Well, they're more important than the vice-provost of making you feel personally guilty about slavery. The football staff makes much less than the DEI staff and the football program is far more valuable to Michigan than DEI (mostly because DEI have negative value in this case). |
When we are comparing the DEI hires with non DEI hires using objective criteria, you are basically saying that facts are full of biases. |
So the football program is a DEI program? JEEBUS it's EVRYWHERE!!! |
That fact is racist. |
| Skimming through this thread, I can't help but think that most people didn't read the entire article. It brought up many points worthy of discussion, and I didn't view it as entirely anti-DEI. It's more an issue of how to accomplish the various objectives of DEI programs and whether what is being done now is creating positive changes. |
Which criteria? Why do you think those specific items are important? |
Maybe it would be nice if the mission of a university could be more about education and building a better society instead of an archaic, gladiatorial sport where millions watch the efforts of tens of people bashing each other. Success at one type of effort is much harder to measure. And my point is proportion anyway. Millions are spent on football which is mainly a branding and loyalty generating engine. And yes, it earns money, but that revenue just funds more sport. So blah blah the DEI coordinators are paid a lot...so are the coaches, the law profs, the b-school profs, senior faculty, etc. The salaries are only outrageous if you think the work has no value. I understand that's your belief. But the salaries are on par with other well-paid, middle income jobs. |
The work doesn’t seem to have value. Can you point us to the successes of the work? What have they done lately? Should be easy to find, right? |
No. I consider it unproven as to whether the entire initiative is a failure or whether the pandemic and racial unrest and economic damage of the last few years are mainly accountable for survey-based (plus anecdotal) reports of unhappiness. There were 60 people interviewed for the article, so there wasn't even a representative body of students. So the 2021 survey seems to be the main data source for results that is publicly shared. 2023 brought Gaza, which is a real tough challenge for any university with a substantial Jewish population and large local Middle Eastern Muslim population. The environment may equally be impacting on-campus conditions. I am willing to hear the University's response to this article. We do not know what changes have been made as this experiment has gone along or what may change now. Society and education are still recovering from the pandemic. |
PP. I will admit that I cannot point to the successes of the work because I am not employed at U of M. Nor can I determine with fine detail what their staff people do. However, after reading the article, I am comfortable continuing to support the University to continue trying to make DEI efforts better and continuing on. Even if I'd rather not hear a land acknowledgement before every theater performance. I believe they will do the best they can. Perhaps the article may help in some way. It is always good to have a detailed, synthesized analysis shared where many can examine the details and reflect. |
Maybe making DEI better means scrapping it and starting over. Throwing more money at it won’t make the problem go away. It’s a naive take. |
No, football is the poster child for meritocracy. You play on the team based on being the best; why can't academics be the same? I don't see any affinity groups for Asian footballers being formed, do you? |
This is what Michigan is known for. Trying to improve society through research. |
The very best college football players on the highest ranked teams are rarely even above average college students. Yet they play at colleges. Because U.S. society has incorporated football into its definition of what college "is about". What if society chose to make "DEI" issues what college "is about"? Some do think this is what college should be about... |
But what is DEI actually about? Nobody even knows. Emails? Surveys? Slogans and workshops? It’s just a bunch of fluff and hot air. It certainly wasn’t about making U of M diverse or inclusive. |