|  
               
            Web Exclusives: Raising Kate 
                
               a PAW web exclusive column by Kate 
              Swearengen '04 (kswearen@princeton.edu) 
             
             October 8, 2003:  
               
             The 
              way of the precept: Inspired or impossible?  
              The university seeks 
              to improve experience for undergraduates 
             
            A week ago the faculty committee on the course of study, the staff 
              of the McGraw teaching center, and the several student leaders put 
              out a shiny, orange-and-white pamphlet entitled "Inspired 
              Conversations: The Princeton Precept" and delivered it to 
              all undergraduate and graduate mailboxes.  
             
            Although the theory behind the precept, introduced by Woodrow Wilson 
              in 1905, is sound, even beautiful  Wilson saw the precept 
              as a refuge from crowded lectures, an opportunity for students to 
              discuss political theory and jazz and Nabokov in an intimate environment 
               things have proven less rosy in practice. Since 1905, the 
              average size of a precept has grown from 5 to 12, and the preceptors, 
              once academicians hired specifically for the task, are mostly graduate 
              students.  
             
            "Inspired Conversations" was issued in response to 
              a 2001 USG survey that found that an overwhelming majority of Princeton 
              undergraduates are dissatisfied with their precept experience. The 
              USG put it this way: "Our report indicates that the precept 
              system fails to provide an inspiring, intellectually stimulating 
              environment for many students."  
             
            For those who haven't seen it, the USG's 2002 Report on the Status 
              of the Princeton Precept System (http://www.princeton.edu/usg/docs/precept.html) 
              is a must-read: "A student, when asked to describe the characteristics 
              of a good precept, quipped, 'I've yet to be in one!' Several students 
              expressed frustration by suggesting that precepts should cease to 
              be mandatory. One student captured this view, saying, 'I would like 
              to see [the preceptorial system] do something useful, like go away.' 
              These students are clearly indicating that their precepts have failed 
              to provide an opportunity for critical and engaging discussion." 
             
             The 
              tone of University-endorsed "Inspired Conversations" differs 
              significantly from that of the USG report. "Inspired Conversations" 
              is relentlessly, resolutely cheerful. My favorite comment is this 
              one: "On the first day of precept, I bring in 3x5 cards and 
              distribute them. I ask students for different kinds of information 
              about themselves  what's their major, their hometown, their 
              favorite film...Sometimes I ask them to draw a picture of themselves." 
              Puh-leeze. 
             
            "Inspired Conversations" also contains comments like: 
              "I love the chance to discuss deep issues with other really 
              intelligent people." "Prepare! Do the reading and be 
              ready to actually think!" "Precepts have been the most 
              valuable element of my Princeton experience." 
             
            Precepts have been the most valuable element of my Princeton experience, 
              too, if by "precept" you mean either "a genuinely 
              thoughtful discussion led by someone with a Ph.D." or "Guinness 
              on tap." To be fair, though, I know people who've been 
              in wonderful precepts, and I've been in a few good ones myself. 
              The best ones have been led by professors rather than graduate students. 
              But one precept in the Near Eastern studies department stands out 
              as having been particularly well run, and it was led by a graduate 
              student. This is not to say that the person leading the precept 
              should bear sole responsibility for its quality. After all, the 
              most honest assessment in "Inspired Conversations" 
              is this one, submitted by a disenchanted graduate student: "If, 
              after everything has been tried, the precept still does not go well, 
              do not conclude that you are a failure. Chance can throw together 
              a group of students whose ignorance is so universal and whose indifference 
              is so profound that Socrates himself would be stumped!"  
             
            I know a former graduate student who thought all his precepts were 
              like that. He told me that on the first day of class, grad students 
              make predictions as to the academic performance of their undergraduate 
              charges. A student wearing a baseball cap is one point; a student 
              wearing a baseball cap backwards is two. The more points, the worse 
              the precept will be.  
             
            I, too, have a system: Avoid precepts at all costs. Choose a seminar 
              over a large lecture with a precept component. I've only 
              been in five precepts, and that was no accident. When you're 
              taking a class that meets three hours a week and one of those hours 
              is spent in a poorly run precept, you're not getting the 
              education you're paying for.  
             
            The USG concludes its report with a number of sound recommendations: 
              mandatory teacher training for all graduate students, awards for 
              excellent preceptors, midsemester evaluations. Some of these ideas 
              have been implemented: the teaching center recently held a two-day 
              orientation program for preceptors. The program included discipline-specific 
              training in the categories of foreign language, engineering, humanities, 
              social sciences, physics, and sciences.  
             
            Hank Dobin, associate dean of the college and one of the principal 
              authors of "Inspired Conversations," expressed optimism 
              for the future of the Princeton precept. "Mandatory assistant 
              in instruction training was adopted and implemented for the first 
              time this fall  that's a huge step forward," 
              he said. "The McGraw Center regularly sends out both encouragement 
              and a template for midterm evaluations."  
             
            So where does "Inspired Conversations" fit into all 
              of this? "Arguably, 'Inspired Conversations' 
              directly addresses the recommendations about the affirmation of 
              purpose and responsibility, and, depending upon student reaction, 
              the reaffirmation of student commitment to making precepts successful 
              and stimulating." said Dobin.   
             
             You can reach Kate at kswearen@princeton.edu 
              
              
              
              
               
               
           |