Curry, Schmidt, & Jarvis Join SOPHIA Leadership

SOPHIA Board of Trustees unanimously elects new members to leadership team

Dr. Ken Stikkers

Dr. Kenneth Stikkers

SOPHIA has been enormously fortunate to have had Dr. Ken Stikkers serve as Trustee and our Vice Chairman of the Board of Trustees. Dr. Stikkers has been an active participant in SOPHIA’s work and a constant champion of our mission. We are so grateful for his efforts and thank him for his long service to the organization. With his recent request to step down from SOPHIA’s leadership team, we undertook efforts to select and elect a new member of our Board of Trustees.

Dr. Tommy J. Curry, Heidi Schmidt, and Erik Jarvis, three new SOPHIA leaders

Dr. Tommy J. Curry.

Dr. Tommy J. Curry

Philosophers so often disagree that it is wonderful to celebrate our unanimous decision to elect Dr. Tommy J. Curry as a Trustee of SOPHIA. Dr. Curry holds a Personal (Distinguished) Chair in Africana Philosophy and Black Male Studies at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland. He won a 2018 American Book Award for The Man-Not: Race, Class, Genre, and the Dilemmas of Black Manhood. He participated as an outstanding facilitator in our 2013 SOPHIA symposium at the University of Mississippi on the question: “Should Everyone Go to College?” He has given several papers on SOPHIA panels over the years and collaborated with Dr. Gwenetta Curry on the 2018 publication of a paper in a SOPHIA led panel of articles in Dewey StudiesIn addition, he was a guest early on the Philosophy Bakes Bread podcast about The Man-Not, in episode 9, “Studying Black Men.” He joined us again on the show in episode 32, after he received many death threats for his important publicly engaged work, yielding one of our most downloaded episodes, “The Public Philosopher and the Gadfly,” concerning especially the challenges for Black public philosophers. Dr. Curry has been an inspirational leader of the Philosophy Born of Struggle community. He is a prolific scholar with many articles and a growing number of books published. We look forward to the rich contributions that we anticipate from him as a Trustee for the future of SOPHIA!

Dr. Sergia Hay.

Dr. Sergia Hay

SOPHIA has also long needed to grow our leadership team of officers. We are grateful to Dr. Sergia Hay, who for years has served as our Membership and Chapter Development Officer. She has grown a SOPHIA chapter beautifully in Tacoma, Washington. We recognized that the job of chapter development and membership should be split up into its two parts. SOPHIA is pleased to announce therefore that we have also unanimously elected Ph.D. student Heidi Schmidt to the position of Chapter Development Officer and Lexington SOPHIA Chapter President Erik Jarvis to the position of Membership Officer.

Heidi Schmidt.

Heidi Schmidt

Heidi Schmidt is one of the founders of SOPHIA’s Roanoke Chapter, as well as a doctoral student in the University of Kentucky’s Ph.D. in Educational Sciences’ Philosophical and Cultural Inquiry track. She is an author and has worked as a librarian. She is also a Becker Fellow and is a leader in the Philosophers for Sustainability group. She produced the Civic Connections podcast and has participated both in leading our Roanoke Chapter and in meetings with our Lexington SOPHIA Chapter. We are excited to welcome her to the position of Chapter Development Officer!

SOPHIA leaders established our goal of launching local chapters in 2015 and began planning how they would work in the time since. While we have offered seed grants to help start local chapters, we have yet to determine the best ways of sharing information about our chapters online. Planning and deliberation with Schmidt is among our highly anticipated developments. Exciting efforts are on their way.

Erik Jarvis

Erik Jarvis

Erik Jarvis has participated in the Lexington SOPHIA Chapter since its very first meeting in early 2018. He serves as a Senior Facilities Information Services Administrator in the Office of Information Technology Services at the University of Kentucky. He was elected President of the Lexington SOPHIA Chapter and is energetic and a terrific facilitator of SOPHIA conversations. In addition, he has participated in drafts and revision of SOPHIA One-Sheets in planning for chapter meetings. His expertise in information technology is a welcome boon for SOPHIA as well. We are eager to work with him moving forward on our first concerted membership initiative, aiming to grow our membership and our ties with members. We welcome him to the position of Membership Officer!

If you have any questions about this announcement or about SOPHIA activities, reach out to our Executive Director, Dr. Eric Thomas Weber by email at philosophersinamerica@gmail.com.

The Ethics of Political Advertising

One-Sheet for SOPHIA Conversations

Adobe logo, to serve as a link to the Adobe PDF version of the one-sheet.

Printable one-sheet (front & back) in Adobe PDF.

Students in the Communication Law and Ethics course at Fitchburg State University created this one-sheet for the Worcester County (MA) SOPHIA Chapter. Dr. J.J. Sylvia IV and Dr. Kyle Moody edited it. Its creation was supported by SOPHIA and the Douglas and Isabelle Crocker Center for Civic Engagement. Students included Lindsey Ogden, Kenneth Howell, Martin Heffler, Skyler Saddow, Edgar Mutebi, and Harrison Svihla.

While political advertising can be a useful tool to reach the public in order to inform them on political topics and candidates, these types of advertisements are often saturated in controversy.

Image of a woman at her laptop on which the screen reads: 'Fake News.'

Click here, on the image above, or on the Adobe PDF link on right to open a printable, Adobe PDF version of the one-sheet, which, if printed, is intended to be printed front and back.

SOPHIA is grateful to the students in the Communication Law and Ethics course at Fitchburg State University, as well as to Drs. Sylvia and Moody and to the Crocker Center for Civic Engagement.

The Ethics of Fake News

One-Sheet for SOPHIA Conversations

Adobe logo, to serve as a link to the Adobe PDF version of the one-sheet.

Printable one-sheet (front & back) in Adobe PDF.

Students in the Communication Law and Ethics course at Fitchburg State University created this one-sheet for the Worcester County (MA) SOPHIA Chapter. Dr. J.J. Sylvia IV and Dr. Kyle Moody edited it. Its creation was supported by SOPHIA and the Douglas and Isabelle Crocker Center for Civic Engagement.

Over the course of the 2016 U.S. Presidential election, then-candidate Donald J. Trump popularized the term “Fake News.” Although politicians and the media now frequently use the term, much confusion remains over the meaning of the term and what actually “counts” as fake news.

Image of a woman at her laptop on which the screen reads: 'Fake News.'

Click here, on the image above, or on the Adobe PDF link on right to open a printable, Adobe PDF version of the one-sheet, which, if printed, is intended to be printed front and back.

SOPHIA is grateful to the students in the Communication Law and Ethics course at Fitchburg State University, as well as to Drs. Sylvia and Moody and to the Crocker Center for Civic Engagement.

092: Ep89 – BC17 – Education and Gender

Philosophy Bakes Bread radio show & podcast

Dr. Jane Roland Martin.After a long hiatus, we’re back to release this short, breadcrumb episode, number 89, with Dr. Jane Roland Martin on Education and Gender. Dr. Martin has been a prolific author on the philosophy of education, and in this short episode, explains some of her thinking about past figures in that area, who excluded some things that need to be taught to everyone, and considered their narrower visions the right approach to education for boys. Then, when education for girls caught on, they were thought to need the same education that boys received, excluding those things long considered feminine, which all people should learn.

Image of breadcrumbs.

Dr. Martin was our guest in episode 88 of the show, titled “School Was Our Life.” This short breadcrumb episode is a follow up to that longer conversation, addressing one of the themes of her work. Be sure to check out her most recent book, School Was our Life, as well as The Schoolhome, mentioned in this episode.

Reach out to us on Facebook @PhilosophyBakesBreadand on Twitter @PhilosophyBB; email us at philosophybakesbread@gmail.com; or call and record a voicemail that we play on the show, at 859.257.1849. Philosophy Bakes Bread is a production of the Society of Philosophers in America (SOPHIA). Check us out online at PhilosophyBakesBread.com and check out SOPHIA at PhilosophersInAmerica.com.

 

(13 mins)

Click here for a list of all the episodes of Philosophy Bakes Bread.

 

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Notes

  1. Episode 88 with Dr. Martin, “School Was Our Life,” and her book by that title.
  2. Jane Roland Martin, The Schoolhome: Rethinking Schools for Changing Families (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1995).

Education as a Public Resource for Addressing American Political Polarization

Civil American, Volume 5, Article 1 (June 23, 2020).

| By Preston Stovall |

Part 1: Speaking to the Middle

I

Adobe logo, to serve as a link to the Adobe PDF version of the transcript.

Paginated PDF version.

An educated populace is crucial for a well-functioning democracy, and in the U.S. the use of pamphlets, periodicals, opinion pieces, and public letters, stretching back before the revolution, testifies to the importance that Americans place on an educated public. The use of these devices has helped keep American citizens apprised of the problems we face, and in the early Republic especially it was an important method of consensus-building.

Benjamin Rush

Benjamin Rush.

This interest found kindred expression in a general concern with education in the United States and the colonies, one that many of the founders shared: Benjamin Franklin was instrumental in the creation of what would become the University of Pennsylvania, Benjamin Rush founded both Dickinson college and what would become Franklin and Marshall College (‘Franklin’ named after Benjamin), and Thomas Jefferson worked to establish a system of schools in Virginia, from the local level up to the University of Virginia, with the aim of selecting the brightest pupils for further instruction at each stage.

These projects were animated by a sense of education as something like a public resource for the American people. As a public resource education offers individual citizens not only a path to gainful employment but also the possibility of improving our lives by developing the habits of thought and conscience that accrue through a period of prolonged engagement with the thoughts and deeds of those who came before us. And by creating such citizens American education offers, for the public, successive cohorts able to sustain the intelligent collective reflection over the shape of American society that attends our participation in this experiment in self-government.

Thinking of education as a resource for the American people highlights the importance of the principles and institutions that shape its management. For just as the principles governing (e.g.) Fish, Wildlife, and Park services for U.S. citizens are enforced by various institutional mechanisms, and these geared toward the end (in part) of allowing us to enjoy the public goods that come with resource use in wilderness areas, so are the institutions of education meant to be run by principles that enable American citizens to enjoy the personal and social benefits that come with education. And just as access to wilderness areas redounds on the health of American society and its citizens, so does access to education. This analogy suggests that if education is a resource for the American people then educators—as stewards of the use of that resource—have a duty to mind the institutional norms and mechanisms that enable the public to enjoy its benefits, just as employees of FWP have a duty to mind resource management in wilderness areas.

Thomas Jefferson.

Thomas Jefferson.

Despite its close ties to the founding of the Republic, in practice higher education, as with political representation, would remain for generations the province of the elite, however. When Jefferson speaks of the “best geniuses” that will be “raked from the rubbish annually” by the school system he proposed for Virginia (Ford 2010, 61), his candidate geniuses were white men from families wealthy enough to pay for higher education.

It is a testament to the animating ideals of the American system of government that we have gradually overcome some of the barriers obstructing the universal enjoyment of our rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. If the development of American society is to proceed on the basis of a more thorough realization of the principles of individual liberty and collective self-government that animate our country, and if education in the United States offers both the individual benefit of personal betterment and the public good of intelligent control over the shape of our union, then it will be important that American educational institutions foster the mutual understanding that precedes collective action. For we cannot effectively work together on a common project if we do not understand what our partners want and are trying to accomplish.

II

Unfortunately, we live in a time of increasing political polarization in the United States, and this makes it harder for people to understand one another across political divides (see section III for the details). This polarization has grown sharply in the last twenty-five years. According to the Pew Research Center, in 2016 more than 50% of those identifying either as Democrat or Republican held not only an unfavorable but a very unfavorable view of the other party (Pew Research Center 2016b). By contrast, in 2014 43% of Republicans and 38% of Democrats had a very unfavorable view of the other party, and in 1994 these percentages were just 17% and 16%, respectively (Pew Research Center 2014). This growing divide is reflected in different views about what our top priorities should be (Jones 2019). There is also a rising sense that public discourse on political issues has become too divisive (Pew Research Center 2019).

This situation makes it difficult for people of different political views to talk to one another without the conversation devolving into acrimony. That in turn makes it difficult to share and improve on the ideas we have about what we are facing and what to do about it. It would thus seem that U.S. educators, qua stewards of the public resource that is education, bear a duty to intervene in this situation in ways that foster the collective understanding and self-government that I am suggesting education offers the American people.

Class in discussion outside on the campus of the University of Mississippi.

III

There are reasons to be optimistic about the possibility of such intervention. Research going back over three decades suggests that Americans share more political commitments than they realize, and that it is the vocal minorities in the wings that are driving the sense of a division. Summarizing a recent study and the associated background literature, Stevens (2019) writes (emphasis in the original):

  • Democrats and Republicans significantly overestimate how many people on the ‘other side’ hold extreme views. Typically, their estimates are roughly double the actual numbers for a given issue.
  • Greater partisanship is associated with holding more exaggerated views of one’s political opponents.
  • The Perception Gap is strongest on both “Wings” (America’s more politically partisan groups).
  • Consumption of most forms of media, including talk radio, newspapers, social media, and local news, is associated with a wider Perception Gap.
  • Education seems to increase, rather than mitigate, the Perception Gap (just as increased education has found to track with increased ideological prejudice). College education results in an especially distorted view of Republicans among liberals in particular.
  • The wider people’s Perception Gap, the more likely they are to attribute negative personal qualities (like ‘hateful’ or ‘brainwashed’) to their political opponents.

College campus.It is distressing that both college education and consumption of most forms of media today appear correlated with a greater perception gap, and this research reinforces the suspicion that we are facing a period of increasingly difficult collective action on account of a failure to understand one another. But the model mocked up here also suggests we are facing an opportunity as well. For if we share more in common than we realize, while it tends to be the vocal extremist minorities in the wings who dominate public conversation, then once we have a better understanding of where most people are located it may be that collective understanding (if not agreement) will be easier to reach than it appears right now.

My proposal in this essay is that educators make an effort to speak to the middle on politically-charged issues, and toward that end I gather together some social-scientific data and offer an interpretive gloss about how to proceed. My focus will lie on the situation on college campuses, as I believe that university educators have a particular duty to model the norms of thoughtful conversation that are needed for the development of mutual understanding. Higher education in the U.S. today has seen its own trends of increased political polarization, however, and so it will be important for the academician to address the problem as it appears within the academy as well. But if we educators can build up a bulwark of sensible people in the middle of the debate on university campuses, we might hope to more effectively intervene in the situation with the public at large.

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