Showing posts with label UCLA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UCLA. Show all posts

Friday, June 6, 2014

Death by a Thousand Paper Cuts -

You may have read the very provocative article in The Wall Street Journal entitled, Gender Bias Alleged at UCLA's Anderson Business School.  The article included the graphic below which highlights dramatically the paucity of tenured and tenure-track female faculty at business schools.

As the first female Full Professor at the Isenberg School of Management at UMass Amherst and the first female holder of an endowed chaired professorship in the UMass system, the statistics and comments in the article really pained me and, yet, I fully understood the situation. Just read the following from the article: Prof. Rossi, who has been at the school since 1997, said she hasn't observed overt discrimination or hostility at Anderson, but said she has witnessed subtle digs and dismissive comments directed at women from colleagues and students. "It's death by a thousand paper cuts," she said.  Professor Aimee Drolet Rossi is a marketing professor and a member of the Gender Equity Task Force, created by Dr. Olian, the first female Dean of UCLA's Anderson School of Management. 

Everyone, males and females alike, needs to be treated professionally, in a civil manner, and have their contributions valued and recognized. 

Our colleges and universities are microcosms of our modern society. Lessons learned in academia carry through in one's life and impact behavior in government, the corporate world, our neighborhoods, and our families.

Academia is a testbed for our social and professional networks and for analyzing the behavior of decision-makers in hierarchies from students to faculty and staff to administrators, from department chairs to the upper echelons of  deans, provosts, chancellors, and presidents. Along the way, civility has been lost and the ivory tower now stands upon a muddy foundation. Positive, inclusive leadership has to come from the top.

There once was a time when collegiality mattered and a colleague's success would be celebrated through public recognition or a kind, personal note (remember those?). I even received, on several occasions, a bouquet of flowers, delivered with chocolate chip cookies for my daughter, sent, compliments of a top administrator.

Those not acknowledged appropriately and feeling excluded – I have listened to many from Assistant Professors to Full Professors  – actually feel pain. I have personally felt victimized - sometimes the "brand" is only what matters rather than individuals and research.

An organization such as a college or university is built on the achievements of all, accumulated over many, many years, as is its reputation and history. Good manners matter and provide the lubricant for the flourishing of work and productivity.  Good manners should be part and parcel of the academic culture. Why is it, then,  so hard for some in academia, which has been referred to as the “loneliest profession,”  to acknowledge with a thank you (even emailing a “Thnx” seems to be challenging for some),  to be consistent in recognizing contributions of individuals, to be inclusive communicators  and conduits for information, and to be respectful of others?


Civil society is built on courtesy, respect, and empathy.

It's time to bring back good manners to academia. Females, and even males, should not be dying by a thousand paper cuts!

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Happy Birthday to the Internet!

CNN.com has a wonderful interview with Dr. Leonard Kleinrock. Dr. Kleinrock, a professor at UCLA, is sometimes referred to as a Father of the Internet and today marks the 40th anniversary or birthday of the message that he sent from the first node of the net at UCLA to Stanford. His interview illustrates his love of tinkering and his fascination with figuring out how things work but my favorite quote in the interview comes at the end of it and it is:

Life is one big puzzle for me in the positive sense. There are a lot of things to play with. And they pay me for it.


One can read more about Professor Kleinrock, who has received numerous awards, and those of us in operations research and engineering are also well aware of his numerous contributions to queuing theory, in this interesting article.