|
Faculty Hiring Trends Hard to Reverse
To supporters of, and those interested in, Project
Sycamore:
We are encouraged by the response so far to our
limited initial communication. We want
to thank those who have signed the petition, those
who have written with encouragement
and criticisms, and those who have contributed. We
soon intend to reach out to a wider
audience and ask your help in making our next series
of contacts as productive as
possible.
To that end and most importantly, if you share our
goals but have not yet signed the
petition, we ask you to sign now if circumstances
permit. The influence
of the Project will turn in large measure on the
numbers we can muster. Those numbers
will be visible at the outset by the petition
signatures. Remember that by signing the
petition you are not "joining" an "organization." You
are simply expressing support for
Father Jenkins's aim of increasing Catholic
representation on the faculty and expressing
opposition to continued performances of The Vagina
Monologues.
Click here to sign the Petition
Next, we again urge you to pass on information about
Project Sycamore and its web site
to your friends. An ever-widening circle of persons
telling their friends about this Project
will be the surest and best way to gather together all
who are concerned about preserving
the Catholic identity of Notre Dame.
We have heard from some who share our goals but
still have reservations. We thank them
for sharing their questions with us. No organization
can perfectly represent the views of
all who subscribe to its principal purposes, but we
want to do the best we can.
We wish to address briefly one of those reservations
because it may occur to others and
because evidence that it is groundless is beginning to
appear. A few correspondents have
said that, while they agree the threat to Catholic
identity is serious, they also believe they
can rest secure because Father Jenkins intends to
add more Catholics to the faculty. This
confidence, while understandable, is unwarranted for
the simple but decisive reason that
these days it is the faculty, not the President, that
largely controls faculty hiring and
tenure. As a long-time philosophy professor described
the difficulty.
"The real problem is that the hiring policies of the last
thirty years have given us a
faculty, especially in the humanities and sciences,
that is more and more devoid of
Catholic sensibilities....Fr. Jenkins sincerely wants to
do something about it. The
question is whether he will be able to. There is no
group of people harder to deal with
than entrenched university faculty."
Click here to read the article
In short, Father Jenkins can exhort, and it is
reasonable to hope for some compliance by
the faculty. But it is unrealistic to assume that
secularized departments will, without
resistance, change their practices to the extent
necessary to restore the "predominance"
of "Catholic intellectuals" demanded by the
University's mission statement. A major
alteration in the hiring pratices of the last thirty
years will be necessary simply to prevent
Catholics from sliding into a minority, since Catholics
have constituted less than 40% of
those hired to the Arts and Letters faculty during the
last two years while retirees
have been, and will continue to be,mainly
Catholic.
Faculty opposition is already being voiced. The last of
a series of articles in The
Observer on Father Jenkins's proposed change is
headed, "Professors Question
Recruitment Approach" (10/12/06). No professor is
reported to support Father Jenkins.
Rather, professors spoke of the "alienating"
and "chilling" effect of Father Jenkins's
statements and voiced their "skepticism"
and "suspicion." They "questioned whether
increases in the numbers of Catholics" is wise, and
thought rather that it was important to
hire persons, Catholic or not, who are "models to
students." The general sense of the
comments was best captured by a professor who said
that Fr. Jenkins should, in effect,
not have spoken of the University's mission in terms
of Catholicism but rather in terms of
"promoting Catholic virtues." That, he said, would
have pleased "a Jew, a Muslim, a
Hindu" – and presumably, though he did not say so,
all Christians as well. [link]
If Father Jenkins holds to his resolve, it seems clear
that the ensuing controversy will
dwarf that over The Vagina Monologues – where the
faculty's success is an unhappy
precedent. To succeed in his stated goal, Father
Jenkins will need all the support and
encouragement to persevere that he can get. Project
Sycamore is designed both to provide
it and to report on the course of events.
Thank you for your support and encouragement, and,
if you have not already, please take
the time now to sign our petition and forward this
message to others who might share our
concern for the distinctively Catholic mission of Notre
Dame.
Sincerely,
Project Sycamore Steering Committee
Richard V. Allen (’57, ’58)
Dr. Daniel M. Boland (’56, ’61)
Timothy M. Dempsey (’89)
William H. Dempsey (’52)
Dr. John A. Gueguen, Jr. (’56, ’58)
George L. Heidkamp (’52)
Amelia Elizabeth Marcum (’04)
Joseph A. Reich, Jr. (’57)
Dr. Susan Biddle Shearer (’88)
|