Posts tagged rutgers

Posted 1 year ago

Yesterday, which was Rutgers Day, I was a Millionaire for McCormick (Rutgers’ president) to satirize the administration’s complicity with the gradual privatization of the university. The obscured sign reads “Educational Opportunity TRUST Fund.” It was a chance to simultaneously do two things I very much enjoy: dress nice and protest tuition hikes.

Posted 1 year ago

Now that national news outlets have picked up the story, the student union will be having a press conference today at noon (EST). We were also ordered a pizza by some wonderful people in Madison, Wisconsin in a show of solidarity.

Posted 1 year ago

NY Times - Students at Rutgers Occupy a Building

These are my friends! They are still in the building at the time of this writing. Given that the newly-elected student government is overwhelmingly affiliated with the student unions, this is quite an excellent way to introduce the new student administration.

Posted 1 year ago

The rally for which I made a flyer has just become a rally to support the students currently occupying the administration’s office in Old Queens, one of the original campus buildings at Rutgers. My friends in the student union are having a ‘study-in’ to protest the administration’s complicity with the gradual privatization of the university.

Posted 1 year ago

Another flyer I made for the Rutgers Student Union’s ongoing actions.

Posted 1 year ago

Walk into Action

I’m thrilled that I know these people personally.

Posted 1 year ago

University needs participation, not spectacle

I got a letter published in my school’s newspaper, The Daily Targum. A bit of background: RUPA, the student-run programming association, recently hosted Jersey Shore’s Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi for two events on campus, which cost RUPA $32,000. It was very popular, with 2,000 students attending two sold-out shows. A controversy was ignited, however, because the school (through a different organization) will be paying Nobel Laureate Toni Morrison $30,000 to speak at graduation this year. One student wrote a column calling for the abolishment of RUPA, and many others called its judgment into question. News outlets around the country have picked up the story, and many people are seizing it as an opportunity to confirm their worst stereotypes about New Jersey. Many articles and letters were written about it in the Targum, but I believe most of them missed the point about the controversy. 

Following the controversy surrounding Nicole “Snooki” Polizzi’s visit to the University, a group of students have undertaken a project to bring Bruce Springsteen to campus. The leader of this effort gave his reasoning in Thursday’s brief in The Daily Targum titled “Facebook group hopes to draw Springsteen to campus”: “[Our] image is tarnished, and bringing someone like Bruce here will help people refresh their thoughts about Rutgers.” While I am a longtime fan of Springsteen’s music, this effort is completely misplaced. Replacing one N.J. celebrity with another misses the point entirely. The University should not judge the strength of its reputation on the names of the celebrities it can bring to campus. The effort to improve the school by bringing Springsteen trivializes the lessons we can learn from the controversy about Snooki into a shallow argument about which celebrities are “better” for the school.

…I think the divisiveness of the Snooki controversy points to a larger issue, one that calls into question the structure of RUPA. Many students expressed the idea that they had little say in this decision about how their campus fees were spent. According to Monday’s brief in The Daily Targum titled “RUPA says 2,000 students asked for Snooki appearance”: “Before selecting a performer, RUPA members brainstorm ideas, analyze trends in campus programming and gauge student input while maintaining an annual programming budget.” This resembles the work of a marketing department, not an organization that should be accountable to the students who pay its fees. Such an arrangement reduces most students to the role of consumers of pre-selected events. It’s unsurprising, then, that many students feel the work of RUPA does not reflect their interests, even if events like Snooki’s appearance are very well attended. RUPA is playing for popularity, not participation.

If we want the University to have an interesting culture, then we should strive to build arrangements that foster student participation beyond surveys and websites. Rather than trying to see which media figures do best in polls of student preferences, we should work toward a culture in which students work democratically to create art and events that genuinely reflect student life at the University.

Unfortunately, for the sake of topicality (and length), I couldn’t go after the real spectacle at Rutgers: the football program. For the same reasons, I couldn’t quote Guy Debord, either. But nevertheless, I think my comments apply to many colleges. The more a college does to market itself as ‘hip’ to prospective students through spectacles and similar events, the more it does to undermine genuine student-created culture, ultimately making the college a far less interesting place to be.

Posted 1 year ago

Rutgers Professor Maps Toxic Ads, Then Buys Billboards to Publish The Results

mediafreakgodicon:

Naa Oyo A. Kwate’s innovative research analyzes the urban environment in terms of its impact on health. As Associate Professor in the Department of Human Ecology at Rutgers University, she carries out studies that focus on what she calls “toxic exposures” to things like fast-food outlets, advertising messages, and even subtler cues such as bulletproof glass, barbed wire, or shopfront security grilles.

For Edible Geography, I talked to Kwate about several of her recent studies, including one in which she mapped alcohol advertising in Central Harlem against residents’ drinking patterns. Not only did she discover that an astonishing 25 percent of the outdoor advertising space in the neighborhood was dedicated to selling alcohol, but also that exposure to these ads increased black women’s chances of being a problem drinker by up to 13 percent.

What’s particularly interesting about her current project, though, is that she is not only documenting the urban environment’s effect on health, but then turning around and using the same tools—outdoor advertising—to publish her results and stage a positive intervention. She’s still in the data-collection phase of this ambitious 5-year study, funded by a NIH Innovator Award, but eventually she plans to buy billboards, use them to disseminate her findings and their implications in terms of racism and inequality, and then measure her participants’ health pre- and post-exposure, in order to evaluate the impact of her own messaging.

The idea, Kwate explains, is to “play off the finding that, in some instances, African Americans—particularly those of lower income—who deny experiences of racism actually have worse health than those who report it.” Rather than a message of uplift, her ads will, she hopes, sensitize residents to the pervasive inequalities embedded in their streets and storefronts. Although this counter-marketing campaign is still a few years away, Kwate offers an example of the kind of message she might want to communicate in an bus shelter ad: “Normally, this space has a liquor ad in it.”

You can read more about Kwate’s shocking findings thus far and her bike-mounted fleet of urban researchers over at Edible Geography. I can’t wait (5 long years!) to see how her own blunt un-advertising campaign works out.

My school has some pretty cool professors sometimes.

Posted 1 year ago
i'm thinking of applying to rutgers for philosophy. can you share with me some thoughts?
tpww-deactivated20101202 asked

Apart from ‘DO IT YOU WON’T REGRET IT,’ here’s my advice. I’m assuming that you’d be coming in as an undergrad. 

When I switched into the philosophy program here at Rutgers, I didn’t have a whole lot of expectations. It was only after my mind was made up to switch that I found out Rutgers has one of the best departments. I think that was a good attitude to have, because I simply approached it with a desire to learn. Don’t expect to hear much about philosophers that are considered well-known or famous a lot of the time unless you’re taking a class on their work. Most of the philosophers I’m reading I would never have heard of back in high school. 

If you’re looking for upper-level courses on Marxist theory or post-structuralism, don’t look in the philosophy department (I think your best bets at Rutgers would be English/comparative literature, political science, sociology, and the gender studies department also leans heavily on Gramsci). You will not find any there- the department does not focus at all on continental philosophy. Much of what is considered ‘philosophy of science’ (Thomas Kuhn, Foucault’s work on the production of knowledge) in the continental tradition is argued quite convincingly to be ‘sociology of science’ by analytic philosophers of science. Continental philosophy in general suffers from a lack of conceptual clarity that is strongly discouraged in analytic departments like the Rutgers philosophy program.

The department does not focus on political philosophy. They offer courses on it, but it is not a strong suit of the program. Our better programs include philosophy of mind (Jerry Fodor, Brian McLaughlin), philosophy of language (Ernie Lepore, Andy Egan) epistemology (Peter Klein, Ernest Sosa), metaphysics (Dean Zimmerman, John Schaeffer), and ethics (Larry Temkin, Jeff McMahan).

If you go into the program, take intro to logic (201) your first semester, and take upper-level courses as early as you can. Try to get into the seminars. Pay attention to who’s teaching the courses you’re looking to take. Sometimes it will be very competitive- I’m presently trying to fight my way into an advanced seminar in ethics that’s very limited in size. These also happen to be, unsurprisingly, the classes you’ll get the most out of. While it’s important to have classes taught by good professors for what the faculty here like to call the ‘big four’ subjects at the upper level (philosophy of mind, epistemology, metaphysics, and philosophy of language), don’t hesitate to take a class taught by a grad student if it’s a specialty one you’re interested in taking. One of the best classes I’ve taken was taught by a PhD candidate, and given the reputation of the grad program, they are all very sharp and tend to be good teachers. Go to your professors’ office hours to chat, and don’t feel the need to just talk about that week’s lecture or reading. This is how you figure out who can potentially supervise an independent study or honors thesis, and how you decide if graduate study is right for you. Put a lot of effort into your writing, and ask your professors how your arguments could be improved (they generally give exceptional feedback). Don’t hesitate to ask for help.

I hope this helps, and I wish you well in the application process.

Posted 1 year ago

This is another flyer we’re distributing for our teach-in. I’m preparing my remarks for it this afternoon- I’m discussing the link between the situation at Rutgers and higher education and the economy writ large.