February 24, 2008

Mean and Nasty Academics: Bullying, Hazing, and Mobbing

“Tenure is supposed to protect scholars from outside control, but it does a lousy job of protecting them from one another.”
-- Kenneth Westhues, quoted in The Chronicle of Higher Education


I don't usually post my newsletters here, but I think this is a subject that needs to get more airing. So here is the text of my latest newsletter, called "Mean and Nasty Academics." (If you'd like to sign up for my bi-weekly (sometimes less frequent) newsletter, go to this page, which also lists the bonuses you will receive.)

Another reason I'm posting this newsletter issue is that I have received some interesting replies from my newsletter readers that will help those of you struggling with these issues. I will put these replies up in later posts.

Mean and Nasty Academics

"I was surprised to experience hazing as a graduate student, not once, but continually and by multiple professors… I watched how some of the other women faculty members in the department were treated, and they were second-class citizens at best." (Twale and De Luca, 2008, p.84)

"A tenured full female prof gets up to talk, and an untenured junior faculty man tells her that her ideas are not really important, that it may be a concern of hers but not ours. And the entire faculty went along with it, including the women... Be invisible. We weren’t supposed to say anything, even the strong women who could hold their own. Women sensed they were in a powerless position." [Ibid, p.85]

As an academic coach, I could add many more examples of graduate students and professors of all ranks being victimized by mean, nasty, harsh, underhanded, passive aggressive or bullying behavior at the hands of other academics.

The only reason I don’t give you details of what my clients have told me over the years is that I need to protect the identity of the victims. However, I’m not giving anything away if I tell you that I have heard numerous examples of departments ganging up on one individual, of professors being shunned, of tenured professors harassing other tenured professors, and of incredibly harsh treatment of graduate students by their advisors or other professors.

Bullying and emotional abuse don’t only exist in academia (see Mobbing: Emotional Abuse in the American Workplace). But Darla Twale and Barbara De Luca, the authors of Faculty Incivility: The Rise of the Academic Bully Culture and What to Do About It, suggest that there has been an increase in “bullying, mobbing, camouflaged aggression, and harassment” (p. xii) within academia.

In working with people who have been the victims of bullying, I find that one of their first needs is reassurance that they did not do anything to deserve such treatment. So let me say that No one, ever, under any circumstances, deserves to be humiliated, undermined, insulted, shunned, marginalized, ganged up on, or even spoken to harshly. If it has happened to you, you did not cause it to happen. And you are not alone.

What Can I Do About Bullying?

There is no space here to review the reasons that academics can be so cruel to one another. Instead, I’ll focus on what you can do about it. The following suggestions are summarized from the Twale and De Luca book; additional comments from me are in brackets.

  1. Avoid becoming part of an abusive department. Before you attend graduate school or accept a job, do your homework. Look at faculty turnover rates, policies and guidelines regarding harassment, and level of enforcement of such policies as seen in grievance filings and resolutions. [Note for prospective faculty: Talk to all the current and past faculty members that you can.] [Note for graduate students: Look at graduation rates and time to degree for both your prospective department and advisor, and talk to as many more advanced graduate students as you can to find out the “hall file” on any prospective advisor or department that you are considering.]
  1. If you are the victim of any kind of abuse:
    1. Document all communication concerning the abuse and take notes on all occurrences.
    2. Share with a close friend and/or colleague to get their take on the situation.
    3. Assess the situation coolly and continue to observe and collect information in order to see who is involved and how widespread the problem is.
    4. Don’t react precipitously or impulsively.
    5. Don’t react in kind. [Note: if you are equally rude, you won’t come out looking better than the perpetrator.]
    6. Show appropriate assertiveness. [Note: the way to do this could be the subject of a book, so get help with this if you don’t know how.]
    7. Get institutional support. The authors suggest that professors contact a local chapter of the American Association of University Professors. [Graduate students should contact their Director of Graduate Studies, the chairperson of their department, or their dean.]
    8. [Note: educate yourself about bullying – see links below.]
    9. [Note: If necessary, get help from a therapist or academic coach that is knowledgeable about this kind of situation.]

Luckily, academia has many wonderful people in it, who are horrified by the notion of abuse, and who would not stand for it if they were made aware of it. By exposing such behavior to the light of day, we can increase awareness and help increase the likelihood that administrators will intervene in cases of academic bullying.

Have you personally experienced an incident or situation in which you were bullied, abused or mobbed (ganged up on) within an academic setting? If you were, and you’d like to share it (with names and identities changed) in order to help the readers of this newsletter better understand what can occur in academia, please write me at gina@academicladder.com

Twale, Darla J. & De Luca, Barbara M. (2008) Faculty Incivility: The Rise of the Academic Bully Culture and What to Do About It. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass.

___________________________________________________________

If you have been the victim of bullying in academia, this informative blog has many useful links.
Bullying of Academics in Higher Education

Also see: “Mob Rule: In Departmental Disputes, Professors Can Act Just Like Animals” in The Chronicle of Higher Education.

And it can happen to postdocs: When Bad Things Happen to Good Postdocs”




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2 Comments:

At 5:51 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

What about students ganging up on professors? I have no problems with my colleagues, but huge problems with certain students. I notice it mainly with sorority girls in classes of 30-40 students. I first noticed the behavior 8-10 years ago, but it has become far worse in the last two years.

Some whisper throughout my lectures. When I call them on it, they deny that they have been speaking, or claim they needed something repeated because they could not hear me and did not want to disrupt the class, or they needed to repeat what I said for their friend who is partly deaf -- all lies.

They deliberately show contempt with eye-rolling, bad-mouthing, by eating an entire meal during class, letting the door bang when arriving late, or exiting the class for a drink or bathroom break during lecture (or re-organizing their backpack or changing clothes). In class interactions they complain about various things, consistently exaggerating the course’s weaknesses while persistently ignoring its strengths. These girls seem intent on showing their power, so I tell them outright to take their complaint to the dept head (because I know he will back me up). But the most recent ringleader did so and lied outright, falsely accusing me of actions I had not taken. The head offered to meet with us both and she backed down. Do such girls want to sabotage the class or me personally? It feels very personal.

Please note that I know for certain that the young women of whom I speak are in sororities, but I do not wish to badmouth them all. Some are hard workers with leadership skills.

Note: I have a classroom etiquette section in all my syllabi that we read aloud on the first day of class addressing the issues above (speaking while others speak, door banging, etc.). I also call students' attention to the item in all my syllabi reserving me the right to raise or lower a student's final grade on the basis of their classroom behavior and participation. Anyone who behaves in the ways I describes above suffers the grade penalty, yet they still persist. After 27 years as a prof, I am not at all afraid to assert myself with such students and often do, but doing so also sometimes validates them, and I certainly do not want to argue with them in front of the class. Other students sometimes notice these students' behavior but rarely comment on the disruption. Some definitely feel intimidated. I happen to be female (of average height, weight, looks, dress, achievement, etc.) at a well-known state university in the western U.S.

Does anyone else have this problem? What do you do about it? I had a colleague come in and do a peer teaching evaluation once but the group of five behaved for the visitor.

 
At 6:19 PM, Blogger Gina said...

This is a terrible problem, anonymous, and you're certainly not alone. It truly amazes me that professors have to work under these conditions. You might be interested in reading the post in the Tomorrow's Professor blog called "The Rules of Engagement: Socializing College Students for the New Century," by Neil F. Williams. It's one professor's rules for classroom behavior. At one point there were many comments following this article, although when I just checked I could only find two. But it's definitely a subject that most profs have dealt with. I would also like to hear what others have done about this issue.

 

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