« continuing thoughts on program design | Main | affect and childhood games »

tenure in the corporate world

Inside Higher Ed has another article on the "end of tenure." I'm not linking to it because it's really just cheap sensationalism. However, I will say this. If you want to eliminate tenure, you have to come up with an alternative. And you can't really expect that a corporate model is a good idea?

Why?

Because corporations are such ethical institutions that operate fundamentally with common good of society in mind, treat their workers equitably, and develop products that benefit humans without a thought for personal gain? OK, maybe higher education doesn't always do that, doesn't always live up to its mission statements. But do you really think a corporately-managed, tenure-free university would be free of adjuncts?

Corporations are designed for their own institutional survival, to dominate the marketplace without a thought to the consequences for human or any other life, and to produce profit for shareholders. Everything else is window-dressing. Maybe corporations would be better off with a tenure system enforced. They'd have to put up with whistleblowers. They couldn't just silence or fire employees who disagreed. They'd have fewer sychophantic "yes wo/men."

There's an argument that a contract system would ensure that academics work harder, that we all know some colleague that's just mailing it in. Maybe. But we all also have a dozen colleagues that are working very hard.

Honestly, without the tenure system, I think a school like mine would be more worried about how it was going to keep its good faculty than it would be salivating over the chance to hire new blood.

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d8341c82a553ef00d8352741ad53ef

Listed below are links to weblogs that reference tenure in the corporate world:

Comments

blog comments powered by Disqus
My Photo

My CV web | pdf

Academia.edu

Blog powered by TypePad
Member since 05/2004
Subscribe in a reader

my books

Recent Comments

Powered by Disqus

del.icio.us links