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Worthy work: the National Association of Scholars — 6 Comments

  1. I was a member of NAS until a few years ago. I even attended a national conference in Boston. It was great to finally be with other academics who were of like mind instead of being isolated. When I joined there were 4 other faculty on my campus who were also NAS members, then I ended up the only one. I dropped my membership as it became obvious, that despite their good work, it was going nowhere. Higher education is a lost cause IMO, and I’m so glad I’m retired. BTW, Jay and I used to communicate a bit since we are both CT based, but like I said, it’s really pissing into the wind. I admire Jay’s stamina. I had none left after years of being threatened with my job (despite having tenure), and verbally attacked by administrators, faculty, students, and alums. The only people who I got any support from were the staff.

    Until there are serious financial consequences for higher ed, they will continue along the leftist path, with each older radical faculty cloning themselves with the new hires, so the system perpetuates.

  2. I just finished the article Mr. Bergman recommended, and it is excellent.
    A detailed, lucid, and compelling narrative of how the world-wide, age-old institution of slavery was finally eradicated in Britain and its American colonies (pre- and post-independence) mostly by, if I may use the phrase, “old dead white men.”
    With significant help from the ladies and from former slaves themselves, of course.
    History done right.

    https://www.nas.org/blogs/article/how-the-times-1619-project-misses-the-point

  3. I looked at another article, out of personal interest, and found this delightful invitation at the bottom, although not on the 1619 post.

    What is “Ask a Scholar”?

    Have a question Wikipedia can’t answer? “Ask a Scholar” matches readers’ questions to scholars with answers. We invite readers to submit questions. Click on the link to send us an email, or you may submit questions via Intellectual Takeout’s Ask the Professor feature.

    Questions submitted for consideration should call more for educated judgment than for facts that can be found easily with an internet search. We especially welcome questions that provide professors the occasion to draw erudite distinctions and incorporate mention of matters you had no idea were connected to the topic at hand.

  4. Eva Brann, The Imaginative Conservative (Dec. 2, 2019): Jacob Klein: European Scholar and American Teacher

    The subtitle of my talk might be “Liberal Education: Program and/or Pedagogy?” The reason is that I think of Jacob Klein’s life as being an embodiment of that slash, “and/or” and therefore an occasion for asking what seems to me a question the answer to which determines the success—I mean the lively and secure survival—of liberal education.

    There is the much more often debated converse to the question: “Is there a specific pedagogy for liberal education?” This is the question: “Is there a specific curriculum for liberal education which goes with the kind of teaching you might call “liberal?” I won’t dwell on the answer today, except insofar as it bears on particular aspects of teaching. I’ll just say that I think the answer is that almost anything can be taught liberally—to a point. […]

    I am persuaded, even with a certain passion, that Liberal Education does have its most appropriate program, its preferable matter, and that this matter particularly calls for its own pedagogy. Concisely, and thus a little too peremptorily, put: You cannot achieve liberal education in the mode of a specialized teaching authority, a professor. That is by no means to say that professors who know their stuff inside-out can’t sometimes teach liberally—but it will be, I think, in an alternative style for them: Ex cathedra, “from the podium” will have to become “in the trenches,” on a chair around the table with the other human souls.

  5. I have been a member for about 25 years, and plan to continue though I am retired.

  6. I am a stalwart NAS member, and a serious financial contributor.

    Peter Wood assumed the presidency some years ago. As a full prof., anthropology, at BU, he had written the first book critical of diversity: “Diversity: The Invention of a Concept” (2003). I emailed him then, found we were both Haverford alums, and have since determined that we can identify only 4 non-leftist alums over the past 50 years: him, R.R. Reno the editor of the most worthy First Things semi-theological magazine, Howard Kurtz of National Review, and me.

    NAS has done super work under Wood’s leadership despite its meager resources. It is best if one goes to its website http://www.nas.org to see its work products.
    I’ll mention a few:

    -“Outsourced to China”, an exposure of the Confucius Institutes that wormed their way onto some 100 American campuses despite being an arm of the Beijing government to spread pro-Chinese propaganda. This report caught Capitol Hill’s attention, yielding an amendment to the 2018 defense appropriations bill making colleges choose between getting DoD money or giving up their Institutes.
    So this ChiComm propaganda arm is in gradual full retreat. No small accomplishment!

    -“Separate But Equal, Again: Neo-Segregation at Yale”. This 2-year study of race policies at ~200 colleges and universities has received attention from the Wall Street Journal, National Review, and Instapundit, among others.

    -“The Irreproducibility Crisis”, a critically important report on the flaws of modern sciences in using slipshod statistics, groupthink, and flawed research techniques.

    physicsguy:
    When the going gets tough, the tough get going! NAS needs your support. Please rethink.

    One need not be an academic to join: membership is open to all who wish to support NAS, with modest annual dues. Retirees are fine!

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