Facebook Posts
Why, thank you, helpful AI summary!
**
"Wise Bauer" and "Great Shadow" likely refer to Susan Wise Bauer's new book, The Great Shadow: A History of How Sickness Shapes What We Do, Think, Believe, and Buy, which explores humanity's relationship with disease throughout history. Alternatively, it could refer to the Bauer Supreme Shadow goalie equipment, which includes protective gear like a catcher and pads, and is known for its premium quality and large pocket size. ... See MoreSee Less
2 days ago
- Likes: 16
- Shares: 2
- Comments: 4
I like “protective” and definitely premium quality. 🫶🏾
At least it mentions your book first. Can you imagine if you were the “alternative” to the goalie equipment? 🤣
We've always admired your large pocket size.
A few weeks ago I asked AI about a multi-volume 19th-c. biography of Napoleon. It provided a nice 300ish-word statement. Then, for no reason, it ended with "Wesley Posvar was the 15th Chancellor of the University Pittsburgh, 1967-1991. He is credited with solidifying the university's financial footing, but there is no evidence he contributed to the scholarship on the Napoleonic era."
If you’ve been wandering around on any social media channels over the last couple of weeks, you’ve probably seen the polemical posts about Samantha Fulnecky, the University of Oklahama student who got a 0 on her response essay because she turned in an opinion piece based on the Bible instead of an academic response with proper citation.
I had a whole post planned about this under the impression that Ms. Fulnecky was a freshman. After nearly twenty years of teaching freshmen, I could 100% see this scenario unfolding. My take: the child headed off to the U of O having been thoroughly warned about the godlessness of a secular university and her responsibility to uphold Biblical truth. I’ve taught those kids. It takes them at least a semester to realize that we, the professors, generally aren’t out to sabotage their faith. (I say generally as I can’t speak to all motivations, but in the English department at William & Mary, we were mostly just trying to teach them close reading and decent writing.) Coming into a class with all of your defenses firmly in place is not the best posture for learning; I’ve gotten my share of freshman essays that footnote the Bible instead of dealing with the text.
And there would have been shared responsibility. It seemed that the TA grading the paper was too inexperienced to react properly—which would have been to invite the student to office hours and say, “You misunderstood the assignment. Let’s go over the criteria again and I’ll give you a chance to rewrite the paper. I’ll have to take one letter grade off for lateness, but you can still get a good grade if you’re willing to put in the work.” I’ve done this as well.
So that was going to be my post.
Then, doing a little fact checking before hitting “send,” I found out that Ms. Fulnecky is a junior psychology major.
A junior, taking a class in her major field, who turns in a completely inappropriate paper should absolutely expect to get a failing grade. She knows the expectations by year 3 of her college career.
I can’t speak to Ms. Fulnecky’s motivations any more than I can absolve all of my fellow professors of intending to indoctrinate. But the *appearance* here is certainly that she chose a class in which the TA was transgender (something which doesn’t actually have anything to do with whether the rubric was properly applied) in order to make a point. Which she did. The TA has been put on administrative leave and Ms. Fulnecky is being praised by TPUSA, among other conservative Christian organizations, for her bravery.
Higher education most certainly has its problems. This is not the way to address them. ... See MoreSee Less
3 days ago
I’d like to see the assignment instructions and the essay itself to make up my own mind. Anyone know where I can find this info? All my searches are coming up with opinion articles confounding the issue with the trans pro- con - stance with no links to the original source material. As an Atheist, I’ve cited the Bible for a number of papers in the past because it’s still a valid source for contemporary thought and has a heavy influence on society, past and present. Other religious texts are also fantastic sources, specifically when comparing and contrasting teachings and their influences on modern societal patterns, both for and against many of today’s issues. I’d be very curious to read the primary sources rather than relying on 3rd party opinion pieces.
So you are saying that you know for certainty that she picked a class with a transgender TA on purpose?? Are you sure about this? I don't even know how to find out who the TA's are before I register and pay for my classes and receive access to the syllabus.
I'm a psychology professor, and I've read the target article, the student's paper, and the grading rubric. The moment the instructor included in the directions the option of talking about "why you FEEL the topic is important or not" and "application to your own EXPERIENCES" the instructor lost the option of downgrading the paper for being all about the student's subjective opinions instead of an intellectual engagement with the article. In the past, I tried assigning response papers like that, and very quickly stopped doing it. The result was always shallow self-indulgent pablum from students (including 3rd-year students) who are capable of so much more. When I want substantive engagement with the relevant scholarly literature on a topic, backed up by cited sources, I put exactly that in the instructions.
Your second paragraph of this post is exactly why parents don't want to send their kids off to some universities. You clearly have disdain for kids with these views and I guarantee you it shows in your teaching.
It seems risky to assign all of this to the motivation of a junior enrolling in a class. Surely your years of teaching have also acquainted you with students who will do anything to avoid certain class scenarios and…are forced to take them anyway to graduate.
A paper even tangentially addressing the assignment should NOT receive a grade of 0. 0 is for not turning anything in.
Wow! How important it is to research to know the facts instead of reading these articles and making assumptions. I appreciate you digging into this a little deeper. I would love for you to speak more on this topic of attending a “godlessness, secular university” as a Christian and understanding the concept of close reading and decent writing vs an attempt to sabotage a students faith. It seems to be a real fear that I had never considered until my daughter started dual enrollment and I had conversations with other parents. It almost seems like it should be forbidden that we would let our kids take a class at the “secular”school. 🤦🏾♀️
The following is from David Deming, a professor of geology at OU who tracked down the rubric for the assignment: The original instructions for the assignment ask the student to write a "reaction paper" that is a "thoughtful discussion" that includes "your own thoughts." There is NO mention of sources or the necessity of using empirical evidence. Neither are either of these mentioned in the explicit, written grading criteria. The response to the student is argumentative and more than anything else, can be characterized as "browbeating." The student is awarded a grade of "zero" and the reasons given include the fact that she failed to use "empirical evidence" and included her "own personal beliefs." (Which of course is exactly what she was instructed to do!). Furthermore, the student was graded down for being "highly offensive." Apparently, the teachers of this course missed the memorandum. The Chicago Statement was adopted as offical OU policy a couple years ago by the Regents. And the Chicago Statement clearly states: "It is not the proper role of the University to attempt to shield individuals from ideas and opinions they find unwelcome, disagreeable, or even deeply offensive." www.facebook.com/david.deming.1232/posts/pfbid035v4HDiHVs1ytoGj8ZprnytYnkXfX6jGnEsvAQKuk5km6S4Tzb...
She may not have had any choice in which class to take if it was required for her major. What she ought to have done was made a formal request for an alternative, neutral topic so she could complete the assignment without violating her religious beliefs. The instructor refusing a request for an alternative topic would’ve been a legitimate religious discrimination case. But that’s not what she did and while I am sympathetic to her dilemma, she handled it poorly. You can’t cite the Bible as a source in a psychology paper
I think that no one here knows all of the facts, especially her motivations, so no one is in a position to judge her. But I will say that this is probably a bit of backlash against so much anti-Christian philosophy and attitude perpetrated against Christian students. Personally, I would not attend a college today that did not support and uphold my cherished Christian beliefs. Such institutions do not deserve my money nor my time.
Additionally, the articles I read stated another professor also reviewed the paper and agreed it deserved the zero due to not following the criteria.
While I agree with everything you've said, zero credit for a poorly written paper seems punitive. This student was a poor writer, and she didn't cite the Bible correctly. Still, a zero? I tend to think she must have followed something in the rubric which would have given her some credit. It seems punitive because it probably offended the TA. If the student wrote the paper in order to offend the TA (who is trans) rather than to be winsome, then she wasn't being Christlike either. Even so, if the student didn't cite her sources and didn't use academically acceptable sources, she still wrote her paper. Clearly, AI didn't write it. She should have received some credit, instead of none. When the paper and the rubrics are scrutinized by the powers that be, the TA might be in some trouble. Of course, Turning Point and other groups are going to use this example as proof that secular schools are "out to discriminate against Christians." The TA should have been more professional and detached. They may lose their job, but I don't believe they should be expelled from the university.
If that paper wasn't deserving of its failing grade, then my 10th grader is already a Rhodes Scholar.
Trans people should not be in positions of power or authority anywhere.
This is why my husband, for years, had to start freshman classes with a statement that he wasn't there to tear apart anyone's religious beliefs. This tiny conversation had a huge impact on how many combative students he had, students who were almost always graduates of private Christian schools.
I am curious, did you read the assignment and the paper?
Friends kept warning me not to let my young person attend Duke University because he would be “indoctrinated”. Yeah well, he was a Bio major with minors in Chem and Ancient Civilization. Everything was going swimmingly until his last semester. He had to drop a comp sci course to take one more “inquiry” class. . . And doggone it, that C.S. Lewis prof and class really caused him to question his future. Suddenly, he was confused by finding a “kindred” academic thinker. Imagine! 😆 This makes me think of the high school book ban fervor here in my NC county (Guilford) about 4 years ago. My fellow Conservative moms and grannies went berserk over Jesmyn Ward’s Salvage the Bones being used in an AP Lit class due to “sexual content”. They expressed they preferred their young people read “classic” literature instead of modern because they seemed to be under the impression there was no sexual content or themes in those “old books”. Methinks they do not comprehend the old stuff and the language used. (I am not a book ban Conservative.)
Well said. May I share this?
There is a difference between being persecuted for your faith and consequences for being obnoxious. One notable action is that of Rosa Parks who deliberately challenged the status quo bus etiquette which needed to be changed.
My biggest question: was there a grading rubric?
And the fact that so many people won't bother to actually find out the facts and story behind it (and apply some critical thinking) and simply read the click-bait headlines designed to manufacture outrage, is a major problem today.
And the fact that the TA took the heat is the marshmallow on top! Oh, how I want to say 🤬🤬🤬
I also found an analysis of the paper by a biblical scholar. In her analysis, the paper didn’t even hold up if the student had “genuinely” used religion as source material. The scholar said the poor grade was well deserved
I read the TA’s response and thought it was very thoughtful and gracious considering a Junior decided to completely ignore the provided assignment rubric.
It's such a ridiculous issue and entirely preventable. For example, I am Jewish. I enrolled at a "Christian" college online. When writing in a Biblically based class, I wrote the Professor and asked "Do you want the Christian answer or my actual beliefs? I am happy to write on either." And the Professor clarified I could write on my own beliefs so I did. I got full credit.
This is a first for me. I analyzed a TikTok trend!
Have a read and tell me what you think.
... See MoreSee Less
3 days ago
I showed this to my middle and high schoolers and they want to design an experiment to look at raw slices of potatoes on a person's body further. I'm drawing a hard line at either of these kids sleeping with raw taters in their mouths, but other than that, if they can define and isolate independent and dependant variables, I guess we're doing potato science.
Both the potato cure and your assertion that this is a useful pointer or the foundational assumption of the MAHA movement is absurd! Perhaps if you talk only with the fringes.
I lived in Ukraine once upon a time and I remember holding in a laugh as my landlady told me to do this to get over my cold, but she said i needed to paint my feet with mustard first. that was 15 years ago, it's an old wive's remedy in former Soviet countries.
Nice. This theory also tracks with “doctors don’t know this,” or “doctors don’t want you to know this.”
Such a great read! Very much enjoyed this. I am very familiar with these concepts as I know a lot of people like this. It is always fascinating to me. The tie back to the Greeks and their philosophy was really interesting. Really enjoyed it!!
Love this. Thank you.
I'm currently reading Eleanore of Avignon. I'm immersed in miasma theory. LOL
