Dear Governor Ducey,
Today I received a note from my chair telling me that because of the budget cuts the creative writing course
caps will increase by two students a class. That might not seem like many to
you. It’s not, in some scheme of things. That’s only 8 more students. But for the
university, that’s pretty good money. There are six and a half full time
faculty in my area. That’s 52 more students. Undergraduates are charged $1,958
for a 3 credit hour class. That’s
$101,816 more for the university. We won’t be making a huge dent in the
$17,000,000 in cuts to our university but every little bit helps, right?
Strangely, no matter how many more students we teach, we
receive no increase in salary. And, in fact, we may receive pay cuts in the
form of furlough. It’s difficult, in creative writing classes, to absorb
additional students. Each week, 4 students turn in poems, essays, and short
stories. The faculty write extensive comments on each of them. The students
also write comments. We write comments on the comments. We spend class time discussing
how the writing works, what is the voice, what is an image, how is the
dialogue, where is the scene, what are the verbs, what ways might we suggest to
improve the piece. Every week, I write 3000 words on student work. I tell the
students about their comments, this will help them in the workplace. They’ll
learn how to respond to their colleagues’ work in critical and helpful ways.
Their creative thinking skills will help them problem solve, innovate, invent, and
develop new things. I talk to them like a capitalist because that’s the society
we live in. (I also tell them that the time to write is probably the most
valuable thing they’ll get in college. That they should take the time for their
art regardless of its monetary worth. But I don’t tell you that.) These classes
are mind-blowing for the students. Not just mine—but creative writing classes
everywhere let students speak for themselves, discuss books they love, try to
emulate those books and invent their own idea of the book, follow their ideas
out until the very last thread and then try to figure out how to tie it all
together. Some complain about MFA programs proliferating. How can it not?
Creativity explodes. It is exponential. Let it erupt.
Taken from the AWP Writer Website: “The Association of
Writers and Writing Programs surveys conducted periodically since 1978 indicate
that most teachers of writing find they are most effective in the workshop
format, and that the majority of workshops have a class size of 11–20 students.
AWP recommends that workshop size not exceed 15, and that 12 be viewed as
desirable and most effective. 12 is half of 24. 24 is one less than the number
we will now teach in our undergraduate writing workshop classes. It should be
noted that many institutions define “writing workshop” as equivalent to
teaching two courses because of the additional work required in conferences,
tutorials, and thesis preparation that writing students need for the
development of their work.”
We’re already teaching double the number of students recommended
in our workshop classes. Why not two more? With two more students in a class,
it’s not that bad. They’ll just get a tiny bit less time for workshop. A little
bit fewer of those 3000 words. They’ll survive. We’ll survive. The students?
Well, I’m sure they don’t read the AWP recommendations any more than you do. At
least, the undergraduates don’t. Our MFA students might. We hope they’re not
counting class mates. We hope they all know we will do double the amount of
work for them. Teaching at a university is pretty volunteer-oriented anyway. We
don’t HAVE to write 3000 words a week on student work. We don’t have to teach
new texts every semester. We don’t have to assign 3 stories per student a
semester. We don’t have to host extracurricular reading series. We don’t have
to write grants. We don’t have to have a literary magazine. One of my colleagues,
who teaches 4 classes a semester, also volunteers to help run the undergraduate
lit magazine. She also serves on committees. She also advises. She helped draft
a ten-page document on learning outcomes She also runs a literary magazine of
her own. She also supports our reading series by hosting guest writers. Another
of my colleagues co-edits that lit mag with her. He supports the reading series
by helping to host guests. He read on several theses since one of our
colleagues is on leave. Another colleague runs the Northern Arizona Playwriting
Showcase. She mentors our graduate students to teach creative writing. She
works on committees. She nominates and writes letters of incredible opportunity
for her students and her colleagues. She also helped draft a ten-page document
on learning outcomes. Another colleague works tirelessly to find funding for
our students. She writes curriculum proposals and drafts assessment protocol. She
also helped draft a ten-page document on learning outcomes. Another colleague
took over for me as director while I’m on sabbatical. He’s gone to bat for our
area to make sure we don’t lose more than we is obviously, already lost. He
hosts agents and editors in his class. He sits on faculty senate. Each of helps our students find venues to publish.
Each of us brings new writers into the classroom. We chaperone them to the AWP
conference. We spend entire days working on their theses. We host guest
writers. We attend student readings. We write grants for the series. We advise
literary magazines. We respond to student emails in the middle of the night. We
write them letters of rec two days before the deadline. We give them books we
love and think would serve them well. We coach them on careers and we coach
them on work-life balance and we coach them on how to be writers in a world
that claims to not value writers but, in the end, requires creative writing for
almost everything, including writing letters to the governor. The more work we
are assigned, the less we can volunteer. Double the number of recommended
students in a workshop. It will be hard to keep up the pace.
I wonder what it would be like if you were asked to do
double the recommended governing (please, god, no). What if you woke up this
morning and were asked to govern a whole other state? What if it wasn’t a
Republican state? What if you had to govern something like Oregon or New York?
What if your constituents expected government to not only fix their roads but
to educate their students? You don’t get double the salary or double the staff.
For two states, you must now make sure the lawns are mowed at the park. You
must scrub graffiti off the walls of the subway. You must decide whose water
rights trump whose and who has to clean up the polluted ones (You. You.
Remember. There’s just one of you). You must make sure the fire departments can
put out fires. (You’re good with a hose, right?) You should also make sure the
garbage is collected. Make sure the toilets flush. Make sure the prisoners are
locked up in their prisons (this one will be easy for you. You love prisons,
yes?). Make sure kids aren’t being beaten. Make sure rapists are prosecuted.
Make sure the snow is plowed (it snows in Oregon. In New York. Even in
Arizona). Make sure the teachers are certified, even if they’re not quiet. Make
sure you answer each letter from your constituents. That’s your first job,
right? Listening to your constituents. So many letters. Double what you had
before.
1 comment:
I just want to say that I am reading your letters and it gives me heart that you are writing them, even when circumstances are so dire and keep getting direr. Thank you for helping me take heart.
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