Monday, November 3, 2008

The way the world works... (in GVSU's Japanese Program)

(Edit: Sorry about the weird spacing before the tables. I'm still not quite sure why it's doing that...)

I apologize in advance for the long post, but I will have a lot to talk about in relation to the future of the program on this blog, and in order to provide the background context I thought I’d make a long introductory post about the general structure of the program here and what that structure means for our options over the next few years...

The Department of Modern Languages and Literatures hires four different types of faculty. First, tenure-track faculty are full-time (meaning 3 courses per semester) and their contracts continue indefinitely (provided they are granted tenure when they come up for review). Visiting faculty are full time, but they have only a one-year contract which can be renewed for no more than three years, after which it is expected that they will seek employment elsewhere. Affiliate faculty are hired with various lengths of contract, and they can continue to renew indefinitely, though they typically teach only language classes. And adjunct faculty are hired to teach one or two courses depending on need. Depending on the needs of the individual languages, a combination of faculty are hired, with tenure-track typically teaching literature and upper-level language, full-time non-tenure track faculty teaching the range of regularly offered (mostly language) courses, and adjuncts hired to fill in the gaps. Unlike most large schools, where teaching assistants frequently do a large amount of the lower-level language teaching, GVSU does not make use of teaching assistants. That means there is generally a higher bar set for when we can add courses, since a faculty member always has to be found – or hired – to teach them.

From 2002-2008, the Japanese program has relied on one visiting faculty member (two different people doing a three-year-stint each) and an adjunct. Last year, for example, the visiting faculty member was Tomomi Emoto, who was finishing up her third and final year at GVSU while she was completing her PhD in anthropology, and the adjunct was Kailing Wu, handling two sections per semester. Like this year, there were three sections of first-year in both the fall and winter semesters, and there were two sections of second-year in the first semester, dropping to one section in the winter (as is usual after the three-semester language requirement is fulfilled). So the schedule looked something like this:


















Fall 2007Winter 2008
JPN 101.01
JPN 101.02
JPN 101.03
JPN 102.01
JPN 102.02
JPN102.03
Wu
Wu
Emoto
JPN 201.01
JPN 201.02
JPN 202.01
JPN 380
Emoto
Emoto


As a full-time faculty member, Emoto sensei was responsible for three course sections per semester, so in the winter, when there was only one section of second-year Japanese language to teach, she had room in her schedule to teach a course of her choosing. JPN 380 is called “Special Topics in Japanese” and it’s a “catch-all” course number, in the catalog as a place holder under which a wide variety of courses can be taught, depending on the professor’s area of expertise. Emoto sensei, for example, taught a course on Japanese culture through film. And it’s fairly clear from the numbers why the Japanese language program has been stalled at second-year for so long. In order to add a third-year course, two full-time positions were needed, and without even a commitment to make the first full-time position tenure-track, that wasn’t going to happen.

Last year with Emoto sensei’s third year coming to an end, the MLL Department once again went to the college (CLAS – the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences) with a request for a tenure-track position. And once again – though I have yet to figure out exactly why, given the high enrollments – there was some resistance. In order to get the position, MLL had to get support from a second college (COIS – the College of Interdisciplinary Studies). COIS includes the East Asian Studies program (which ostensibly includes both Chinese and Japanese), so it was a natural fit with the position. And, although it had never been done before so the details of how the position would actually function weren’t entirely clear, a tenure track line was granted in MLL for Japanese, funded 2/3 by CLAS and 1/3 by COIS. And that is the position for which I was hired.

It was expected that the 2008-2009 academic year for Japanese would look pretty much like the schedule above for last year, with me teaching the classes formerly taught by Emoto sensei, and Wu sensei sticking with her same courses. However, we learned late in the summer that Wu sensei would not be returning to Grand Valley, instead focusing her energies on teaching Chinese in the Grand Rapids Catholic schools. This left us in a bit of lurch... especially since it isn’t as easy to find Japanese-speakers qualified to teach at the college level in the Grand Rapids area as it is to find, say, Spanish adjuncts. In fact, we still hadn’t found someone to teach the additional sections by the beginning of August, and we were starting to worry that we may have to cancel some sections (something I really didn’t want to do in my first semester trying to build the program). We finally found Keiko Sakakibara, who had taught Japanese at Forest Hills high school in the past, and she took on the section of JPN 101 taught on the Pew campus while I took on an additional section of JPN 101 as an overload for the fall semester. So here’s how the current schedule looks:

















Fall 2008Winter 2009
JPN 101.01
JPN 101.02
JPN 101.03
JPN 102.01
JPN 102.02
JPN102.03
Robinson
Sakakibara
Robinson
JPN 201.01
JPN 201.02
JPN 202.01

Robinson
Robinson


The fact that second-year Japanese drops to a single section in the winter term means I don’t have to take an overload in the winter semester, but unfortunately it doesn’t leave space for a Japanese literature/culture course either.

So where does that leave us for next year? Well, MLL has recognized the need for a second full-time instructor, and it is a lot easier to get approval for a visiting position than it is for a new tenure-track line so we’ll be running a search in the winter for another full-time instructor. It will be a visiting position, which means that the person will be able to stay here up to, but no more than, three years. That additional position means that I will be able to leave all three first-year sections to the visitor and start to expand our Japanese offerings, including a third year of language and a literature/culture/civilization course in the 2009-2010 academic year. It isn’t finalized yet, but it should look something like this:
























Fall 2009Winter 2010
JPN 101.01
JPN 101.02
JPN 101.03
JPN 102.01
JPN 102.02
JPN102.03
Visitor
Visitor
Visitor
JPN 201.01
JPN 201.02
JPN 202.01

Robinson
Robinson
JPN 380(language)
JPN 380(language)Robinson
JPN 380 (culture)Robinson


“Wait a minute!” you ask, “I thought you were going to teach third-year Japanese! What’s with all those JPN 380’s?” Well, as I mentioned earlier, it’s hard to get new courses into the catalog without a “pilot course,” but JPN 380 can be taught with a wide range of contents, including language, and students can take the JPN 380 courses for credit multiple times as long as the content changes. So for the first year, we’ll be teaching the equivalent of a JPN 301-302 sequence under the course number JPN 380, and if enrollments are decent we should be able to officially add JPN 301-302 to the books the following year. The other JPN 380 course will also be a pilot course, but this time for a permanent literature/culture/civ course. I have had quite a few requests from those of you who have seen my website and list of my past courses and want me to re-teach those, but unfortunately I probably won’t have the freedom to do so anytime soon. My first priority is to build courses which can help to fulfill the basic requirements of the EAS minor, in order to create options for a minor in Japanese studies as soon as possible. Toward that end, I will probably end up adopting the current model used by the Chinese program, which has a two-course sequence on “Ancient Chinese Culture” (CHI 321) and “Classical Chinese Culture” (CHI 322). In the Japanese case, I might teach “Pre-modern” and “Early modern” as opposed to “Ancient” and “Classical,” but it would probably be similar in that it would teach a wide range of culture (literature, history, art, religion, etc.) for a particular time frame (Pre-modern to 1600 AD, Early modern from 1600-1900). Unfortunately, more specialized courses will probably have to wait until the basics are established (and we are able to hire more people).

Okay, so let’s assume that all goes well, and we are able to put the third-year language course and the civilization course on the books for the 2010-2011 academic year. It would look something like this:

























Fall 2009Winter 2010
JPN 101.01
JPN 101.02
JPN 101.03
JPN 102.01
JPN 102.02
JPN102.03
Visitor
Visitor
Visitor
JPN 201.01
JPN 201.02
JPN 202.01

Robinson
Robinson
JPN 301
JPN 302Robinson
JPN 321 (or 322)Robinson


It looks neat and tidy (and quite a bit better than what we have right now) but even with two full-time faculty we are only just barely covering the courses. For one thing, the culture courses could only be taught in the winter semester, so we could only offer them once per year, alternating between the two courses (not exactly the way to guarantee that students who want to pursue the minor will be able to do so). But more importantly, it leaves no room to expand. If first-year enrollments increase, or if more students want to continue on to the third semester of Japanese, or if there is enough interest to warrant a fourth year of language, there is no room to grow. I have talked with the head of MLL, and she envisions being able to make the case for a second tenure-track position by about the time that the visitor’s third year rolls around. And hopefully that means we would be able to get yet another visitor in to help cover more classes as we expand. With three full-time faculty, here’s what I’d like the regular schedule to look like within five years:

























FallWinter

JPN 101.01
JPN 101.02
JPN 101.03
JPN 102
JPN 101
JPN 102.01
JPN 102.02
JPN102.03
First-year language

JPN 201.01
JPN 201.02
JPN 201
JPN 202.01
JPN 202.02
Second-year language
JPN 301JPN 302Third-year language
JPN 321
JPN 323
JPN 322

3-semester culture sequence
(pre-, early, modern)


Now if I really had my wish list fulfilled, there would also be a fourth year of language study, perhaps a classical Japanese language course, and several more courses on specific topics (like most of those on my previous courses list), but those will probably have to wait. I think the above is the bare minimum to sustain Japanese as a viable minor through EAS. It allows for the first three semesters to be taken in either the fall or winter semester, which is important to accommodate different student needs as enrollment grows, and it makes each of the three culture courses available every year rather than every two. If we could have a reliable slate of courses to allow the EAS minor in Japanese by the end of those five years, we would be in good position to start thinking about a major.

Unfortunately, the real challenge to making Japanese a bigger part of the EAS program is something over which I have almost no control: the almost complete lack of faculty elsewhere on campus who teach Japan-oriented courses. China is very well represented, with China specialists in history, religion, sociology, geography, etc. but the only other Japanese scholar on campus is Joe Helgert in Communications, and he rarely (if ever) teaches Japan-oriented courses. Japan is a minor aspect of some courses, but even those EAS courses that are supposed to have a Japanese element are usually strongly China-centric, if only because those who teach it are far more familiar with the Chinese tradition than the Japanese. One thing I cannot do is create a Japanese major entirely out of the MLL department... I would need extremely large enrollment numbers to justify the necessary faculty. And I have very little control over what other departments prioritize as they hire new faculty. As a lone Japanese voice in the Chinese sea that is EAS, I hope to keep Japan on their radar as they make these decisions, but it is extremely difficult.

Anyway, that is where we stand right now. I apologize for the even-longer-than-I-thought-it-was-going-to-be post, but hopefully as things develop I’ll be able to point people here for answers rather than going over the same ground over and over again. As always, feel free to ask me to explain anything further in the comments, and your feedback is alway’s appreciated. Kore kara mo yoroshiku!

Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Japanese Dinner and a Movie

Well, I've been promising for a while now to do a Japanese dinner and a movie night, and I think I've finally got the details set. Thursday in the early evening seemed like the best time for most of those who responded to me about availability, so I've set it for Thursday, Nov. 13th, from 6pm in Mackinac B-LL-126 (one of the big "case rooms" on the basement level). I figured we could start gathering at about 6pm, make the food, start eating, and then begin the movie at around 7. Unless there are strong objections to either, I thought the menu would be okonomiyaki and the movie would be Kamikaze Girls (Shimotsuma monogatari, 2004).

Okonomiyaki is sometimes called "Japanese pizza" but the name literally means "stuff you like, cooked" so how could we go wrong. It's cheap, easy, can be made with only a portable electric griddle, and the ingredients are flexible, so we can make veggie options if we need to. Depending on the number of people, I may ask for people to throw in a buck each for ingredients, but that should cover it. Also, I have an electric griddle, but if anyone else has one they can bring it would be great to get several going at once.

Shimotsuma monogatari was originally a novel... and then a movie... and later a manga, about a lolita-fashion-loving daughter of a low-level yakuza living in the boonies, who befriends a biker chick... and hilarity ensues. It stars Fukada Kyoko and Tsuchiya Anna. Other possibilities I had considered were The Taste of Tea (Cha no aji), if people were in the mood for something a bit odd or Densha Otoko if people wanted something a bit more mainstream. I like all three, so I'm certainly open to changing the film if there is a strong demand in any direction.

I would like to get a general sense of how many to expect, so if you are interested, please RSVP, either as a response to this post or via e-mail. See you all on the 13th!

Update: I talked to the department head, and she's willing to kick in the necessary funds, so you all won't need to. Free food! Pocky for everybody!

Welcome to GVSU JapanBlog!

When I was hired to take the helm of the Japanese program, one of the most important tasks I was given was expanding the program with an eye toward making possible a minor and, in the longer term, a major. As an outsider coming in, it looked to me like this move was long overdue. It seemed to me that the very high enrollments at the first-year level, combined with the level of excitement for further study among students at the second year level, would warrant an expansion of options for Japanese students to study both higher level language and Japanese culture/literature/civilization. However, for one reason and another, the process has been on hold since this need was recognized in the department more than six years ago. Rather than committing to a tenure-track faculty member in Japanese, approval at the college level was only given for first one, and then another three-year visiting faculty member. And for all the advantages of variety and energy brought to classes by short-term visitors, they cannot and should not be tasked with growing a program that they are bound to leave. For six years, the only options available to Japanese students have been two years of language and occasional courses centered on the visitors' areas of expertise. Students who wanted more had to either study abroad or even transfer to another school with a better developed Japanese program. For a school in which the first-year classes began with three full sections and over 80 students, I think this is unforgivable.

So that is why I'm here... to teach what I know, but also to do whatever I can to ensure that students who have the desire and the commitment to study Japanese language and culture won't have to stop due to a lack of available courses. And the reason I am beginning this blog is because I recognize that the most important part of this grand plan of mine is the students. Speaking with many of you when I arrived at Grand Valley, I was surprised by how little of what went on in the Japanese program was shared with the students. Many of you didn't know that Emoto Sensei was only a visitor, that Wu Sensei was an adjunct working only part time, and that neither of them would be around this year. Now in all fairness, Wu Sensei's departure came as a surprise to all of us, but in general it seems that the students have been largely kept out of the loop and I hope to change that. I want to use this blog to keep you all abreast of the changes that are going on in the Japanese language program, and let you know what those changes mean to you. I want to make clear the way the East Asian Studies program and the Modern Languages and Literatures Department interact (just as soon as I figure it out myself), and openly discuss the options that I anticipate being available to you as they both continue to grow. And I want to make this blog a clearinghouse for information on the various Japan-related groups that are beginning to emerge on campus, as well as for announcements of Japan-related events in the area... which I hope to help expand in the coming years. I am doing this in part because I am a strong believer in transparency in theory, but in more practical terms I do it because I believe it is the best way to help myself accomplish the task. When I said students were the most important part of my plan, I meant far more than just the need to fill seats in classes. It is your energy and your demand for a greater range of options that will make it possible for me to go to my department head -- and for my department head to go to the dean -- to request additional faculty positions to respond to that demand. I will discuss where we stand now, how I see the next few years shaping up, and what I think I will need in order to accomplish my goals in later postings. But for now I just wanted to let you know my position, and the perspective from which I am approaching the task.

I look forward to hearing your input whenever you have something to say; the blog comments section is completely open. Criticism is completely welcome (especially if it's constructive), and although I always like to know who is posting, if it's easier to post something anonymously you can feel free to do that as well. In whatever way you are willing to contribute, I am eager to hear your contribution. And I look forward to working with you to build the program. Yoroshiku onegai shimasu!