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It is both an
honor and a pleasure to be here today. To the Faculty Senate, thanks
for your selection which gives me this opportunity. Thanks also
go to Vice President for Academic Affairs John Trefny for his support,
both philosophical and financial of this annual lecture series.
Finally thank you for taking time from the end of a busy semester,
to come today.
There are three
objectives to my address today: to discuss the stages of faculty
development, to discuss the motivating factors in a professors
life, and to ask the question, Can we profess meaning?
To address such
a topic deals with many difficult and individual factors, including
psychological waters which I am neither qualified nor anxious to
navigate. Initially the studies of Wergin, Mason and Munson (1976)
and Bess (1982) both indicate that the factor most predictive of
success in faculty motivation is depth of knowledge about the faculty
members and their personal characteristics. We begin with the intuition
that an academics motivation may differ significantly from
an industrial or governmental worker. With such a difficult and
diverse subject, we hope to draw upon the sparse existing literature
about faculty, causing us to paint the faculty silhouette in a broad
brush, and to accept any evaluations as tentative until further
evidence appears. Your reaction to these thoughts are welcomed;
send them to esloan@mines.edu.
We first ask,
What are Stages? There seems to be agreement that stages
consist of stable periods with clear goals, during which we integrate
our life experiences, and turbulent periods during which we reorder,
change, and differentiate our life. For example, A.N. Whiteheads
three stages of learning in The Aims of Education (1929)
are:
- Romance
during which the learning becomes enthralled with the potential
of the
subject area, but has only a fragmentary knowledge of what is
involved in reaching
that potential,
- Precision
is the second stage, in which the learner fill in the detailed
learning required
to achieve the potential, followed later by
- Generalization
in which both the precise principles and romance are incorporated
and
connected to other areas in the learners knowledge and life.
While Whiteheads
model of education was intended to describe learning stages during
the college years, similar stages may be postulated for other learners,
such as faculty who encounter the field of teaching for which they
have no formal training. Other evidence for Stages in Life have
been studied by Freud (1900-1921) for childhood influences, Jung
(1913-1946) for the adult life cycle, and Erickson (1950-1980) in
the general life cycle.
The popularization
of the Life Stages concept in the general literature
was done by Sheehy in Passages (1976), Levinson et al. in
Seasons of a Mans Life (1978), Vaillant in Adaptation
to Life (1995), and Borysenko in A Womans Book of Life
(1996). From these publications, we can safely conclude that changes
and developments occur throughout the adult life cycle. It is appropriate
to ask the question, Is there a Life Cycle for professors?,
recognizing that such a question is fraught with traps such as anecdotal
information, individual circumstances, and attending difficulties
from extrapolating such a small sample.
There is a growing
body of evidence that there are faculty career phases, especially
in teaching and research components. Twenty per cent (only 10 people
ages 35-45) of the Levinson groups longitudinal sample
were university professors. Blackburn, Behymer, and Hall (1978)
did a research productivity study of 1,216 faculty, which included
24 independent scholarship variables, and three dependent variables
(articles, books and citations). Baldwin and Blackburn (1981) had
a sample of 106 faculty for a study on teaching productivity. Some
tentative ideas emerge from those three studies.
Both research
and teaching productivity appears to be bimodal. Productivity appears
to increase from the entry level until the ages between 35 and 39,
during which time faculty normally strive to obtain tenure and full
professor status. There is a slight decline in productivity between
the ages of 35-39 and 40-44, while faculty go through Levinsons
mid-life transition period. Productivity increases again with the
resolution of the mid-life transition until the early fifties, and
then there is a slow decline until retirement. Senior faculty still
produce significantly more writings than junior faculty, even with
this last decline. These findings are supported by Cole (1979),
who determined that roughly the same proportion of scientists in
different age groups makes important discoveries. This is in direct
refutation of the theory by Lehman (1953), brought about by questionable
sampling, that most of the important discoveries are made by those
faculty under thirty years of age.
Difficult times
generally arise twice during a career. Teachers have difficulty
during the early years when they are first learning how to teach.
In this respect the increase in teaching productivity lags the research
productivity by 2-3 years. The second difficult period occurs with
senior state and periods of new or added responsibility which involves
new coursework, additional committee work, administrative duties,
etc.
Normally career
reassessment also occurs twice. The first period is in the late
assistant professor period when the faculty must explore contingency
options in case tenure is not achiever. In the full professor period,
there is also a time when he/she must decide whether to remain a
classroom teacher or to try to diversify as a means of maintaining
professional vitality.
Factors in
Faculty Motivation
While there
is a sizeable amount of data on other motivational theories, e.g.
the behavioral modification theory of Skinner, one of the clearest
and most applicable motivation theories is the so-called Needs
Theory, derived from the work of Maslow (1943, 1954) and extended
by Erickson (1982). These two authors proposed a hierarchy of needs
for the individual shown below in successive degrees of fundamental
needs:
- Generativity
- Self Actualization
- Esteem Needs
- Belongingness
- Safety
- Physiological
Needs
The Needs Theory
suggests that the lower needs on the hierarchy (levels 5 and 6)
are the first ones encountered, and the higher needs are realized
only after the lower needs are gratified. The stronger the deprivation
of a need, the more it dominates; the more a need is gratified,
the less important it is and the more important the next higher
need becomes. Schneider and Zalesny (1982) suggest that faculty,
by their autonomous nature, appear to have the needs which are the
most mature. The academic environment attracts people who tend to
be oriented to self-initiated, creative behavior. Aldefer (1972)
indicates that frustration of growth (generativity and self-actualization)
needs increase the desires of relatedness satisfaction, and frustration
of related needs leads to the desire for existence gratification.
For example, frustrated researchers might turn to affiliation available
through teaching, frustrated teachers might move to another institution,
extend their education, or participate more in administration.
MacKeachie
(1982), Csikszentmihalyi (1982) and Deci and Ryan (1982) all suggest
that faculty are intrinsically motivated and have limited positive
extrinsic motivation possibilities. Intrinsic motivation is coincident
with the higher levels of Maslows need hierarchy, while extrinsic
motivators are appropriate for the lower levels of the hierarchy.
Organizational
structure, external rewards, (such as promotion and pay) and feedback
are examples of extrinsic rewards which are seen as somewhat
self-defeating when used in a controlling manner. If extrinsic rewards
are used, then faculty may slacken their efforts once full professorship
and tenure have been obtained; such administration may build in
a never-ending spiral of salary increases in hopes of continuing
faculty motivation. However, providing external evaluation in an
informational way can lead to motivation. Slight discrepancies from
a facultys self-image may motivate change; however, large
external evaluation discrepancies are rejected. Finally to little
extrinsic feedback can lead to de-motivation.
Centra (1973)
suggests that when self-actualized people encounter a slight discrepancy
between their self image and other evidence, there is motivation
to take action. Csikszenmihalyi (1982), McClelland et al., (1953),
and Litwin and Stringer (1968) all indicate that intrinsic motivation
is reinforced by a slight imbalance in (a) the challenges to the
faculty with (b) the skills the faculty have to meet the challenge.
If the challenge severely outweighs the skills, then anxiety and
frustration occurs; if the challenge (such as teaching a course
multiple time) does not require slightly stretching the skills,
then boredom can occur. Optimally there is an opportunity for growth
by continual slight imbalances between challenges and skills, as
shown by Csikszentmihalyi (1991) so that the skill level can evolve
to meet a growing level of challenges.
Deci and Ryan
(1982) indicate that intrinsic motivation appears to work equally
well for both teachers and learners. A teacher who is intrinsically
motivated seems to enjoy the activity for its own sake and has a
good chance to get the student to seek the intrinsic rewards of
learning. If a teacher is extrinsically motivated, students might
conclude that learning is worthless in and of itself, and lacks
inherent value. Whitehead (1929) says that the ideal of a technical
education is to be .. a commonwealth in which work is play,
and play is life.
It appears
that education largely succeeds or fails via motivation. Professing
means to live a way of life, almost in a religious sense of devotion.
Csikszentmihalyi (1982) suggests that education is the process whereby
the young agree to become adults not just behaving like adults
enjoying being an educated adult. We can help students enjoy
learning if their professors enjoy learning. If the professor does
not enjoy learning, should the young emulate the alienated?
At the heart
of all classroom experiences, Csikszentmihalyi (1982) indicates
there is subliminal question in the students minds, Does
it make any sense to become an educated adult like this person at
the front of the classroom?
In additional
work, Csikszentmihalyi (1991) suggests enjoyable intellectual experiences,
such as learning, have eight characteristics:
- the work
is bounded, it can be completed
- there is
time to concentrate on the task at hand
- there are
clear goals
- there is
immediate feedback for self-assessment
- there is
deep involvement and stretching
- there is
a sense of control over the activity
- self-concern
disappears, but growth occurs
- the sense
of time duration is altered.
Heroism and
the Transmission of Meaning
The classical
definition of a Greek Hero (Whitman, 1982) is a person who exhibits
super-mortal behavior or mastery, while retaining man-like accessibility.
As examples, in the ancient sense heroism was exhibited on the physical
level by Achilleus killing Hector at Troy, on the combined physical-mental
level by Odysseus lying to the Cyclops to escape the cave, and on
the mental level by Socrates defining Love in The Symposium.
Heroism has
cultural underpinnings. For example, in Japan heroism is downplayed,
for example with their saying, The nail that rises up get
beaten down, perhaps indicating the sacrifice of individual
desires for cultural advancement. In a modern, western society sense,
Nugent (1992) suggests that heroism is more distributed throughout
the population, as with the grandmother of color in the ghetto,
providing for her grandchildren because her own children are dis-functional.
In a fundamental
sense however, heroism may be considered as ensuring the culture.
Broadly, that is what Achilleus, Socrates, and the grandmother are
all doing providing for means that their culture might continue.
So that might be the question for us as Colorado School of Mines
educators Is it possible to ensure our culture through
education?
We get some
sense of such heroism from Csikszentmihalyi (1982): Higher
education succeeds or fails in terms of motivation, not cognitive
transfer of information. To teach implies a transfer of information,
and that is not the main purpose of higher education. To profess
means to confess ones faith in, or allegiance to, some idea
or goal. An effective professor is one who is intrinsically motivate
to learn, because he/she will have the best chance to educate others.
So that comes
to the final and most important question for us today. Can we transmit
Meaning to ensure the culture? We might begin by taking moderate
risks in enhancing our own learning to illustrate the pleasure of
learning as a convincing argument for knowledge in and or itself.
As a final
illustration, consider the application of the myth of Tiresias to
the Colorado School of Mines faculty. Tiresias was the worlds
first Transvestite, who lived in Greek Mythology, first as a man,
then as a woman, and then as a man again. Tiresias was called in
as an engineering consultant to settle an argument between the chief
Greek gods Juno and Jupiter.
The question
the gods asked of Tiresias was, Who has the most fun in bed,
men or women? It was Junos contention that men do, mostly
due to her eternal irritation at Jupiter, who was perpetually, sexually
attracted by anything that moved. Since Tiresias had experiences
as both genders, he was a qualified consultant in the matter.
After some reflection
Tiresias said, Why of course, women have the most fun in bed.
Upon hearing that, Juno flew into a rage and struck poor Tiresias
blind. In partial compensation, Jupitor rewarded Tiresias with the
gift of inner vision, so that Tiresias became a prophet in much
of Greek literature. Both Sophocles and Homer for example, have
the blind prophet wandering through their literature, foretelling
the future, sometimes in a way which was slightly more obscure to
comprehend, perhaps due to Tiresias previous learning experience
with Juno.
For example,
Narcissus mother came to Tiresias while her son was still
a baby, saying, I have this beautiful boy, tell me what will
be his fate? Tiresias response must have sounded very
strange to Greek ears, who were used to having the enjoinder Know
Thyself, as the measure of conduct for example it was
inscribed on the Temple of Delphi.
Tiresias
response to Narcissuss mother to forecast her sons fate
was, He will be happy so long as he Doesnt Know Himself,
a forecast which went against the wisdom in Greek culture. But we
know what happened to the beautiful Narcissus. After the unfortunate
incident with Echo, Narcissus fell in love with his own image, and
wasted away from idolizing his own image in the reflection pool.
We might reflect
that Tiresias still speaks to us on the Colorado School of Mines
faculty, almost 4000 years later. Tiresias still calls to us to
get beyond the narcissism of our own learning, to model learning
as being very enjoyable to the younger members of our learning community.
In this way Tiresias is calling us to become heroic to ensure the
culture with the young learners.
Thank you for
your attention.
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