“Gilded cage?” Maybe it’s not where you think.

There’s nothing quite as disappointing as seeing those who should get it  — who by all rights should be your allies, your friends, your family — making silly and ultimately harmful observations.

Especially when those observations add to a miasma of half-truths, stereotypes and unfortunate political leanings that are slowly and steadily choking education in this country.

"Gilded Cage," courtesy of KayVee.INC through Creative Commons.

“Gilded Cage,” courtesy of KayVee.INC through Creative Commons.

Of all the dismal news and opinion I’ve read in the last couple of weeks, the most disheartening was this blog entry about a former academic who quit to form a business.  The company will produce an online app that pre-structures essays for students so they can “focus on content.”

Starting the company, author Lindy Ledhowski wrote, was preferable to being caught in the “gilded cage” of a tenure-track and eventually tenured position.

In such a position, she “would face no risks, but … be safe.”  Now there’s a contrast whose supposed oppositions and subtleties I likely never will grasp.

Ledhowski found it far more attractive to “make jobs for other people” than be in “a job.” The professoriate, she apparently believes, is an area in which “stasis” would be inevitable, at least for her.

Personal ephiphanies are fine. When those are gussied up in the language of education’s most ardent enemies, it’s a little more problematic.

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Remember the state motto: “Forward”

pelican

Creative Commons photo (license here) courtesy of Dawn Ellner. Cropped from original available here.

Here’s an interesting article from Bloomberg Business, announcing that fossil fuels are just that — a relic of the past — and that renewables have brought us to the only future we can feel comfortable about.

Whether the publication is more conservative or more liberal is beside the key point here. It’s a business publication, and its core audience is concerned about business success.  That makes this brief analysis more than worthwhile.  It has an important message that we’ll all need to hammer into our so-called leaders, again and again and again.

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No shortage of sub-freezing outdoor activity

 

This past weekend was one of those in which I did nothing special, but it ended up being quite special in its own Central Wisconsin way.

It started with no particular plan. By the time it was all said and done, though, I had visited four regional outdoor recreation institutions, with each visit sandwiched around a bunch of indoor activities.

All in all, it was yet another reminder of what a great place we live in.

Izaak Walton Jamboree leaves us hungry for more 
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Hiatus over for me; new paths just starting for others

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Click to see larger version of this picture of Ron and Donna Zimmerman.

I’ve been on an unintended break from blogging for almost two months now. The needs of my faculty position, my other writing, and my family life took precedence, but now I’m trying to ease back into my blog.

I’ll start with a link to my Portage County Gazette column from last week that was really fun to write because I got to sit down for a while with some wonderful folks.

The paper’s site is now fully functional, so I suspect we’ll renegotiate what I do with my columns.  Access to the site is free until March.

I’ve got another post that’s not recreation-related almost ready to go.  It was written with a mix of disappointment, dismay, and criticism, and it’s the latter that is making me wait another day or so.

 

New Schmeeckle app highlights history; vandals hit bike hitch

schmeeckle cap

Schmeeckle Reserve’s new interactive app features aerial-photo layers underneath a trail map. Click photo for a closer view.

Last week’s Gazette column is posted on the paper’s web site, which can be accessed at this link.

In the meantime, here’s a screen shot of the app.  Head on over … and, as a teaser for this week’s column, I wish everyone happy holidays!  (Yes, I’ll make fun of Texas, my former home state. But it will be an equal-opportunity column.)