 |
Antioch
professor emeritus Marianne Whelchel and professor Jean Gregorek
packed up the literature department last week in preparation for
the college’s closure this month. |
Faculty and staff vacate Antioch College campus this week
By Lauren Heaton
The laboratory where Antioch College geology professor Peter Townsend
taught for 37 years was a mess of beakers, textbooks and research last
week scattered half in and half out of the boxes scheduled to leave
the science building. Up in the south tower of Main Building where the
literary scholars perch, professor Jean Gregorek and faculty member
emeritus Marianne Whelchel weren’t faring much better, wading
through stacks of plays, poetry, literary anthologies and reams of student
papers. With none of the fanfare often reserved for the departure of
dedicated employees, about 100 faculty, staff and administrators swept
out the last of their belongings to prepare for the shuttering of the
college this week. Most of their contracts will end on June 30, with
some health benefits extending until August of this year.
According to Suzette Castonguay, director of human resources for Antioch
University, only the library, the Kettering Building and the maintenance
office will remain operational on campus to house approximately 30 college
and university employees who will continue to work after June. Located
in the library will be three library staff members, two for the Antioch
Review and about eight faculty and staff for co-op and Antioch Education
Abroad, who will help the nearly 50 students scheduled to complete their
Antioch College degrees by December, according to Andrzej Bloch, interim
president of the college. Two staff members from the registrar’s
office, two from the business office and a few from human resources
will move to the Kettering Building, which will continue to house the
Ph.D. Program in Leadership and Change, and the offices of the chancellor
and vice chancellor, student loans and payroll, which service the entire
university system, Castonguay said.
For reasons having to do with their contracts ending without the severance
or sabbatical generally afforded to tenured professors, about nine faculty
members are leaving the college for new jobs, Bloch said. And according
to film and communications professor Anne Bohlen, at least 21 tenured
faculty members have chosen to join the Nonstop Antioch effort to continue
the kind of education they offered during their years at the college.
Others are simply retiring, some before their chosen time, to begin
new adventures.
As they cleaned out their offices, faculty and staff members recalled
their time at the college as both turbulent and exhilarating. And all
who were interviewed said that the passion of the students and the campus’s
commitment to community and social justice were the reasons that compelled
them to stay here.
Why they came
When Hassan Nejad first came to Antioch in 1981 and saw the boarded
up buildings and low enrollment, he almost turned around and left. But
the apartment he and his family had left in California was already rented,
and Antioch was one of few institutions that wasn’t biased by
the recent hostage crisis with his native country, Iran. Now he is grateful
that they stayed.
As a professor of political science and international relations, Nejad
said what really kept him here were his students. “I value the
students’ passion for learning and independent judgement and for
keeping me actively involved in my field by asking good questions,”
he said.
Antioch also presented unique fiscal and managerial challenges, which
Nejad chose to tackle as chair of the faculty in the early 90s, and
then as dean of faculty and executive vice-president of the college
under then-president Bob Devine. Together they proposed a five-year
recruiting and renovation plan, which he believes had the potential,
had it been adequately funded, to help the college recover, he said.
Psychology and sociology professor Chris Smith also considered leaving
her second year at Antioch because of the problems presented by the
lack of technology and the sometimes negative, dogmatic campus climate.
But after five years, she also saw Antioch’s strengths in its
ability to draw students who are intellectually curious and culturally
and politically aware.
“Antioch, at its best, is the most amazing experience one can
have as a professor,” Smith said.
Antioch College was the only school math professor Eli Nettles applied
to when she was looking for a job eight years ago. She knew of it growing
up in Piqua, and the self-defined majors and the passion of the students
put Antioch on a plane unparallel to any other. “And I wasn’t
disappointed,” she said of her time here.
The volatile issues she has been challenged to face, even as a faculty
member, regarding privilege, race, class, and gender identity have taught
both her and her husband, John Nettles, who directed the academic support
center. “I look at things differently than I would at a different
place,” she said. “I’ve loved Antioch, and I know
this will be one of the top places I’ve taught when I look back
on my career.”
Those qualities are also the reason co-op faculty member Tom Haugsby,
who is retiring this year, chose to spend 33 years at Antioch. He identified
deeply as a faculty member, he said, who coordinated job opportunities
for students and then challenged their interpretations of those experiences.
He was honored to be present for the insight students gained by making
strategic use of the work opportunity to learn about themselves and
the larger world, he said.
One student who had floundered a bit at Antioch and was a heavy alcohol
user grew through the co-op, working in modest capacities in the food
business and then in an urban high school with gang issues. Through
his experiences and some personal care and attention, that student went
on to become a scholar and a writer.
“Students at Antioch learn that they can make a difference and
be an adult — that there is a place in the world for you, and
that you are a person of substance with a contribution to make, someone
to be depended on,” he said.
Antioch’s commitment to make the world better, encapsulated in
its famous dictum, “Be ashamed to die until you have won some
victory for humanity,” is one that “nags at you,”
Haugsby said.
“Some become famous, and others labor in obscurity, but they do
it,” he said. “I am grateful to work in a place where you’re
constantly asking yourself, ‘Can we do this better?’”
Freedom of a small place
As a small school that, especially in the past 10 to 20 years, has had
departments of one, Antioch’s flexibility and independence has
enabled faculty to build creative and progressive curriculums that have
taken them all over the map.
In the geology department, Townsend took students during the summer
three-week block courses on treks to Ontario, beginning at Sault Ste.
Marie on Lake Superior and heading inland along the Ottawa and St. Lawrence
river valleys, to look for igneous and metamorphic rocks such as granite
and slate. They also went to eastern Ohio and the West Virginia hills
to study sedimentary rocks and sandstone.
And instead of publishing for professional development, which is next
to impossible for undergraduate students because of the refinement of
scientific fields, Townsend partnered with students on environmental
consulting projects for citizen’s groups. He also testified in
court cases, including Bessie Williams vs. the Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency in the early 90s, which forced the OEPA to retroactively enforce
ground water protection rules for every air permit issued in the state
and is considered one of the biggest environmental successes in Ohio,
he said.
In the literature department, both Gregorek and Whelchel found during
their time at Antioch that the school had a strong commitment to expanding
the literary canon to include African-American, feminist and multicultural
studies. As an Americanist, Whelchel was able to design courses using
letters, diaries and oral histories as primary resources to reconstruct
the lives of local farm women who survived the Depression, for example.
As a historicist with a focus on British and post-colonial literature
and theory, Gregorek was able to apply current political and cultural
perspectives on race, gender and sexuality to reassess both old works
being discovered and new works being produced. Challenging students
to see how racism may have affected Mark Twain’s works, for exampe,
made a field defined by aesthetics as much as by social movement a very
dynamic one to teach, she said.
Because of its historic commitment to community, according to Haugsby,
Antioch always encouraged faculty and staff to contribute through their
own professional development. In this way, long-time campus members
were able to evolve the way that J.D. Dawson, who began as a math professor,
did when he went from co-op to the dean of students office and ultimately
became a fundraiser and long-time university board member. Peg Brown,
who started out in the registrar’s office, became a member of
the institutional research team because of an environment that instilled
confidence and provided opportunities for growth, Haugsby said.
“The idea that one could see one’s life in many dimensions
and learn how to develop those dimensions to benefit the university
has been one of my most satisfying experiences here,” Haugsby
said.
Choices for the future
Though the openness to new ideas in the past has been limited by the
decision to close the college, members of the Antioch community, in
traditional style, have found a way to create options for their future.
One of those is through the Nonstop Antioch effort, which for tenured
faculty member Anne Bohlen, presents the best opportunity to continue
the teaching agreement she feels the college failed to honor when it
broke the tenure agreement with all the faculty this spring.
Bohlen has taught film and communications at Antioch for over 16 years,
and at 60, she anticipates difficulty finding another job without moving
away from her community in Yellow Springs.
“Tenure is a mutual contract, you’ve agreed to invest in
the institution, and they’ve agreed to invest in you,” she
said. “And if you’ve had tenure for 10 years or more, you
haven’t been looking, and it’s hard to get another job.”
Gregorek, who has taught at Antioch for 14 years, feels the same way.
For her, joining Nonstop is a way to continue her relationship with
a college whose progressive values she strongly believes in.
“I’m angry that the university made the decision to close
this institution, and I want to be part of keeping it alive,”
she said. “It is a risk. But you have to do what you’re
heart tells you — especially in light of Horace Mann’s dictum
— you have to fight for what you believe in.”
Others on campus have chosen, for various reasons, to look elsewhere.
Eli Nettles found that as associate dean of faculty at Antioch, navigating
the sensitive divide between faculty and administration created more
tension than she signed up for when she chose to teach math. Though
her experiences teaching at Antioch were some of the best she’s
ever had, she is relieved to be joining the math department at Nashville
State Community College next year where her husband has family and where
he can play music.
Though he had hoped to end a long career at Antioch, Nejad now plans
to finish out as dean of the School of American and International Studies
at Ramapo College of New Jersey, a public liberal arts school with 6,000
students and one of four in the nation committed to the social justice
and interdisciplinary learning that distinguished Antioch College.
With nine years in the economics department, faculty member Janice Kinghorn
will start teaching at Miami University in the fall. And Chris Smith
is leaving for a more stable position at a state school as assistant
professor of psychology and human development at the University of Wisconsin,
Green Bay.
Still others who are leaving campus are simply retiring or leaving without
specific plans. Anna Hogarty, who began working in the behavior research
lab in 1965 and finished as an administrative aid in the president’s
office with over 20 years of service to the college, will take some
time off in northern Ontario and reassess future plans when she returns.
Adding insult to injury at the end of a long career, Haugsby has felt
“sadness, disappointment and rage” at the university’s
recent decision not to honor a retirement agreement Haugsby said was
ratified in 2005. The arrangement included a relinquishment of his tenure
to allow him and his wife Linda Hall to purchase a farm in Ohio to raise
chickens, sheep and try living among the Amish. The Haugsbys have already
sold their home in Yellow Springs and still plan to pursue the dream
they’ve had since they met in high school, but the conflict has
added more bitterness to his experience with Antioch, he said.
With a new proposal by the Antioch College Alumni Association to make
the college independent of the university in the works, the future of
the institution is still uncertain. But the absence of the faculty,
staff, administrators and students who have already left because of
the decision to close the school means that no matter what decisions
are made, the college is forever more a changed place.
Contact: lheaton@ysnews.com