Tag Archives: creativity

Sunday Evening Ramblings

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I don’t want to feel bitter and angry, but at every turn, I feel betrayed.  Stay in school, they said.  Get an education, they droned.  I did, to the tune of $50,000 of debt.  After 15 years of teaching, I’ve watched that debt mushroom to $70,000 with zero hope of ever paying it off.  It has single-handedly ruined my credit and on a daily basis keeps me mired in terrible financial straits.  In every conceivable way, I would have been better off financially to have skipped college — especially graduate school — altogether and worked at some kind of personal business.  Instead, I listened to those in authority and am ruined financially because of it.  So yeah, I feel angry and bitter.

I work 60 hours a week, at least.  In the fall semester especially, I run ragged from the time I wake up Monday morning until I finish grading sometime Sunday evening.  There is no break.  There is no rest.  There is only teach, rush to the high school, battle the high school nonsense, rush back to campus, teach, grade, repeat.  For my efforts, I’m paid less than the average fast food manager.  Of what I make, I get to keep and live off 51% thanks to child support, insurance, and taxes.  My actual take home wages are well below the poverty line.  So yeah, I’m angry and bitter.

Despite having given everything I am to my profession and having a mountain of feedback that insists I’m really fucking good at my job, every single day I’m made to feel as if I don’t give enough and don’t work hard enough and don’t exhaust myself quite enough.  Just Thursday, I received an email from my boss questioning why I hadn’t submitted faculty feedback on a class that had only started on Monday.  Let me repeat that.  I was questioned for not supplying feedback on students who had only been in class for four days.  They haven’t even submitted a fucking formal essay yet.  That should tell you just about everything you need to know about the current state of education. So yeah, I feel angry and bitter.

I’ve written four pretty good books.  I’ll put my series against 99% of the shit that passes for entertainment these days, especially the drivel on TV, but I can’t make a dent in anyone’s consciousness because I don’t fit tidily into a pretty little marketing category.  And Facebook now makes you pay to show your links.  And Google+ sucks.  And Twitter is madness unleashed.  And I was born in the wrong era.  So yeah, I’m angry and bitter because my two greatest skills and greatest passions, writing and the teaching of writing, have zero worth in this chapter of American history.  I’m a dinosaur, and I’m just about fed up with it all.

Late Night Ramblings

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It’s bittersweet to read through the comments left the other day by former students.  On the positive side, it’s good to know that I’ve reached so many people on an efficacious level.  On the negative, it breaks my heart to know that the system is breaking the spirit of so many like me.  I’ve given everything I have to this profession, and it feels like all I’ve gotten in return is a demand for more.  For someone like me, who has endured my share of hardships, it’s hard to feel defeated.  I’m simply not accustomed to it, but for now, the bureaucrats have won.  I’ve fought the good fight for as long as I can.

My focus and energy have to turn to something else.  Right now, the frustrations of fighting against the business model are wearing me to a nub.  I’m hoping against hope that this momentum I’m seeing on Amazon is real.  I’m hoping against hope that the dam is about to burst, and The Brotherhood of Dwarves series is finally reaching a broad audience, but it’s still too early to tell.  All I know is that something has to give.  I can’t continue to live on substandard wages at executive hours, battling students and administration for respect.  I can’t continue feeling like a second-class citizen, devoid of any say in my day-to-day life, devoid of any voice in the process.

At heart, I’ve always considered myself a writer first, teacher second.  I’ve always believed that eventually the books would find their audience, and maybe that day is close, but even if it isn’t, my time in education is near an end.  I won’t be part of the business model, the entertain-them-over-educate-them paradigm that seems so en vogue of late.  I won’t make students happy for the sake of keeping them paying tuition.  I won’t pass students along; I won’t give them video games and coloring books as assignments.  If I can’t teach the proper way, I’ll do something else, anything else, with my life, but I will not perpetrate a fraud on my students or the public by pretending to teach them writing while shoving nonsense down their throats.

Education as Business Ramblings

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For today’s post, I want to try something a little different.  If you were ever a student of mine, at Tusculum or WSCC, I want to know how much you value the skills you learned from my classes.  Please, leave a comment on this site describing any significance those skills have had on your life.  I want (and quite honestly need) to hear whether or not all of the sacrifices I’ve made to my health, financial security, and personal life have made a positive impact on your lives, so please describe for me what you took away from my courses and whether or not that has affected you beyond the time you spent in class.

Thank you for taking the time to respond,

D.A. “Alex” Adams