The University of Calgary Gauntlet®
  2001-10-11
(NOTE: Archived content:
Current issue here)

[image]
Previous Issues

News
DISCOURSES ON TERROR
DISCOURSES ON TERROR
Faculties fighting for funding
More medical marvels
A book of days the oncoing saga
U of C students hold their ground overseas
Votes, please
We said "push" the bed...

Opinions
Ever after
Flex your democratic muscle
Pimpin' with Pil on a Thursday
Natural women
The "crazies"
Islam wide open to interpretation
Finding felonious factories
Mayoral candidates weak to poor
Typecast criminals
Re: " Political 'Science '," Sept. 27, 2001,

Sports
The wheels fall off in Manitoba
Rock royalty coming to the U of CRock royalty coming to the U of C
Red tide sweeps through Canada
Soccersaurs ravage Pronghorns
The days when time stood still

Entertainment
Bandits foiled by poor script
I AM mediocrity
Iron Monkey no battle
Doors to experience
Dirty, filthy soap
To the internet and beyond
How Andy Turnbull got it wrong
Road Home in the right direction

Features
Blocking out the scenery, breaking my mind

Web
Firewalls protect you from me

AP
What your momma never said

  Letter
Re: " Political 'Science '," Sept. 27, 2001,





[Print] Print this story

ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

Editor, the Gauntlet,

After four years in Kinesiology, Gauntlet News Editor Ruth Davenport went in search of something a little "less scientific, less defined, and more subjective." Accordingly, she enrolled in two Political Science classes. It is clear that Ms. Davenport is disappointed with her choice. What is far less clear is why.

The ongoing discussion of theories, interpretations, and tangential postulations frustrate Ms. Davenport. This discussion is not helpful to those interested in academic discourse. Many would postulate, not so tangentially, that the discussion of those theories and interpretations is the academic discourse. Maybe there's more to her case.

Despite her quest for subjectivity, she "cringes" every time a student challenges the professor with a subjective opinion. Forgetting for a moment that professors routinely ask for student opinion, we have all felt the twinge of embarrassment for a classmate who asks a "silly" question or presents a radically different point of view. But this questioning is fundamental to the liberal education. First-year confrontations and less than thought-out diatribes often evolve into sophisticated dialogue.

Ms. Davenport would rather be indoctrinated. The professor should lecture from what Ms. Davenport believes to be a book of "fact," hardly the subjectivity she was looking for.

In her Political Science classes, Ms. Davenport suffers from "alienation and exclusion." Her peers are not helpful resources, but antagonists. The fault for this belongs to no one but herself. She stays huddled in the corner, watching the dialogue unfold. If she chooses to "sit on the bench" during this Socratic debate, it is her own inability or insecurity that causes her alienation. If she refuses to join the dialogue, this is what renders her classmates idle as resources.

Ms. Davenport was looking for something less scientific, less defined and more subjective than Kinesiology. For some reason, she was upset to find these things in Political Science.

Why? I suppose she is simply too used to the "subjectivity" of an editorial board. From there, she can postulate to no end, and comfortably refrain from any form of dialogue.

Share this story: del.icio.us digg Fark NewsVine Reddit YahooMyWeb


Reader Comments:

 Add your comment or send a letter to the editor

No comments found. Be the first!

 Views expressed are those of the posters and do not necessarily reflect that of the Gauntlet.

ADVERTISMENT

ADVERTISMENT

RSS icon RSS Feeds:
[ Main - News - Opinions - Entertainment - Sports ]
Volunteer at the Gauntlet®
.