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1998 Distinguished Professor Address
Dr. David T. Courtwright (History)

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President Fretwell President
Rasche, President Shapiro, Provost Mine, faculty and members of
the UNF community I am deeply grateful to my colleagues for the
honor they have conferred on me. I am deeply grateful for the
love and support of my wife, Shelby, without which I wouldn't
be a distinguished, anything. And I am deeply grateful for the
monetary award, though I take note of the fact that, as immediate
past chair of the presidential search committee, I may be one
of the few recipients who had to actually earn the money by working
overtime in Summer A.
I am going to mark the
occasion by taking a moral holiday. Lest you think I'm about to
say something recklessly candid-although I may do that-I propose
chiefly to take a moral holiday from my profession. History deals
with the past. What I am about to say deals with the future.
My premise is that within
15 years UNF will be nearly double its present size, somewhere
around 20,000 headcount students, plus or minus a thousand. With
the chancellor's new classification scheme, which caps undergraduate
enrollment at Florida's three "national research universities,''
we could hit 20,000 sooner rather than later.In fact, our campus
may be overflowing with would-be Gators and 'Notes. (A sobering
thought.)
Now, with 20,000 students
we're talking about a mature institution, not a "young, growing''
campus. My question is this: What should UNF have as a mature
university that it does not presently have? I'm not referring
to the obvious-more offices, more classrooms, more parking spaces,
though heaven knows we need these things. Rather, I'm referring
to the more subtle amenities that are currently lacking, but which
we might secure as we expand further.
Not long ago a distinguished
critic of film and literature, Michael Wood, came to campus After
he had lectured to a full house, visited two of our classes, and
presided over a faculty seminar, he decided he wanted to go to
the opening of the "Polaroid Project'' show across town.
I drove. On the way over I asked him if he'd like to listen to
an audiocassette I happened to have in the car. It was Garry Wills
reading from his book John Wayne's America. Wood said sure, so
I popped in the tape. Wills' confident, resonant voice filled
the car. Somewhere between Motel Stadium and the Times Union-center
for Performing Arts, Michael Wood could stand it no more. He began
talking about-or perhaps talking back to-Garry Wills, explaining
why his conception of American myth was hopelessly monistic and
out-of-date There l was, driving down Bay Street, listening to
one great critic provide a voice-over narrative on the work of
another. The live stereo criticism gave rise to an epiphany life
in this town had its possibilities.
We need more of those
possibilities. We need more events like David Kline's colloquies,
or Dick Bizot's Irish Studies offerings, or the presidential lecture
series inaugurated by Adam Herbert. The life-of-the-mind-after-dark
at UNF is sporadic, uncoordinated, and generally under-advertised.
It also suffers, of course, from the fact that so many students
are commuters. For them a return trip in the evening is on the
same level as a visit to the periodontist. But as the number of
residential students grows, and as the honors program expands,
we will develop more of a critical mass for campus events- dramatic,
musical, artistic, and athletic as well as academic.
Our chief institutional
aspiration is to provide quality undergraduate education. But
quality collegiate education is not something that happens only
in the classroom. What goes on outside the classroom is just as
important. Real campuses have real student newspapers, real radio
stations, real film series, study-abroad programs, Phi Beta Kappa
chapters, bicycles, cheering crowds at big games, and interesting
places to eat. We have signs forbidding skateboards, a plan for
a three-hole golf course, and Chick-fil-à. Surely we can
do better as additional resources are made available to us.
Have you ever noticed
that there are no architecturally distinguished buildings on this
campus? Most of our buildings are-if you will pardon a triple
oxymoron-polygonal utilitarian clinkers, the scale of their facades
ruined by the useful but ugly concrete walkways. When visiting
candidates tell me how lovely the university is, I mentally register
one strike against them. (I told you this was a moral holiday.)
The campus in the Latin sense of the word, is lovely; the buildings
and their interiors are not. Surely a campus of 20,000 committed
to a modernist aesthetic should have one great modern Structure.
We need institutions
to foster faculty interaction. This is my tenth year on campus
and I confess I still don't know names of about a quarter of the
regulars. I have much less interaction with colleagues in education,
business, and engineering than I would like. There has to be a
better way to get to know people than craning your neck at a Faculty
Association meeting. The faculty development center, which will
include a faculty commons, is a good start. Perhaps one day it
will evolve into a full-blown faculty club, a social and intellectual
gathering place for all colleagues, full-and part-time.
So who has time to sit
around the faculty commons drinking coffee? We've all spent many
a day schlepping off to our classes, attending meetings, holding
office hours, and feeling lucky to sneak 15 minutes for lunch
at our desks. The workload problem-and here I fear I Am about
to tread on some toes-is compounded by the amount of teaching
done in the summer. Yes, nine-month salaries are low and, yes,
we all need summer income. But as we add FTEs, build the endowment,
and realize economies of scale, we can set aside more seed grants
and summer research funds. We need to encourage more faculty,
particularly people in early and mid-career, to take a break from
teaching.
We've made a promising
start in that direction. Academic Affairs provided a record number
of summer grants in 1998. Nevertheless, as we recruit more junior
colleagues-first-rate people trained at fine institutions, come
to us courtesy of one of the world's tightest job markets-we must
make it possible for them to have the time-and, in the sciences,
the facilities-to pursue their research Not only is research valuable
in itself it makes us better and more interesting teachers. Or
at least it made me one.
I know this is beginning
to sound like a wish list. I'm sure you'll agree UNF could use
more special events, cultural and intellectual Amenities for students,
snazzy buildings, and opportunities for faculty interaction and
development. I'm really trying to make a larger point. Justice
Holmes once remarked that we live by symbol. All these things
are symbols to me, and I hope to you, of quality in higher education,
of an active life of the mind and spirit.
If we do not achieve
these things in the coming years, if we do not build on the progress
we've already made, if we grow in such a way that we simply double
the number of student, offices and parking spaces, then we will
have failed. There is an important sense in which UNF has not
yet become a real university, much less a ''national class"
one or a "public ivy" It will, however, become one ((if))
we use our unique growth opportunity to effect qualitative as
well as quantitative change.
You have by your collective
vote made me a distinguished professor and I am honored. Can we-faculty,
administration, staff and students-by our collective efforts make
this a distinguished institution? Or will it simply become a big
one?
David T. Courtwright
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Copyright ©1998University
of North Florida.
All Rights Reserved.
Questions, Comments, Suggestions
Modified:
July 6, 2006
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