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	<title>Comments on: Two-Year Colleges &#038; Class</title>
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	<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/</link>
	<description>faults &#124; sins &#124; abuses</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 07 Jan 2009 02:45:03 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>By: cindy</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-809</link>
		<dc:creator>cindy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-809</guid>
		<description>But establishing generalizations about CC students is rather difficult.  As I just said at Jeff Rice's blog, the reasons students attend CC's are too many to list; their economic and social backgrounds are similarly varied.  In the past year, I've had students who are at the CC for these reasons, for example:

--to raise their GPA's for a 4-year school
--because they can't afford a 4-year school
--because of geographic ties to family or work
--to retrain
--to pick up the pieces of their lives after prison
--parents ordered them
--they only seek a 2-year degree or certificate
--to take a few courses for enrichment
--their employer wants them to take a few courses
--they don't know what they want to do with their lives

Our students range from the ages of seventeen to 80; they live in the poorest sections of two of our state's major cities and in the suburbs of our wealthiest towns (which happen to be among the wealthiest in the nation).  The diversity is mindboggling.

It's the lack of understanding of this diversity by many of our 4-year colleagues which drives me nuts.  They assume the CC student is either unprepared for college or poor.  Sure, some of them are, but that only scratches the surface.

What's so refreshing to me, Mike, is that you are interested in the topic even though you don't teach at a CC.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>But establishing generalizations about CC students is rather difficult.  As I just said at Jeff Rice&#8217;s blog, the reasons students attend CC&#8217;s are too many to list; their economic and social backgrounds are similarly varied.  In the past year, I&#8217;ve had students who are at the CC for these reasons, for example:</p>
<p>&#8211;to raise their GPA&#8217;s for a 4-year school<br />
&#8211;because they can&#8217;t afford a 4-year school<br />
&#8211;because of geographic ties to family or work<br />
&#8211;to retrain<br />
&#8211;to pick up the pieces of their lives after prison<br />
&#8211;parents ordered them<br />
&#8211;they only seek a 2-year degree or certificate<br />
&#8211;to take a few courses for enrichment<br />
&#8211;their employer wants them to take a few courses<br />
&#8211;they don&#8217;t know what they want to do with their lives</p>
<p>Our students range from the ages of seventeen to 80; they live in the poorest sections of two of our state&#8217;s major cities and in the suburbs of our wealthiest towns (which happen to be among the wealthiest in the nation).  The diversity is mindboggling.</p>
<p>It&#8217;s the lack of understanding of this diversity by many of our 4-year colleagues which drives me nuts.  They assume the CC student is either unprepared for college or poor.  Sure, some of them are, but that only scratches the surface.</p>
<p>What&#8217;s so refreshing to me, Mike, is that you are interested in the topic even though you don&#8217;t teach at a CC.</p>
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		<title>By: Mike</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-810</link>
		<dc:creator>Mike</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-810</guid>
		<description>Interesting! In my one semester at Montgomery College Takoma Park, I saw a somewhat similar diversity of age and purpose -- although many students were still around my age -- and an astonishing diversity of ethnicity and national background. Much of that is a function of the super-international Takoma Park itself -- and so one might say that geography is an important and overlooked factor in determining who goes to what institution. But from what you're saying (and I'd be interested to see how much John agrees, and I'll have to follow up checking out the discussion at Jeff's), maybe we can make a generalization, namely:

&lt;strong&gt;1.&lt;/strong&gt; Student populations at two-year colleges are often far more diverse than people think.

But see, I'm also thinking, Cindy, about the comment you left here last year about how your institution's vocationally-oriented mission statement basically acknowledged that, "Yeah, we're training an underclass." That might suggest a second generalization, namely:

&lt;strong&gt;2.&lt;/strong&gt; Two-year institutions may fail to acknowledge the diversity of purposes they serve for students.

And of course, from your comment, the third generalization would be that

&lt;strong&gt;3.&lt;/strong&gt; Academics in four-year institutions, serving a fairly homogenous student population, consistently fail to acknowledge the diversity of functions of two-year institutions.

Are those fair, and would you add any others?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Interesting! In my one semester at Montgomery College Takoma Park, I saw a somewhat similar diversity of age and purpose &#8212; although many students were still around my age &#8212; and an astonishing diversity of ethnicity and national background. Much of that is a function of the super-international Takoma Park itself &#8212; and so one might say that geography is an important and overlooked factor in determining who goes to what institution. But from what you&#8217;re saying (and I&#8217;d be interested to see how much John agrees, and I&#8217;ll have to follow up checking out the discussion at Jeff&#8217;s), maybe we can make a generalization, namely:</p>
<p><strong>1.</strong> Student populations at two-year colleges are often far more diverse than people think.</p>
<p>But see, I&#8217;m also thinking, Cindy, about the comment you left here last year about how your institution&#8217;s vocationally-oriented mission statement basically acknowledged that, &#8220;Yeah, we&#8217;re training an underclass.&#8221; That might suggest a second generalization, namely:</p>
<p><strong>2.</strong> Two-year institutions may fail to acknowledge the diversity of purposes they serve for students.</p>
<p>And of course, from your comment, the third generalization would be that</p>
<p><strong>3.</strong> Academics in four-year institutions, serving a fairly homogenous student population, consistently fail to acknowledge the diversity of functions of two-year institutions.</p>
<p>Are those fair, and would you add any others?</p>
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		<title>By: John</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-811</link>
		<dc:creator>John</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-811</guid>
		<description>First, Mike, let me thank you for the careful reading of my postings on this topic.  As you well know, the quality of dialogue corresponds to the shared understandings of the "other"'s views.  You've raised excellent points and I'm not going to try to respond on a Saturday night, after a fine dinner and two glasses of sauvignon blanc.

I will  note  that Cindy's response is very much to the point, and I'll have a few things to say about  that as well--tomorrow, with  a clearer head.  Also, it reached 94 degrees here today, which we don't do very often.

I will reference this discussion on my blog.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>First, Mike, let me thank you for the careful reading of my postings on this topic.  As you well know, the quality of dialogue corresponds to the shared understandings of the &#8220;other&#8221;&#8217;s views.  You&#8217;ve raised excellent points and I&#8217;m not going to try to respond on a Saturday night, after a fine dinner and two glasses of sauvignon blanc.</p>
<p>I will  note  that Cindy&#8217;s response is very much to the point, and I&#8217;ll have a few things to say about  that as well&#8211;tomorrow, with  a clearer head.  Also, it reached 94 degrees here today, which we don&#8217;t do very often.</p>
<p>I will reference this discussion on my blog.</p>
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		<title>By: cindy</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-812</link>
		<dc:creator>cindy</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-812</guid>
		<description>I think those are a good start, Mike, though perhaps I would add a variation on #1 and #3: Universities often fail to recognize the academic ability or potential of CC students.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I think those are a good start, Mike, though perhaps I would add a variation on #1 and #3: Universities often fail to recognize the academic ability or potential of CC students.</p>
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		<title>By: joanna</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-813</link>
		<dc:creator>joanna</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-813</guid>
		<description>Here are some random thoughts regarding the discussion(s) we've been having:

1.  Geography and the economy certainly play a part in choosing which CC campus one attends--if one is from an immigrant family living in Takoma Park, one would tend to go to that campus because of proximity (Though our college has started a free shuttle service between the three campuses).  Proximity is important when one has a very limited amount of money in one's pocket.

2.  However, if a particular program is offered on one campus alone, then the choice becomes whether or not to participate in that program. And so we sometimes have very exhausted students coming to class--they've had to work at two jobs and are taking one or two classes.  Or we have single parents who must take a day away from classes to tend to a sick child and are afraid that we are going to flunk them if we do.  Geography plays a part in this because these students rely on busses to get to where they are going--to work, school, daycare, the library and so forth.  And taking the bus takes time which could be used for studying.  

3.  On another tangent:  how many community colleges have multiple, sizeable campuses?  Living in the DC area, I am used to perceiving a community college as being made up of two or three campuses.  Our college has about 21,000 students and three campuses.  What's the norm?  Or is there a norm?

I mention size because just as university and CC's have their differences, I'm beginning to wonder about the differences among all of the CC's in the US. What are the different ways that we define "community" when we create a community college?


4.  John, you've synthesized what we've been talking about and put it in a frame.  Thanks.  Mike, you work with these ideas so clearly and intelligently that all I can do is point to you and say "What he said."  Cindy, we're both East Coast CC instructors, and it would be interesting to parse the similarities and differences between our two schools.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Here are some random thoughts regarding the discussion(s) we&#8217;ve been having:</p>
<p>1.  Geography and the economy certainly play a part in choosing which CC campus one attends&#8211;if one is from an immigrant family living in Takoma Park, one would tend to go to that campus because of proximity (Though our college has started a free shuttle service between the three campuses).  Proximity is important when one has a very limited amount of money in one&#8217;s pocket.</p>
<p>2.  However, if a particular program is offered on one campus alone, then the choice becomes whether or not to participate in that program. And so we sometimes have very exhausted students coming to class&#8211;they&#8217;ve had to work at two jobs and are taking one or two classes.  Or we have single parents who must take a day away from classes to tend to a sick child and are afraid that we are going to flunk them if we do.  Geography plays a part in this because these students rely on busses to get to where they are going&#8211;to work, school, daycare, the library and so forth.  And taking the bus takes time which could be used for studying.  </p>
<p>3.  On another tangent:  how many community colleges have multiple, sizeable campuses?  Living in the DC area, I am used to perceiving a community college as being made up of two or three campuses.  Our college has about 21,000 students and three campuses.  What&#8217;s the norm?  Or is there a norm?</p>
<p>I mention size because just as university and CC&#8217;s have their differences, I&#8217;m beginning to wonder about the differences among all of the CC&#8217;s in the US. What are the different ways that we define &#8220;community&#8221; when we create a community college?</p>
<p>4.  John, you&#8217;ve synthesized what we&#8217;ve been talking about and put it in a frame.  Thanks.  Mike, you work with these ideas so clearly and intelligently that all I can do is point to you and say &#8220;What he said.&#8221;  Cindy, we&#8217;re both East Coast CC instructors, and it would be interesting to parse the similarities and differences between our two schools.</p>
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		<title>By: John</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-814</link>
		<dc:creator>John</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-814</guid>
		<description>More good contributions since yesterday.  I'll try to comment on a few selected points.

Mike's point about student diversity is crucial.  Our local term of art is the "student mix."  On the one hand, we have a strong transfer curriculum because our community has a very high  level of education and demands it.  But we also have the largest program for disabled students in the state.  We have a few students in this program who have been at De Anza for 15 or more years.  They are not passing through: we are their destination.  More to the point of composition:  we have a range of adults who are functionally  illiterate, but who seek to get work skills or to eventually qualify for academic level coursework. We also have a huge population of English Language Learners, across a wide range of language ability.  No university could or should admit this range of students, but understanding how they can best develop in reading and writing should be of interest to any scholar engaged in teaching adults to improve in the handling of written texts and other significant forms of communication (the objects of rhetorical study).  I believe that CC teachers who work a lot with adults with marginal reading/writing abilities have developed knowledge out of practice that should inform the profession.  I'm not sure I  know a senior scholar in composition studies who agrees with me, at least not to the point they act on that view.

Regarding Mike's point 2:  Over the  years, CC's have been roundly criticized for being all things to all people.  When I started out, I was told we had six purposes:  transfer education, vocational education, remedial education, counseling/student services,  community services, and life-long learning.  I suspect most CCs of any size have programs that fall  under all six categories, but proportions would differ from local community to local community and according to available resources.  In California, each district still has a locally-elected Board of Trustees, so we have strong input from the local  community, something most large universities don't get in that way.

Joanna asks about governance structures.  These are particular to each state.  In Kentucky, CCs were administered through the University of Kentucky until very recently.  Pennsylvania and Ohio have many two-year campuses related to state universities, as well as independent campuses.  Florida calls Miami-Dade a college with five or six  campuses.  In California, the Los  Angeles CC District has six or seven colleges.

When City  College of New York created "open admissions" it created huge controversy, and created a number of scholars who have been very influential in composition:  Mina Shaughnessy, Lynn Quitman Troyka, Donald McQuade, Ira Shor, among others.  But California had already created its Master Plan for Higher Ed with open admission CCs and no  controversy.  That's an example of what Mike referred to as the "unexamined assumptions" so common in regard to CC composition programs.  Texas has a state requirement that forces all higher ed, especially CCs, to meet state testing requirements.  This drives their curricula in quite different ways than in other states.  It also drives the developmental textbook market, because many Texas CCs have departmental adoptions and the publishers compete for them.  

I  guess  I  see a whole  host  of areas worthy of careful inquiry.  And Mike, you are right, a grad student can't be asked to grasp all this.  But the senior professors directing dissertations should be a whole lot less clueless (a lot more clueful?).

Again, thanks, Mike, for focusing the discussion this way.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>More good contributions since yesterday.  I&#8217;ll try to comment on a few selected points.</p>
<p>Mike&#8217;s point about student diversity is crucial.  Our local term of art is the &#8220;student mix.&#8221;  On the one hand, we have a strong transfer curriculum because our community has a very high  level of education and demands it.  But we also have the largest program for disabled students in the state.  We have a few students in this program who have been at De Anza for 15 or more years.  They are not passing through: we are their destination.  More to the point of composition:  we have a range of adults who are functionally  illiterate, but who seek to get work skills or to eventually qualify for academic level coursework. We also have a huge population of English Language Learners, across a wide range of language ability.  No university could or should admit this range of students, but understanding how they can best develop in reading and writing should be of interest to any scholar engaged in teaching adults to improve in the handling of written texts and other significant forms of communication (the objects of rhetorical study).  I believe that CC teachers who work a lot with adults with marginal reading/writing abilities have developed knowledge out of practice that should inform the profession.  I&#8217;m not sure I  know a senior scholar in composition studies who agrees with me, at least not to the point they act on that view.</p>
<p>Regarding Mike&#8217;s point 2:  Over the  years, CC&#8217;s have been roundly criticized for being all things to all people.  When I started out, I was told we had six purposes:  transfer education, vocational education, remedial education, counseling/student services,  community services, and life-long learning.  I suspect most CCs of any size have programs that fall  under all six categories, but proportions would differ from local community to local community and according to available resources.  In California, each district still has a locally-elected Board of Trustees, so we have strong input from the local  community, something most large universities don&#8217;t get in that way.</p>
<p>Joanna asks about governance structures.  These are particular to each state.  In Kentucky, CCs were administered through the University of Kentucky until very recently.  Pennsylvania and Ohio have many two-year campuses related to state universities, as well as independent campuses.  Florida calls Miami-Dade a college with five or six  campuses.  In California, the Los  Angeles CC District has six or seven colleges.</p>
<p>When City  College of New York created &#8220;open admissions&#8221; it created huge controversy, and created a number of scholars who have been very influential in composition:  Mina Shaughnessy, Lynn Quitman Troyka, Donald McQuade, Ira Shor, among others.  But California had already created its Master Plan for Higher Ed with open admission CCs and no  controversy.  That&#8217;s an example of what Mike referred to as the &#8220;unexamined assumptions&#8221; so common in regard to CC composition programs.  Texas has a state requirement that forces all higher ed, especially CCs, to meet state testing requirements.  This drives their curricula in quite different ways than in other states.  It also drives the developmental textbook market, because many Texas CCs have departmental adoptions and the publishers compete for them.  </p>
<p>I  guess  I  see a whole  host  of areas worthy of careful inquiry.  And Mike, you are right, a grad student can&#8217;t be asked to grasp all this.  But the senior professors directing dissertations should be a whole lot less clueless (a lot more clueful?).</p>
<p>Again, thanks, Mike, for focusing the discussion this way.</p>
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		<title>By: John</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-815</link>
		<dc:creator>John</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-815</guid>
		<description>Oh, I wanted to say something about the class issue, Mike's central concern.

We usually look at individual student demographics to construct notions of  class.  If students of a certain economic condition are heavily concentrated in certain institutions, we attribute their class standing to the institution.

But I think we also have a class system of institutions.  At one CCCC, in an elevator, I overheard two writing faculty from Harvard bemoaning the need to listen to CC views at an earlier session.  What I didn't say--maybe I should have--is  those CC faculty get better paid than you Harvard comp drudges.

OK, that's a bit unfair, but there's a class issue operating here based on some perception of institutional status, separate from actual material conditions of the comp teacher.  And these situations can differ markedly from state to state.  Several years ago, the  Soutwest TYCA regional was proud of their resolution calling for all part-time faculty to get paid $2000 a course, up from $1500.  I immediately fired  off an email to the  Regional Chair urging them to frame their position in terms of percent increases, not in flat amounts.  As Cindy noted, per course pay differs a lot.  And at Foothill-De Anza we got part-time pay put on a schedule indexed to full-time pay, so it goes up everytime there's a general raise.

We regularly get part-time faculty leaving Santa Clara university to teach with us because they make more in the CC than at that university.  So there's the actual economic condition of given composition faculty, and then the ascribed status of the institution they teach in.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Oh, I wanted to say something about the class issue, Mike&#8217;s central concern.</p>
<p>We usually look at individual student demographics to construct notions of  class.  If students of a certain economic condition are heavily concentrated in certain institutions, we attribute their class standing to the institution.</p>
<p>But I think we also have a class system of institutions.  At one CCCC, in an elevator, I overheard two writing faculty from Harvard bemoaning the need to listen to CC views at an earlier session.  What I didn&#8217;t say&#8211;maybe I should have&#8211;is  those CC faculty get better paid than you Harvard comp drudges.</p>
<p>OK, that&#8217;s a bit unfair, but there&#8217;s a class issue operating here based on some perception of institutional status, separate from actual material conditions of the comp teacher.  And these situations can differ markedly from state to state.  Several years ago, the  Soutwest TYCA regional was proud of their resolution calling for all part-time faculty to get paid $2000 a course, up from $1500.  I immediately fired  off an email to the  Regional Chair urging them to frame their position in terms of percent increases, not in flat amounts.  As Cindy noted, per course pay differs a lot.  And at Foothill-De Anza we got part-time pay put on a schedule indexed to full-time pay, so it goes up everytime there&#8217;s a general raise.</p>
<p>We regularly get part-time faculty leaving Santa Clara university to teach with us because they make more in the CC than at that university.  So there&#8217;s the actual economic condition of given composition faculty, and then the ascribed status of the institution they teach in.</p>
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		<title>By: Mike</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-816</link>
		<dc:creator>Mike</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-816</guid>
		<description>John, your comment that "proportions would differ from local community to local community and according to available resources" turns me immediately back to Cindy's and Joanna's comments on geography, and I had a sort of Mister Obvious moment: community colleges are &lt;em&gt;community&lt;/em&gt; colleges. Such institutions are far more deeply local than the Big State University or the Fancy Upscale University, and also more local than the small teaching college. When I was an undergrad at Carnegie Mellon, I met an incredibly geographically diverse population; when I was an undergrad at Maryland, and a grad student at Pitt and UMass, there was still a considerable geographic diversity among the students, with a sizable proportion of students from out of state, and a larger proportion of students from very ethnically and economically diverse communities scattered within the state. Even though Pitt has a Johnstown campus in addition to the Pittsburgh campus, I had plenty of students from Johnstown; even though UMass has a Boston campus in addition to the Amherst campus, I've had plenty of students from Boston. (Yes, now that I'm asking my students to keep weblogs, I'm geographically and institutionally out of the closet.) But when I was at MCTP, it was overwhelmingly a Takoma Park and Silver Spring student body.

I might argue -- and Cindy, Joanna, John, and others, I hope you'll correct me if I'm wrong -- that the students who attend community colleges are predominantly from those communities. I might suggest, furthermore, that those students are often bound to those communities by economic circumstances in ways that students at four-year institutions are not. Yes, this may be my economic perspective clouding all I see, and I understand from all three of you that there are non-economic concerns; things like family needs, or literacy, or disability, or involvement with the corrections system, &lt;em&gt;et cetera&lt;/em&gt;.

But I can't get away from the economic angle. I know quite well that many of my classmates at Carnegie Mellon came from families all over the world who had the means to send their children to study there. I also know that many of my classmates at Maryland came from a swathe of locations ranging from Virginia up to Long Island, but that most of them came from somewhere in Maryland, because in-state tuition was (relatively) cheap, and even out-of-state tuition wasn't too bad. I also know that many of the first-generation college students I had at Pitt and here at UMass are from families that are just now able to afford sending their sons and daughters away from home for a four-year degree, but still in-state: I've had students whose dads worked at the last coke mills on the Monongahela, and students whose parents had small farms in Palmer or Cummington.

So I wonder: how valid would the claim be that there's a continuum of academic 'respectability' that parallels the continuum of the strength of students' economic ties to the local economy? In other words: academics in four-year institutions have a nasty tendency to sneer at two-year institutions, and that nasty tendency becomes more pronounced in inverse relation to their students' economic ties to the local community. Is that plausible? (Part of me is working here very much in the mode of that Burkean embarassment I cite above.)

Perhaps what &lt;em&gt;CCC&lt;/em&gt; needs in this regard, more than anything else, is the perspective of a geographer. Many people, John included, have remarked upon the Balkanization of English studies. A compositionist, working with a geographer, might be able to make a convincing claim about a similar (and perhaps more literal, given the origin of the term) Balkanization of composition practices and perceptions, perhaps based in part -- as I've tried to outline above -- on the strength of economic ties to local communities.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>John, your comment that &#8220;proportions would differ from local community to local community and according to available resources&#8221; turns me immediately back to Cindy&#8217;s and Joanna&#8217;s comments on geography, and I had a sort of Mister Obvious moment: community colleges are <em>community</em> colleges. Such institutions are far more deeply local than the Big State University or the Fancy Upscale University, and also more local than the small teaching college. When I was an undergrad at Carnegie Mellon, I met an incredibly geographically diverse population; when I was an undergrad at Maryland, and a grad student at Pitt and UMass, there was still a considerable geographic diversity among the students, with a sizable proportion of students from out of state, and a larger proportion of students from very ethnically and economically diverse communities scattered within the state. Even though Pitt has a Johnstown campus in addition to the Pittsburgh campus, I had plenty of students from Johnstown; even though UMass has a Boston campus in addition to the Amherst campus, I&#8217;ve had plenty of students from Boston. (Yes, now that I&#8217;m asking my students to keep weblogs, I&#8217;m geographically and institutionally out of the closet.) But when I was at MCTP, it was overwhelmingly a Takoma Park and Silver Spring student body.</p>
<p>I might argue &#8212; and Cindy, Joanna, John, and others, I hope you&#8217;ll correct me if I&#8217;m wrong &#8212; that the students who attend community colleges are predominantly from those communities. I might suggest, furthermore, that those students are often bound to those communities by economic circumstances in ways that students at four-year institutions are not. Yes, this may be my economic perspective clouding all I see, and I understand from all three of you that there are non-economic concerns; things like family needs, or literacy, or disability, or involvement with the corrections system, <em>et cetera</em>.</p>
<p>But I can&#8217;t get away from the economic angle. I know quite well that many of my classmates at Carnegie Mellon came from families all over the world who had the means to send their children to study there. I also know that many of my classmates at Maryland came from a swathe of locations ranging from Virginia up to Long Island, but that most of them came from somewhere in Maryland, because in-state tuition was (relatively) cheap, and even out-of-state tuition wasn&#8217;t too bad. I also know that many of the first-generation college students I had at Pitt and here at UMass are from families that are just now able to afford sending their sons and daughters away from home for a four-year degree, but still in-state: I&#8217;ve had students whose dads worked at the last coke mills on the Monongahela, and students whose parents had small farms in Palmer or Cummington.</p>
<p>So I wonder: how valid would the claim be that there&#8217;s a continuum of academic &#8216;respectability&#8217; that parallels the continuum of the strength of students&#8217; economic ties to the local economy? In other words: academics in four-year institutions have a nasty tendency to sneer at two-year institutions, and that nasty tendency becomes more pronounced in inverse relation to their students&#8217; economic ties to the local community. Is that plausible? (Part of me is working here very much in the mode of that Burkean embarassment I cite above.)</p>
<p>Perhaps what <em>CCC</em> needs in this regard, more than anything else, is the perspective of a geographer. Many people, John included, have remarked upon the Balkanization of English studies. A compositionist, working with a geographer, might be able to make a convincing claim about a similar (and perhaps more literal, given the origin of the term) Balkanization of composition practices and perceptions, perhaps based in part &#8212; as I&#8217;ve tried to outline above &#8212; on the strength of economic ties to local communities.</p>
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		<title>By: joanna</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-817</link>
		<dc:creator>joanna</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-817</guid>
		<description>Mike--I think that in the end, economics plays a big role in choicemaking, whether it's on the obvious level of affording tuition and transportation, or on a less obvious level--of being from an immigrant family where both parents had to work at two jobs and there was no one at home reinforcing literacy skills.  

While we generally do serve students from the community, we also have students coming in from DC or other counties who have heard good things about our school and want to come here. They are willing to sit on the Metro for an hour each way every day if that's what it takes.  But if you went to MC, you probably knew that.  I'm bringing it up now just to point out the exceptions to the rule.  

And I think that a geographer and a map would be great. 

And are there any two-year private colleges anymore?  Or did they go the way of the finishing school?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Mike&#8211;I think that in the end, economics plays a big role in choicemaking, whether it&#8217;s on the obvious level of affording tuition and transportation, or on a less obvious level&#8211;of being from an immigrant family where both parents had to work at two jobs and there was no one at home reinforcing literacy skills.  </p>
<p>While we generally do serve students from the community, we also have students coming in from DC or other counties who have heard good things about our school and want to come here. They are willing to sit on the Metro for an hour each way every day if that&#8217;s what it takes.  But if you went to MC, you probably knew that.  I&#8217;m bringing it up now just to point out the exceptions to the rule.  </p>
<p>And I think that a geographer and a map would be great. </p>
<p>And are there any two-year private colleges anymore?  Or did they go the way of the finishing school?</p>
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		<title>By: John</title>
		<link>http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-818</link>
		<dc:creator>John</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 31 Dec 1969 17:00:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.vitia.org/wordpress/archives/2004/09/03/two-year-colleges-class/#comment-818</guid>
		<description>I believe some private two-year colleges exist, though our  local example, Menlo College, growed into a four-year college about 10 years ago: market forces, i would guess.

In some parts of the country, two-year technical  colleges have been common, but many of them have become "comprehensive."  Many of the colleges on American Indian reservations are two-year colleges,  notably Navajo  Community Colleges.  I guess  they are public, but they may not all be governed under state statutes.

So yes,  Mike, you are right about  the  geographic dimension.  In a paper I wrote about 25 years  ago, but never got published (Harvard Ed Review rejected it, with snippy comments, and I never submitted it  elsewhere),  I examined the notion "community" as the defining feature of two-year colleges.  I think it could be very instructive to contrast the concepts "community"  and "universe" as the terms that  name  the two different institutions.  That paper is not in digital format, but I should find a way to get it  copied and post it.  It's the work that got my thinking going while in grad school at Stanford.

Here's the essence of the snobbery issue  for me.  At Big Game about 10 years ago (it alternates between Cal and Stanford), the Stanford cheering section at a game played at Berkeley held up a huge  sign that read "WE GOT IN!"  Now even though  two  of my brothers had Berkeley degrees and I did  Stanford grad work, that kind of snottiness is sick.  But it pervades higher education.
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		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I believe some private two-year colleges exist, though our  local example, Menlo College, growed into a four-year college about 10 years ago: market forces, i would guess.</p>
<p>In some parts of the country, two-year technical  colleges have been common, but many of them have become &#8220;comprehensive.&#8221;  Many of the colleges on American Indian reservations are two-year colleges,  notably Navajo  Community Colleges.  I guess  they are public, but they may not all be governed under state statutes.</p>
<p>So yes,  Mike, you are right about  the  geographic dimension.  In a paper I wrote about 25 years  ago, but never got published (Harvard Ed Review rejected it, with snippy comments, and I never submitted it  elsewhere),  I examined the notion &#8220;community&#8221; as the defining feature of two-year colleges.  I think it could be very instructive to contrast the concepts &#8220;community&#8221;  and &#8220;universe&#8221; as the terms that  name  the two different institutions.  That paper is not in digital format, but I should find a way to get it  copied and post it.  It&#8217;s the work that got my thinking going while in grad school at Stanford.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s the essence of the snobbery issue  for me.  At Big Game about 10 years ago (it alternates between Cal and Stanford), the Stanford cheering section at a game played at Berkeley held up a huge  sign that read &#8220;WE GOT IN!&#8221;  Now even though  two  of my brothers had Berkeley degrees and I did  Stanford grad work, that kind of snottiness is sick.  But it pervades higher education.</p>
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