I teach in the Humanities Department of NYCCT, CUNY.
CUNY is currently going through a university-wide restructuring of the
curriculum called Pathways. A longer description of Pathways (which has
been publicly condemned by the Modern Language Association) is available here: http://www.psc-cuny.org/our-campaigns/faculty-staff-and-students-mobilize-pathways-town-hall.
In short, all courses on the books on each and every campus--from Brooklyn
to the Bronx-- has to go through a rigorous review and application process
to see if it fits into the new core curriculum. If a course is not
accepted in the university-wide core curriculum, the course cannot be be
included as a "Pathways Certified Course" on a student's transcript. What
this means is that if a transferring student has taken Chinese Language I at
CAMPUS A, but that course was not accepted into Pathways, the credits will
not be counted towards a language requirement at CAMPUS B. So the student
will have to take language from scratch again. By the way, the process
for approval happens at the college level; so the success of a course depends
entirely on the review process at the local level -- there is no coordination
between campuses about requirements for similar courses.
The consequences of not getting a course into Pathways have
been enormous. Students do not consider taking non-Pathways courses
because they recognize the limitations on the course -- non-transferrable and
not available for financial aid. Registration numbers have fallen in
non-Pathways elective courses, sections have disappeared, and the need for
instructors of these courses has gone with them.
So, what kinds of courses are having trouble making
Pathways? Performing arts courses are rejected outright. Music
Theory could make Pathways, but Music Performance will not (Theatre
History: yes; Acting: no, etc. -- though there is no guarantee that
history or theory would make the cut either). Six definitional categories
within Pathways have been established ("Individual and Society, "U.S.
Experience" etc.), and course applications for Pathways must justify their adequacy
for one of the six categories.
I teach in the Humanities Department at NYCCT. Based on my
own experience there, I can attest to the fact that courses in Communication,
Theatre, and Music have been routinely rejected from the Pathways core
curriculum. What I find disturbing about this fact is that the pedagogical
engine of these courses runs on the energy of oral transmission and
construction of knowledge. Learning outcomes in speech, communication, and
performance courses are built around living, social activities that cannot
always be evidenced in writing. By its own design, Pathways has marginalized
courses that champion vocal and somatic expression. To someone who has read his
share of Bhabha and Spivak, this is an alarming regression. Like the histories
and customs non-Western cultures that were extinguished through the colonial
suppression of oral and performance practices, spoken-word curricula are under
attack at one of the most culturally diverse universities in the United States.
In particular, I can speak to how our Voice and Diction course has been damaged. The strictness of Pathways and a severe constriction of liberal arts electives that students can take has caused a dramatic drop in enrollment. Sections have been cancelled and adjunct faculty have lost teaching opportunities. Changes in TAP funding, which will no longer pays for an elective unless it's required or recommended, has discouraged enrollment as well.
Unfortunately, Voice and Diction is a course that so many of our students (and some faculty) desperately need. Research has shown that articulate, comprehensible, and expressive speech is crucial in order to establish oneself as an effective and functional participant in academic and social communities. It is the single most important quality a majority of employers seek in potential employees. At our technical college where career development is a basic objective, courses like Voice and Diction should be permanent, core fixtures. On practical, professional, and intellectual levels, without Voice and Diction a very large portion of our student body will not be able to function or advance in their chosen disciplines.
No comments:
Post a Comment