http://swopec.hhs.se/ratioi/abs/ratioi0053.htmAbstract: In Spring 2003, a large-scale survey of American academics was conducted using academic association membership lists from six fields: Anthropology, Economics, History, Philosophy (political and legal), Political Science, and Sociology. This paper focuses on one question: To which political party have the candidates you’ve voted for in the past ten years mostly belonged? The question was answered by 96.4 percent of academic respondents. The results show that the faculty is heavily skewed towards voting Democratic. The most lopsided fields surveyed are Anthropology with a D to R ratio of 30.2 to 1, and Sociology with 28.0 to 1. The least lopsided is Economics with 3.0 to 1. After Economics, the least lopsided is Political Science with 6.7 to 1. The average of the six ratios by field is about 15 to 1. Our analysis and related research suggest that for the the social sciences and humanities overall, a “one-big-pool” ratio of 7 to 1 is a safe lower-bound estimate, and 8 to 1 or 9 to 1 are reasonable point estimates. Thus, the social sciences and humanities are dominated by Democrats. There is little ideological diversity. We discuss Stephen Balch’s “property rights” proposal to help remedy the situation[Edited on September 14, 2005 at 5:18 PM. Reason : edit]
9/14/2005 5:18:25 PM
I guess it depends on exactly which science courses and which humanities courses are in question. I didn't find the ZO classes I've taken to be any harder, on average, than history or English classes. Hell, there's at least one 400 level ZO class that's as easy as PSY 200. Of course this is all anecdotal evidence, and the issues involved are very complicated. What easy for one person is hard for another, to name one problem. Socksie, for example, could easily pull his standard trick and convince us that there's no way to figure out anything on the subject.
9/14/2005 5:25:49 PM
Again, conservatives can put up or shut up. This is a non-issue if all they are going to do is bitch and sit around with their collective thumbs up their asses.Gives Rush/Hannity/Savage something to blather about though so it's all-good in AM radio land. /conservative talking here.
9/14/2005 5:26:14 PM
i'll buy that it's hard--if not impossible--to conclusively prove anything on that subject.that said, though, i'm about as sure of my opinion on the matter as i can be of anything that can't be conclusively proved. i think that i, as you say, have it "figured out".but that doesn't mean anything to anyone who doesn't share my opinion.
9/14/2005 5:28:37 PM
Cool. I figured a capable, assertive male like Keynes would be up to the task.That paper doesn't cover any sciences, though. I wonder what the ratio would be like there...EDIT: I can accept, perhaps, that some engineering courses are harder for the vast majority of people. I can't accept that any old science is harder than any old humanity. Especially not math. I find math to be extremely challenging, but some people breeze through it without even thinking. It depends... [Edited on September 14, 2005 at 5:37 PM. Reason : d]
9/14/2005 5:29:49 PM
9/14/2005 5:56:12 PM
^I don't see where you're coming from with this comparison to "women in the workforce." The premise behind the pro-women, anti-discrimination movement has always been the choice of the matter in who one is. It's not like women (for the most part) can choose not to be women; therefore, if they are discriminated against "en masse" for their gender, there's not much they can do about it. That's not to advocate any one position on the "gender discrimination" issue, I'm just stating the logic behind the movement.(on TWW, if you elaborate on a point, you are automatically assumed to have held that position since birth--speaking of "lax standards")By contrast, political opinions are just that--fluid opinions that people hold. I don't buy into the "political discrimination" meme that has floated about lately, especially with regards to "bias in academia." Holding a political viewpoint does not warrant any special treatment; nor is bias against a political viewpoint some particular sin. I don't think "conservatives" are a special protected class.For example: I don't hear too many people complaining that there aren't enough Neo-Nazis in academia. Well, why not? Surely if it's wrong to discriminate against political viewpoints, that must be an unforgivable sin.At any rate, public universities will be hard-pressed to find people willing to vote against their own interests. No matter what principles one holds, the simple fact is that Democrats are the party of big government, and public universities are a big government institution.
9/14/2005 6:18:38 PM
I'm always amused when I receive the standard "university liberal bias" lecture from people who've never set foot into a classroom without being legally compelled to do so.
9/14/2005 6:26:47 PM
the author of this thread is an idiot
9/14/2005 6:29:44 PM
9/14/2005 6:39:45 PM
^
9/14/2005 7:42:20 PM
^ Too simplistic. You'd be surprsed to see how many people, say, in EE genuinely favor reduction of the military budget. That being despite the fact that the military is the single largest funder of research in EE.Basically, professor is an inherently "liberal" profession. You have to be preferring to go through hell to land a job in a more liberal (as in more freedom and independence) environment that pays significantly less than you could get with half your education if only you had different priorities. Many people incorrectly morph their honest and freely chosen disinterest in (large amounts of) money to a "right" to demand the same from everybody else. That's as far as economic liberalism is concerned. Social liberalism is a result of college professors being generally smart.[Edited on September 15, 2005 at 12:39 AM. Reason : .]
9/15/2005 12:38:32 AM
Social liberalism is a result of college professors being generally smart. somehow being able to have a "holier than thou" attitude about not having a "holier than thou" attitude.
9/15/2005 1:01:20 AM
those who can't "do", teachand there's your answer
9/15/2005 1:30:33 AM
9/15/2005 7:32:28 AM
^ Bullshit. I came back from private industry to get a PhD. Why? I want to teach others how not to fuck things up. I can be a hell of alot more effective doing this by combining teaching, research, and service in the field.Again, go get a PhD and get back to me about how easy it is compared to the "real world."
9/15/2005 9:06:58 AM
I heard tenure is the only thing keeping dipshits like you know who off the streets.
9/15/2005 9:14:25 AM
^^ i don't think he is saying that getting a PhD isn't difficult with respect to the "real world." Rather, I think he's saying that teaching in a university/school setting is easier than the "real world."
9/15/2005 9:16:49 AM
9/15/2005 9:20:54 AM
9/15/2005 9:25:44 AM
9/15/2005 9:31:47 AM
Incidently, I would seriously question the very premise that the bias as far as views on economy is actually present or at least that it is as prominent as some would argue. The implication is that the country is evenly divided into fiscal conservatives and fiscal liberals. That is simply not true. You wouldn't seriously argue that rednecks from Mississippi whose road signs are routinely paid by the freedom haters from Massachusetts know anything about self-reliance, would you? Same applies to the "values" crowd from rural North Carolina. Would they be opposed to tobacco buy-outs? Really? Face it, the majority of the American population is "liberal" when it comes to economy, and it's no wonder this situation is reflected in colleges.
9/15/2005 10:43:30 AM
Teaching is an easy, cushy job with a ton of free time - thats why so many Democrats are teachers.
9/15/2005 11:03:10 AM
Have you ever taught?
9/15/2005 11:04:53 AM
No - but my dad was a high school teacher. He worked an average of 180 days per year.
9/15/2005 11:13:21 AM
9/15/2005 11:16:55 AM
^ pwnt^^ I'm sure he was getting tons of money.
9/15/2005 11:34:50 AM
9/15/2005 11:44:20 AM
pwnt? How the fuck was that pwnt? Teaching is cushy - that’s why all you bleeding heart liberals take the position. It gives you more time to complain about President Bush and large, "evil" corporations. Also, it allows for high school teachers to brainwash, young and inexperienced children. After reading soap box - it seams they are somewhat successful.
9/15/2005 11:54:42 AM
GG,Ask any of your profs at this research I institution how cushy their job is. Make a point to ask the tenure-track folks how much time they actually get off between research, writing, lesson planning, teaching, service, and various administrative duties. Yes, there is flexibility in academe sometimes. That flexibility comes from working your ass off 95% of the other time though.
9/15/2005 12:08:07 PM
Being a former hardcore Republican, who intends to continue to the doctoral level, it becomes apparent that alot of capitalist ideas must be weighed with a bit of socialism. It has been shown that medecine, health care and energy do not have the means within the private sector to manage themselves for the common good. All are posting double digit percentage gains in costs every year, so that even middle class families cannot afford them, while at the same time vastly overcharging the government, who subsidize them. Liberal policies I believe work more towards a sustainable future on all sides, whereas the Bush era Republicanism is only concerned with economics and consolidating wealth to the few at any price. I think that we have been lured in the past by tales of people who don't have to work because they are on welfare or what not. But the same policies that Republicans have used to hurt the poor are also hurting the middle class. And by cutting the taxes on the richest Americans, who waste ten times more than the rest of us use, we have put the economic burden squarely on our own shoulders. Its reverse Robin Hood, take from the poor and give to the rich. In '08 I'm voting Democrat.
9/15/2005 12:11:11 PM
9/15/2005 12:57:11 PM
9/15/2005 1:37:51 PM
9/15/2005 2:10:05 PM
^^^ That's the truth, the people who use this quote have no experience what so ever in teaching. I've never heard anyone that has taught, or that has say gone as far as student teaching in an ed. program, say that teaching was easy, or "those who can't do, teach". Teaching is what they are doing. Look at this university, how many people have teachers that have mastered their field but can't teach it very well? (Engineering students?) I say this university in particular because it's a research institution and there are many professors here that are only interested in research and can't teach very well, they just do it because they have to in order to get funding. If done right teaching is one of the most difficult jobs there are. Take a look at the retention rate in the field, it's one of the lowest over the first 3 years. Could it be because it's very difficult? Accompanied by the fact that teachers are poorly compensated? There are a lot of shitty teachers, could it be because teaching is hard? And/or that since teachers or poorly compensated Ed. programs lowers their standards for admission and except students who aren't so bright. (Not that there aren't smart students in Ed. programs). So now you have some people in the field that honestly aren't the best coupled with the difficulty, are they gonna bust their ass for shitty pay, or are they just gonna lay back and go through the motions (we've all had these teachers i'm sure). And of course since not many people want to teach, no one is going to fire them as long as the kids are passing right, doesn't mean they're learning much but they're passing so school boards are happy. Anyone that has no experience teaching and says "those who can't do teach" is speaking out of ignorance.
9/15/2005 2:11:42 PM
Academic research is hard, time consuming and often thankless work.
9/15/2005 2:12:21 PM
9/15/2005 2:18:25 PM
9/15/2005 2:19:24 PM
Apparently, you didn't. You don't know shit about what the job of a University professor entails, yet you pretend to be the authority. How TGD of you!
9/15/2005 2:39:29 PM
9/15/2005 2:41:57 PM
9/15/2005 3:51:23 PM
9/15/2005 4:39:00 PM
What is GGMon's job?
9/15/2005 4:51:24 PM
9/15/2005 5:06:51 PM
9/15/2005 5:11:12 PM
why? That says nothing about the difficulty of TEACHING. it just says that the bullshit university policy doesn't value TEACHING in a TEACHER.
9/15/2005 5:12:25 PM
9/15/2005 5:16:47 PM
9/15/2005 5:20:33 PM
9/15/2005 5:30:03 PM
9/15/2005 5:40:28 PM