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Academic On Track

Trading in the Blue Collar

I am on a rolling work seat, moving like a crab around a wooden pallet. I reach for another metal part. Clumsy, oversized leather gloves make progress slow; I have to hold each part so that I can see how it is facing before placing it on a stack of engine mounts. Finally, I grab a tool and start tap-tap-tapping the last row into place. Sweat rolls under my breasts. I look at the clock. It’s been 40 minutes. It will be another 3 hours and 20 minutes before I get a break. My arms ache and my lower back is starting to spasm. Tiny hair-like metal splinters have worked their way between my clothes and skin making me twitch. I am grateful for the radio. The d.j.’s voice is my only relief. An old box fan whines and grinds past me in the huge metal shed. Beyond my pallet is another dozen. All I can think of is 5 o’clock.

This summer I had a bare taste of what some of my students experience every day — the sheer complete exhaustion that accompanies manual labor. I am convinced that their experience eclipses that of our other working class students. For students who are interested in pursuing a career that is less physically demanding, shaking the blue collar is nearly impossible.

For working class students, the obstacles to higher education have been well documented. Sherry Lee Linkon’s Teaching Working Class; her book with John Russo, New Working Class Studies; Patrick Finn’s Literacy With an Attitude; and Academic Literacy by Carolyn Boiarsky are all tremendously valuable for professors who wish to be more inclusive rather than exclusive. Even instructors from a blue-collar background will find Lillian Rubin’s Worlds of Pain and Michael Zweig’s The Working Class Majority helpful in refreshing the concepts that come along with back-breaking work. My own favorite was Alfred Lubrano’s stunning narrative, Limbo: Blue-Collar Roots, White-Collar Dreams.

In short, it’s common for a working class student to enter a college or university without much support from family. Often there is no framework for parents and elders to understand what college demands. Emotionally abandoned, without encouragement or money, some students attend college for a semester or two before dropping out. Returning to the family business and home, they are often greeted with smiles and hugs. The student’s college attempt may be seen as a rejection of family values; the return often generates a sense of relief from relatives and friends. The failed student may feel confused. The support he or she craved is there at last. The cost? The dream of the college experience — and the changed life beyond — is lost.

“There are two factors for success,” says Ron Malcolm, reflecting on 13 years of postsecondary teaching and several years of grant writing for an educational foundation, “socioeconomic status and a parents’ level of education.” Mr. Malcolm, who teaches composition at Bradley University, in Illinois, added that the single determining factor seemed to be emotional support from family.

Although a number of blue-collar families do support children who want to go to college, many don’t. Lack of emotional support seems more severe in blue-collar families. Alfred Lubrano, author of Limbo: Blue-Collar Roots, White-Collar Dreams, recognizes this: “Blue-collar households stress order, obedience, and discipline. No one is worrying about whether junior is self-actualizing as he sits over there in the corner, as long as he’s not bothering anybody.” Not only did some family members see his quest for higher education as “turning traitor,” some saw it as something worse.

“For some families, college is seen as a waste of time and money, a hideout where lazy — or at least misguided — progeny burrow to retreat from the real work of life,” writes Lubrano. His narrative account of the separation that ensues as he becomes educated is a painful and revealing read.

The community college where I now teach has a program that attempts to generate a support system for working class students. When one of my students, André, indicated that he wanted to go on a “New World” trip to check out a university a two-hour drive away, I immediately rescheduled his midterm so he could participate. Another “New World” student, Sarah, wrote an essay confessing that she is not sure what she’s doing at college. Her parents both do manual labor in an appliance factory; Sarah is the first in her family to attend college. Although she is a competent writer, she often doesn’t complete big projects and seems distracted. I’ve talked with her outside of class about my own working class background and the advantages that come with a college diploma; still, she seems reluctant to buy into the dream.

Most community college and state university professors I’ve met are perfectly suited to guiding their working class student population. Either they are from the working class themselves, or they have read a great deal on the subject. For me, it is a series of discoveries.

First, it was necessary for me to do some manual labor. Although I had mown my own lawn for years, and occasionally helped friends with drywall installation or painting, I needed to do something physical that I could not quit once the going got rough. Doing physical work for a paycheck made me instantly aware of the difficulties that my blue-collar students face. Even if my stint stacking engine parts lasted only a month and a half, it left me bedridden for another 10 days with ibuprofen and heating pads. Without this, I could only read about the experience and imagine the obstacles that my students face.

Here I understood why going to night classes even once a week might be impossible for a student who does a physically demanding job for 40 hours a week. Add on one or two double-shifts and the ability to come to class disappears; for many who do attend, out-of-class reading or writing has to be put aside as the student attempts to care for his or her extended family.

I’m not advocating “dumbing down” of materials or cutting curriculum for working class students. I think the bar needs to be high for all my students. But knowing — really knowing — my students’ energy levels helps me schedule work in a way that helps rather than punishes them.

After my limited experience with physical labor this summer, for example, I immediately rewrote every one of my syllabi. I moved all major reading and out-of-class work to the weekends. I also installed “late” due dates for major assignments. I’d rather see a working student turn in an eight-page research paper two days late and suffer a 10 or 20 percent grade penalty than have him or her simply drop out of college. It’s not the perfect solution; still, I’m working toward accommodation without allowing the curriculum to be chopped up and picked over.

I also needed to explore my own deep-seated beliefs about class. Did I think I was too good to stack engine parts on a pallet? Yes, naturally. Later, did I think, “Well, someone’s got to do it?” In my mind, this is my middle-class brain judging, separating jobs into categories: crap, sort of crap, smart jobs, and very smart jobs. Painfully, I realized that I place work that flexes the brains well above jobs that flex the muscles. I’m sure my attitude seeps into every aspect of my teaching.

Because I moved out of a working class family, I often think that my “job” as a teacher is to help “lift” students out of that experience as well. This is, of course, just another form of hierarchical thinking. I need to become completely aware of my own prejudice. Only then will I start teaching with a free mind. I know that there is a way to measure my progress — the day that I absolutely believe a student who seeks to finish a certificate program is just as good as a student who seeks to complete a four-year degree is the day that I will celebrate my move into “thought equality.”

In the meantime, there is much I can do. First, I must be sensitive in my choice of texts. If I choose a standard text, I need to augment it with essays and articles that are not only written about the working class, but are also written by the working class. If I stick to the classics, I need to define the culture in which each work was written and describe the hierarchy that existed at the time.

When teaching technical writing to burgeoning automotive technicians this semester, for example, I not only use examples from the textbook, but also cull trade publications like Turbo & High Tech Performance and Automotive News for articles — as well a news column from an automotive buff. My best bet? With permission from the author, a written work from a student in one of my previous classes often captures not only a broad range of topics, but also the writing style of those who have not yet had the “ivory tower advantage.” I want my students to feel represented as best they can in the insular environment of the classroom.

It’s also important for me to make the teachings of my discipline relevant. If I do not tie my lessons to what I hope my students will do in the “real” world, I am contributing to the “us versus them” thought processes that separate the educated from the blue-collar experience. Before I end the day’s lesson, I often take 2 or 3 minutes and ask my students, “How will this help you later on in life?” and “Where will you apply this in your job?”

When lecturing, I need to be careful not to denigrate the blue-collar experience. Neither should I be condescending. I need to use examples that do not raise one job above another; instead, I should simply recognize the differences in tasks and duties, services and products without judgment. Next, I need to bridge to experiences common to all of my students. Just as I can create a sentence structure exercise that uses the new iPhone as its topic, I can easily create the next assignment using commercial construction techniques as the topic. In this way my students can see that both are valued.

I also need to acknowledge cultural differences that may make some college practices difficult for working class students. I need to be patient. I cannot expect my students to become critical thinkers overnight simply because they’ve stepped on to a college campus. When I realize that many of them may be from family systems that value obedience and duty, I cannot expect them to rise out of their seats and applaud when I question big box stores, the war, or the lack of support for a third party in our political system.

I will do what I can to rein in my personal agenda at the podium; instead, attempting to show both sides of an issue and letting my students decide — even if that decision comes at a much slower pace than I’d like. I do believe that many experiences have the ability to raise consciousness and train students and teachers alike to “think big.” College is one of them.

Shari Dinkins is an assistant professor at Illinois Central College.

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Comments

Thanks for a well-written article that every professor should read (I teach at a midwestern university). Another item that needs consideration is the requirement of “service” projects in class. (I have subject-related service projects in the past and will continue to do so.) However, alternatives need to be provided for those who work. Traditional students have a much more flexible schedule, while those that work to pay their way through school and/or support a family may have difficulty building a service project into their day.

In agreement, at 8:25 am EST on November 19, 2007

Teaching blue collar students

Shari Dinkins raises some excellent points in her article that all teachers can use. I was born and raised in a housing project in South Philly. In my life, teachers were the people who steered me onto a mindset that let me think beyond the place I was born. Teachers who can relate to their students needs are treasures. I also admire her for not deliberately inflicting her personal political agenda on the students in her English class. Now that’s a refreshing point of view!

feudi pandola, at 8:30 am EST on November 19, 2007

Very nice Professor Dinkins, but no mention of affirmative action. One of the substantive things that can be done to help working people is to end preferential treatment based on race and sex. The poor would benefit as the present system showers benefits on the already-well-to-do based on their appearance, leaving the less-well-off of all colors behind, particularly black men whose sisters get the double-bean-count of race and sex. To make things worse the targets of affirmative action develop resentments because of their knowledge of how unfairly they have been treated: the white poor are well aware that they are victimized by affirmative action and do not like it; misogyny shows up in the music of the black urban male. A fine mess that can be fixed instantly by focusing help on those with demonstrated need in our country today not just those meeting ‘racial’ descriptions carried over from Germany in the ’30s, South Africa, or the discredited gender codes of our grandparents’ generation.

Lunchpail, at 9:00 am EST on November 19, 2007

Thanks

This happens more often than people might think. In this story I saw myself. I was the first person in my working-class family to go to college full-time. Although I had excellent grades and very high SAT scores, I never received any support or counseling from my high school teachers that spoke to the fact that my mother and father only knew that getting a college diploma was important for success, but had no personal experience with it themselves. And of course, I didn’t know how to ask for this sort of support — from my high school teachers, parents, college staff, anyone. I was a just another white girl from a “middle class” family (20 years ago that meant you were just one generation removed from working class) and there were no special support programs for people like me.

I got a college degree from a prestigious journalism school, but that was because I simply showed up and did the work. I didn’t get much else out of the college experience; nobody expected me to do anything else but bring home good grades. I consider my college years an unmitigated failure. I got a job as a secretary 3 months after graduation and never looked back. Now years later I understand I never got the support I needed to make college more than just high school part 2. There was a whole cultural and social arena to college that my parents just didn’t understand, and I had no one who could tell me these things or support me when I had doubts about “the college experience.”

Even today I do not wish to return to school to try again. College didn’t work for me the first time, and I have no confidence it would work a second time.

Donna, at 9:40 am EST on November 19, 2007

gender preferences

Most readers here, but obviously not all, are probably aware that gender preferences in undergraduate admissions these days are at least as likely to be in favor of men, as colleges seek gender-balanced campuses. Wrote the dean of admissions at Kenyon College in a New York Times op-ed, “the standards for admission to today’s most selective colleges are stiffer for women than men.” This myth that women are the usual beneficiaries of affirmative-action “bean-counting” in education needs to go away.

jcl, lecturer, at 11:25 am EST on November 19, 2007

A few thoughts

That this, or today’s IHE article about new practices in first-year writing, needs to be written and read simply emphasizes the massive gap between education and life that so many students (not just working class) feel. If you have not been born to a specific social class and granted specific skills and learning styles, most of American education has pre-determined that you will fail, and, in fact, will go out of their way to make sure that you see yourself as a failure.

‘“There are two factors for success,” says Ron Malcolm, reflecting on 13 years of postsecondary teaching, “socioeconomic status and a parents’ level of education.”’ But is this the fault of parents or of schools?

Anyway, I was struck by Dr. Dinkins thought process on due dates: “I also installed “late” due dates for major assignments. I’d rather see a working student turn in an eight-page research paper two days late and suffer a 10 or 20 percent grade penalty than have him or her simply drop out of college.” And I will suggest this — creating a flexibility of choice, where assignments and due dates might be — to some extent — chosen by the student — that is, individually adjusted — would offer the full solution this professor is looking toward. First, it would place academic responsibility squarely on the student (for some weekend assignments might be the worst, many people outside of education do work on weekends — the students would need to choose), second it would allow them to feel as if they are true participants in the course, third it would teach critical decision making.

I was also struck by this: “I also need to acknowledge cultural differences that may make some college practices difficult for working class students. I need to be patient.” Yes, you do. As well as for students with “disabilities,” as well as for students with different learning styles. as well as for a whole range of student experiences. It is only by really shattering the industrial model of mass training that we can accept that our classrooms are filled with individual learners — each of whom has their own needs and their own timetable.

Ira Socol, Michigan State University, at 11:35 am EST on November 19, 2007

Did I think I was too good to stack engine parts on a pallet? Yes, naturally.

Good for you in realizing this. But now that you’ve discovered your own prejudice, be sure you don’t start lecturing everyone else on the assumption that they grew up with the same prejudices you did. Some people were brought up in homes that valued all kinds of work.

Don’t assume you know me, at 3:00 pm EST on November 19, 2007

This was a thought-provoking article, but I must add some perspective to the author’s characterization of the daily grind of physically demanding labor. Dinkins’ experience was somewhat unusual in that she did not keep the job for long enough to become physically acclimated to it. Her pain and exhaustion were therefore heightened well beyond what an acclimated blue-collar worker usually experiences. She also appears to have worked four hours at a time with no breaks, but many blue-collar jobs provide breaks every two hours or so, depending on what state the worker lives in and depending on how compliant the employer is with state law.

This critique is not meant to undermine Dinkins’ valiant attempts to understand where her students are coming from but to point out that many blue-collar workers are far less exhausted after a day of work than the author was. On the other hand, working such a job month after month can really wear one down.

When I compare my current situation (of trying to perform academic work after a full day of nonphysical work) with my past situation (of trying to perform academic work after a full day of physical labor), I am struck by an interesting contrast. When I was working blue collar, I often found it difficult to make the transition to intellectual labor, but I often found that my mind was relatively fresh and enjoyed the stretch. I practiced good time management and did schoolwork during work breaks as well as after work and on the weekends. Every little bit of study helped.

Now that I’m in a white collar world, I find it hard to do academic work after hours because I’ve been exercising my mind all day, and there’s only so much effective thinking I can do after a full day of work.

I find this disparity frustrating when I reflect on how much schoolwork I was able to get done while I was working full time in the blue-collar world. Of course, I’m doing graduate work now, which is more of a mental stretch; and when I was working on the line every day, I was highly motivated to finish my undergrad degree and get OFF the line. But sometimes I feel as if I got a lot more work done in those days. Perhaps I’m just being nostalgic.

But I do remember how I felt near the end of each work week. Going to school on Thursday nights and then getting up and working a full day on Friday after four days of physical work AND schoolwork was very, very hard sometimes. All I could think about was the weekend—when I would do even more homework and study.

I was a part-time student for most of my college career, so college went on and on for me. I had to use up my vacation days to complete large school projects or to take final exams that conflicted with my work schedule. My last two years in college, I had no vacation time just for me. But I got my degree, and I did what I had to do to get it.

My two cents’ worth.

Bob, at 3:40 pm EST on November 19, 2007

“Lifting Students Up” Versus Exploring Alternative Systems

I’m from what the working class used to call the aristocracy of the working class: construction. I was an iron worker. Not red iron, rebar. Anyway, having done many kinds of hard physical labor in my youth, I can attest that a lot of it was fun and challenging and fulfilling. Much was sheer hell. It varied. The weather could be bad, too.

All this talk about the ethics of not imposing one’s professorial views on students. To me, it depends how it’s done and whether the ideas are really all that radical and interesting. Oh, how I wish I’d had teachers in my earliest college years who had introduced me to ideas like alternative economic systems. (The Soviet Union was hardly an alternative; it too much resembled capitalism with its Party in power and its central planning. Yes, that’s right. Wish I could explain that here. The resemblances are amazing. Alas, it has to be another discussion.

A truly egalitarian society would share the dirty work and glory work. Everybody would work, say, 3 or 4 hours a day doing one thing, say, mining coal, and 3 or 4 hours doing something else, say, being a cardiologist or a publisher. Someone with Donald Trump’s business acumen could clean restrooms 2 or 3 days a week and preside over the equivalent of real estate for 2 or 3 days. Or divide it 4 1/2 months doing one thing and 4 1/2 another. (It would be immensely more productive, yet, for environmental reasons, we would probably deliberately produce less, a merely prosperous amount above what we need.)

Here’s the thing: we—society—would pay ourselves MORE for the less desireable or less creative or less empowering work. That means The Donald makes his best living cleaning bathrooms, which, presumably he has some choice in doing, versus, say, stacking engine parts which might be too tedious for him. When he’s doing what he loves best, “real estate,” he gets paid less. See? The world we know is topsy turvy. But history has destroyed our democratic gyroscopes.

Maybe it would be a supply and demand economy, yet a non-market one. Why can’t such ideas be explored and researched in our universities? Why do we insist on replicating what is and then trying to make little amends and accomodations to working class students? The point, perhaps, is that there should be only one class: a working class in which work itself doesn’t preclude the full development of human potential. For anybody. That’s how we know our present condition is one of a kleptocracy. Wouldn’t a natural outcome of authentic democracy be some picture such as I just sketched?

Look, the system is rigged to use people up and to waste most of the human talent otherwise available to make a really interesting world. But rather than explore such possibilites, we worry about helping a few working class people get “lifted up” on the existing structure of things. I could have used a teacher in my early years inviting me to consider the notion that maybe it’s the structure that’s got to go. Maybe things could be otherwise. See www.parecon.org for more ideas.

Apologetically Inured, at 6:35 pm EST on November 19, 2007

For Inured: John Barnes got there first....the planet Reason in his book A Million Open Doors runs in a way very similar to what you describe as an ideal society.

Won’t work, though. Value doesn’t fall out of the sky; to get paid, you have to swap your labor for someone else’s. All economic systems are based on people deciding how much they will work, and how the fruits of the labor will be swapped around.

That’s why tasks that are easily done by many people, like scrubbing toilets, are not worth much on an open labor market—get them above a certain price point, and folks will scrub their own toilets to save the money. Other tasks involve rarer skills, are more dangerous or odious or demanding, or create more value per hour worked. People are willing to swap more labor for the products of those jobs.

If a group is small and ideologically cohesive enough, true egalitarianism works for a time, but it tends to crumble around the edges. If Sister Agnes is a great weaver, producing twice as much cloth as everyone else, it makes everyone poorer if she has to go out and dig potatoes in the name of egalitarianism. Wash, rinse, and repeat, and you’ve got a modern capitalist economy. :) Even extreme-egalitarian movements like the Shakers had members who got to do more of the fun jobs, because they were so good at them.

And, a final riff on the topic of this post...many blue-collar students may have difficulty figuring out how to function in the higher-education “intellectual economy". I’m a Ph.D from a family much like Donna’s, and the business world still makes much more inherent sense to me than academia does. (My folks are proud of me but have no earthly idea of what it is I do.)

Dictyranger, at 3:10 pm EST on November 27, 2007

“All systems are based on people deciding. . .” Yes, that’s the point. “Value doesn’t fall out of the sky.” _The Political Economy of Participatory Economics_ discussing a controlled experiment, as I recall, showing that people could enter into Participatory Economics without necessarily having the values of solidarity, equity, self-management, etc. and the system of supply and demand (though of the non-market variety) and de-centralized planning would drive those values.

And many more people can be “good at” the more fun kinds of work than we might think. There’s no reason to believe that capitalism optimizes talent. Under capitalism, much talent is excluded in the name of competition. So it seems to me the society at large would benefit by sharing the fun work and the odious work rather than having groups of people be relegated to the less empowering kind. Just a thought. There have been many false starts in history, though, toward egalitarian systems. There were many false starts in history before capitalism learned how to do its thing. Who knows? I’m not ready to be so dismissive, as in “Won’t work” Let’s just be satisfied with the present unjust system. We can do better with Parecon as a vision, albeit a distant one, of something to shoot for.

Apologetically Inured, at 4:55 pm EST on December 8, 2007

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