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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars hatchet job but has some good points also
I'm a prof but was a student, when this book was written. I seldom had a class taught by a TA. When I did, it was excellent. I had close interactions with famous profs throughout my education. But Sykes's anecdotes are real stories during the same period as my education. Many of his observations, of how the academic game is played, are also true. The take-home...
Published on January 9, 2003 by Donald C. Wunsch II

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42 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Genuine issues undermined by sensationalist generalizations
I read Profscam because I so enjoyed and agreed with two of Charles Sykes's other books: Dumbing Down Our Kids and A Nation Of Victims. However, I was bothered by the sweeping generalizations that he makes in Profscam. What most concerned me was his blanket statements about all faculty in higher education. Based on the examples/data he uses throughout his book he...
Published on July 15, 2000


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42 of 49 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Genuine issues undermined by sensationalist generalizations, July 15, 2000
By A Customer
I read Profscam because I so enjoyed and agreed with two of Charles Sykes's other books: Dumbing Down Our Kids and A Nation Of Victims. However, I was bothered by the sweeping generalizations that he makes in Profscam. What most concerned me was his blanket statements about all faculty in higher education. Based on the examples/data he uses throughout his book he clearly is targeting the behavior of full professors in the top 10 "Research I" institutions, but then tries to generalize this behavior to all faculty members, of all ranks, at all (private and public) institutions of higher education. Although we've all heard of "hot shots" in various fields who teach little, make more than $100K/year, and have all of the perks associated with such positions, those individuals are the exception, not the norm. Salaries among educators are notoriously low. The average faculty member in higher education makes less money than the average lawyer, physician, or middle-level manager, even though the number of years spent in school in order to obtain his/her Ph.D. degree is higher than that for the other occupations. A disturbing comment Sykes makes is that faculty only work the 8-16 hours a week that they're in the classroom teaching. This is as distorted as believing that lawyers only work when they're in court or physicians only work while operating on someone. Perhaps the "hot shots" in Research I institutions teach the same courses using old notes or can obtain teaching waivers if they have important grants, as Sykes implies, but the average academic easily spends 50-70 hours/week on teaching, course preparation and grading, advising/mentoring, writing, research, and university committee and community work. Even if we look only at Research I institutions, Sykes's accusation that students are not being taught by faculty is misplaced. Students who apply to such Research I institutions do so because of their reputation. However, few students ponder where that reputation originates. Quite simply, it comes from the research that the faculty conduct. Prospective students and parents are deluding themselves if they expect to find a lot of one-on-one attention from such faculty members. A quick look at these institutions' mission statements, the existence of doctoral graduate programs, and the student:teacher ratios should provide a clear indication that these institutions' goals are research-oriented not teaching-oriented. To go there expecting them to be teaching-oriented seems naïve and Sykes's accusation places blame on the wrong shoulders. The counter argument here might be, if these Research I institutions are not taking their teaching duties seriously then why should be they be paid to "exist" in the first place? But to that objection must be framed a counter-question: "who is to conduct `pure' research if not the faculty members in higher education?" I agree with Sykes that sometimes this research is trivial and not applicable to larger social problems but the hallmark of such research is that it is (comparatively) less-biased than the politically-determined governmental research or the for-profit research conducted in industry because the sponsors are not as explicitly after particular results that will enhance their positions/status (or pockets). As a result, polemical areas can be studied without concern for reprisals (one of the key reasons for the need for tenure). In addition, research also benefits teaching, both invigorating those who produce the scholarship and aiding those who use the textbooks which frequently result from it. Sykes's assertion that tenured faculty go unpunished is simply false. There are many subtle and not so subtle ways of punishing the tenured, from taking away laboratory space, switching offices, not giving raises, pressuring them to teach "service" courses, blackballing their grants, to administrative pressure to resign or accept a buyout or the simple elimination of a position and the professor along with it. On a more positive note, I do agree with Sykes's overall assertion that students are not getting as good an undergraduate education as they could/deserve. This may be partially because of the emphasis on research and lack of contact with faculty members that he describes but I also believe it is because of the desire for applied pre-professional education demanded by students today. As Sykes points out, the original ideal of an intellectual background of shared knowledge that would make all individuals "learned" is fading. That is a pity. While he blames the early German, research-centered model of higher education, he neglects to mention the overpowering effect of the Progressive era in this country and its appeal to application and utility. He is also quite on target in bemoaning the trendy focus on "theory" in the humanities, and the profspeak which, although he attributes to all academics, is more rampant among the poststructuralists. His complaint about offering narrow, specialized, and esoteric courses at the expense of broad core curriculum courses that would allow for a shared body of knowledge couldn't be more accurate. In today's highly politicized and overly sensitive academic environment, diversity and rejection of a purported elitism tend to be explanations or excuses provided for this. But Sykes's argument that it is less work to deconstruct than to construct seems more adequate, particularly in the areas where poststructuralism is most prevalent (literature and literary theory, communication, semiotics, english, history, philosophy). It is hard to contribute something original to the literature when you're using texts that have already been studied for centuries. It is easier to create a career out of deconstructing them. Overall, although I enjoyed this book, I think it's unfortunate that the genuine issues Sykes is trying to highlight ended up undermined by his sensationalistic, journalistic style of writing.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars hatchet job but has some good points also, January 9, 2003
I'm a prof but was a student, when this book was written. I seldom had a class taught by a TA. When I did, it was excellent. I had close interactions with famous profs throughout my education. But Sykes's anecdotes are real stories during the same period as my education. Many of his observations, of how the academic game is played, are also true. The take-home message is: let the buyer beware. It's a gross error of the book to do a hatchet job on profs -- you can find good ones all over. But if you don't do your homework, you could spend megabucks on higher education and get ripped off. I'm thankful to have had the opposite experience. I started by choosing to attend Seattle University, where it was obvious they actually read my required essay from the application, unlike several top-ranked schools that had accepted me. From there, I was mostly lucky. It's still possible to get an excellent value for your higher education dollar. This book throws the baby out with the bath water, but it does tell you what to watch out for.
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22 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars An addictibly readable reality check!, March 3, 2004
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I am currently finishing my masters degree and am researching doctoral degress. Unfortunately, I not only enjoyed this book, but recognized many things in it as so true that they were funny (and sad).

Point: Universities are much less concerned with teaching students as they are with plumping out research that is trivial, abstruse, and to all but maybe 10 peers who will read the resulting article, irrelevent (and those ten are reading it to cite it in the next essay). Point: The humanities have done away with virtually all standards, are interested in theory that poorly reflects the real world, and consist mostly of 'guts' courses that are called that because they are so easy one can pass the tests on gut instincts. Point: tenure is partially destroying education. Once designed as a bastion of academic freedom, now it serves to insulate already detached professors even more from the real world, and destroy any notion of accountability.

Here's the books downfall: it is so eager to point out these things (even though the book is for the most part right on) that it ends up sounding paranoid and overly combative. Every example of a poor professor is accompanied by an adjective like "assinine" or "abysmal". There was even one section where the author points out that "one study says..." in order to show how bad social science education is. I was left wondering....what the other studies said. In other words, the book leaves us with a feeling that while largely correct, the author may have been a.) selective and b.) a little overeager to rip on all things academic for the meer sake the it feels good.

But the main messages is that education is overpriced while quality declines. The proffesoriate cares infinitely more about themselves (and their obscure research) then their students. Graduate students do the teaching while professors 'play at' writing important things. This is all, unfortunately, true. But I do want to write that while the author is quite pessimistic, I am not. I am currently finishing graduate work at a small liberal arts college in Richmond, VA (if you'd like you can figure out which one as there is only one). There, the teachers teach, there is no such thing as a teachers assistant, class comes before research, and classes are small enough where students even have the teachers home phone. Anyone contemplating colleges I urge you to read this book and consider the smaller liberal arts schools (and the one I'm at is top notch).

Good book!

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10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Accurate depiction of the rot in higher education., March 22, 1998
By A Customer
Some professors still revere scholarship and take seriously their professional responsibility to pass their knowledge to succeeding generations. This book is not about them. It is about the growing number who degrade the scholarly tradition, abuse their positions, and cheat their students. I spent 15 years on university faculties. If anything, Mr. Sykes is too kind.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Portions of the book hit home, April 6, 2001
By A Customer
As former faculty member myself, I can appreciate Charles' views, as I saw a few colleagues provide little support for the students. This was not out of malice, but simply a realization that the system does not reward dedication to teaching and effective advising. For example, a colleague of mine got ripped in his student evaluations twice, so what does the department head do? He removes him from teaching undergraduate courses altogether, leaving him with two independent-study graduate courses. My colleague also got promoted the same year. What a deal! All this while I am teaching 30% above capacity and getting nothing but jealousy from a few of my colleagues. My research and publication output was not compromised (any more than others), but department politics were not kind to me. Later, I took a faculty position in the College of Engineering where students WERE first. So, problems vary with the culture of the department. The author does generalize a bit, but faculty should only be offended if he/she is the offender. All of us have seen instances of what Charles has described in academia. My advice to a new faculty member...if it smells bad, change the scenery, QUICK!
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8 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Anyone in higher education should read this book, September 22, 2003
By A Customer
This book exposes the myths of undergraduate, graduate and doctoral education in America. From my own experience, and from what I have read in this book, a college education at a community college may be superior to that of an Ivy League college like Harvard or Yale, especially if you end up in a classroom filled with an auditorium of hundreds of students, and in the professor's place is a graduate student teaching assistant who may have no experience in teaching the class you are taking. The professor is not in class because teaching is not what counts, it is meaningless reasearch for publication that allows a college professor to keep his job, and line his pockets with money from corporations who hire him as a consultant away from the college campus. Students deserve better than this! If what is written in this book is true, you just might be better off going to the public library to educate yourself. You won't have a degree, but at least you won't be an uneducated college graduate.
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10 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars was very accurate but now getting dated, November 29, 1999
By A Customer
This book was written in 1988. At the time is was written, it was a very accurate portrayal of what was happening to undergraduates in America's large universities. I attended one of the schools he mentioned back then and I can tell you from first hand experience that it was very accurate. However, I believe that in the years since then, the situation has improved, possibly because of books like this, the efficiencies brought about by computers, and also because of the pressure brought to bear by ranking reports such as that done by US News.

If you are criticising this book yet you attended a nice, small, expensive elite liberal arts college, you should seriously ask yourself if you really know what the heck you are talking about. Many of the privately educated graduate students at my university thought that things were just hunky-dory for us undergraduates. They underestimated the importance of all the attention and quality teaching they had received at their private school and figured we would be fine without it (or if we weren't fine, we must be stupid). I find that people who got what they needed at that age tend to have a blind spot for the incredible importance of quality, concientous teaching.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Competing Interests in Higher Ed, February 4, 2012
The state of American education is appalling, but it isn't the administration to blame. It is the profs. And Sykes minces no words. Here is a mere sample of his indictment: "No understanding of the academic disease is possible without an understanding of the Academic Man, this strange mutation of 20th-century academia who has the pretensions of an ecclesiastic, the artfulness of a witch doctor, and the soul of a bureaucrat. His greatest triumph has been the creation of an academic culture that is one of society's most outrageous and elaborate frauds. It is replete with the pieties, arcane rituals, rites of passage, and dogmas of a secular faith. . . . Ultimately, the academic culture represents a sort of modern-day alchemy in which mumbo-jumbo is transformed into gold, or, in this case, into research grants, consulting contracts, sabbaticals, and inflated salaries" (pp. 4-5). And this is only a sample of his bill of indictment!

The book is full of lingo, rhetoric, and name-calling. But through all the words, which actually make an otherwise dull subject electric, his contentions hit the mark bulls-eye. The faculty has the power to determine the product, the terms upon which it will be offered, and the customers who will be served. Profs are hyper-specialists, instead of offering students a general education. They are institutionally rewarded for more research grants and publications, and punished for good teaching and time spent interacting with students. In the past twenty years, profs have had decreased teaching loads while huge increases in salaries. Academic democratization has lowered standards while inflating grades. Academic thought police have promoted prof freedoms while imprisoning students in by-gone ideologies. Rather than broadening minds, the academic culture has ended up ratifying and strengthening our culture's most basic features. The rich humanities have been replaced by the sterile statistics of the social sciences.

Sykes blames the profs, but it's the culture of academia that is often the problem. Profs are forced to publish or perish, and they have to specialize in minute details to get published. And outstanding teaching is simply on the backburner of most of the major university's job descriptions. In order to survive in academia, they have to play the game of academia. Grade inflation occurs because so many low grades merely get student complaints to adminstrators who pressure grades upward. Student evaluations forced by accreditation agencies force profs to entertain students rather than educate them.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Don't just take my word for it..., September 15, 2009
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Here are the review excerpts included on the first page:

The New York Times Book Review: "Mr. Sykes' vivid and vocationally eloquent exposé is sure to provoke howls of indignant rage in the academy.... But as a report from the front, ProfScam is an incisive and convincing indictment that deserves to be read by anyone concerned about the future of American higher education."

The Detroit News: "A pugnacious, absorbing, funny, informative book.... Could Charles Sykes be the Ralph Nader of a coming academic reform movement? To the professors, such a movement will probably look like a horde of barbarians storming the gates of the Temple of Knowledge. But the mass of evidence chronicled by Sykes suggests that the barbarians are on the other side of the gates."

The Wall Street Journal: "... a lively indictment.... ProfScam is uncomfortably on the mark in its depiction of the ills of the academy."

The California Review: "Sykes demonstrates both his skill as an investigative reporter and as an essayist. His thesis -- that the professoriate is responsible for inflicting terrible damage to our system of higher education -- is well documented and delineated in a clear, engaging and often humorous style... ProfScam is a stunning and disturbing piece of work. One can only hope that it will be an influential one as well."

National Review: "... an extraordinary book about higher education in America... The thrill of Mr. Sykes's book resides in its relentless specificity."

Chronicles: "This man is a truth teller, therefore he is shrill, obnoxious, abusive, aggressive, offensive, and absolutely right.... A first-rate analysis of a major national calamity -- the end of the university as a suitable medium for educating young people."

Robert Nisbet, Professor Emeritus, Columbia University: "Sykes goes beyond the ivied walls and yields us a view of the university that combines wit with serious and important criticism."

Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post: "Stupendously provocative and important... ProfScam is an immensely important document, one that cuts to the heart of America's academic darkness, and it deserves to be taken seriously by anyone who cares about our universities and worries about the future."

Thomas Sowell, Syndicated Columnist: "Any parent who is planning to spend big bucks to send a son or daughter to a big-name university should especially read ProfScam.... It should be required reading for anyone who wants to think or talk seriously about universities..."
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9 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This is the best book written on higher education., October 2, 2001
By A Customer
Martin Anderson's, "Imposters in the Temple" is another one.
The people who have slamed this aren't being objective, or
haven't sat through 40 classes at their Institutions like the undergraduates do. I suggest they take a few of the extra hours they don't work and sit through a bunch of classes. But they won't because they have tenure and don't really have to care. Real scholars will come away aghast at what they see, but will have no power to change anything. Syckes has called it like it is.

These books are the most accurate and honest description of
what my undergraduate experience was like. They are also quite
applicable to what I experienced ten years later in graduate school, which was quite recent. Nothing has changed folks. And nothing will change, untill you get involved.

Check out ProfessorWatch.com . This web site claims it was inspired by these books, and they've developed a workable plan to change all this degeneracy.

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Profscam
Profscam by Charles J. Sykes (Audio Cassette - Aug. 1997)
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