糖心Vlog

Chancellor spends 40 minutes using smartphone at graduation ceremony

Incident raises questions about etiquette and rudeness

Published on
June 2, 2016
Last updated
February 16, 2017
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Alamo Colleges chancellor Bruce Leslie got people talking 鈥 not in a good way 鈥 last week when he spent a reported 40 minutes scrolling on his smartphone onstage during graduation.

And while Leslie鈥檚 history leading the San Antonio-area college system makes him red meat for faculty criticism in particular, he鈥檚 not the only person in academe guilty of faux pas on or off a phone 鈥 even if his is the most egregious in recent memory, Inside Higher Ed 谤别辫辞谤迟别诲.听

First, a little bit of background on Leslie. If you鈥檙e not familiar with Alamo but the name sounds familiar, it might be because of his聽controversial move聽to make the self-help book聽The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People聽a major part of the system curriculum, replacing a required humanities course. Perhaps ironically, Leslie told聽Inside Higher Ed聽in 2014 that he became interested in聽7 Habits聽in part after realising that some graduates hardly looked him in the eye or knew how to shake his hand as they were accepting their diplomas during graduation.听

Leslie further roiled faculty members with a聽聽to do away with including the colleges鈥 equivalent of majors on transcripts, among other initiatives.

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鈥淪ince he arrived he has made incredibly poor decisions and has gotten away with most of them,鈥 said one Alamo faculty member who did not want to be identified by name, citing job security concerns. 鈥淗e has schemed many ways to disconnect valuable input from the decision-making process.听Millions of tax dollars are wasted on poor decisions.听The list goes on and on and no one does anything about it.鈥

For the record, Leslie through a colleges spokesperson has apologised 鈥渋f he offended anyone鈥.

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The faculty member and others who have commented on Leslie鈥檚 digital perusing during the ceremony at Palo Alto College 鈥 which professors onstage with him reportedly timed 鈥 said the behaviour was especially disrespectful given campus demographics. Many are first-generation college students and the children of immigrants for whom such events are major family milestones.

鈥淒emeanor is everything when you鈥檙e up in front of people,鈥 the faculty member said, noting that one of the photos captured by audience members and posted to social media show a veteran walking across stage as Leslie attends his screen. This is a low-income, predominantly Mexican-American community in which most people don鈥檛 have a high school diploma.鈥澛


University chancellor using smartphone on stage


Yet Leslie鈥檚 far from the first administrator 鈥 or faculty member 鈥 to exhibit poor behaviour at professional events, from faculty meetings to commencement ceremonies.听

Karen Kelsky, a tenured professor-turned-academic job consultant and moderator of the blog The Professor Is In has heard a lot, if not all, of it during her career. In her聽聽she describes the 鈥淢ost Famous聽Anthropologist鈥 who reclined on the sofa during her conference interview in a hotel room, dramatically 鈥渟ighing his questions from a supine pose鈥. She shared some additional lowlights with聽Inside Higher Ed: a friend鈥檚 dean seen texting throughout students鈥 senior presentations; a former department chair who falls asleep during every single talk by any faculty job candidate; and someone who brings a flask to graduation.

It seems the regalia鈥檚 big sleeves might encourage that last behaviour. Debra Humphreys, senior vice-president for academic planning and public engagement at the Association of American聽 Colleges and Universities, said an acquaintance reported that some faculty and administrators 鈥 including board members 鈥 have been to known drink (and sleep) their way through commencement.

Poor etiquette isn鈥檛 exclusive to US institutions, either. Inger Mewburn,聽director of research training at the Australian National University and moderator of the popular blog The Thesis Whisperer, said a colleague she worked with years ago used to field calls for his side restaurant business while on campus. 鈥淗e had no shame at all interrupting class time or meetings to take calls from his chef or suppliers, telling us that it earned him more money than his academic job,聽anyway,鈥 she said.

One聽perceived faux pas: live-tweeting a conference, sometimes mistaken for rudeness.听

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One undeniable one:聽

In the wake of Leslie鈥檚 scrolling, some have pointed out that many students were probably doing the same thing throughout graduation. But those interviewed for this article had little sympathy for him, and said that students鈥 behaviour is no excuse for faculty and administrators 鈥 especially presidents 鈥 to emulate it.

鈥淚t goes without saying that faculty and administrators should be held to the highest standards of comportment and professionalization,鈥 said Kelsky, of The Professor Is In. 鈥淭hey are the face of the institution and its ideals and standards, for heaven鈥檚 sake.鈥

O鈥橬eil, the former president, said that having spent 鈥渃ountless unproductive hours presiding over commencements and graduations during my two decades at or near the podium, I would view the chancellor鈥檚 behaviour as inexplicable and intolerable for a presiding officer鈥. Leslie鈥檚 鈥渄isdain for formality and protocol were simply unconscionably rude to students, colleagues and families,鈥 he added.听

Adrianna Kezar, a professor of higher education at the University of Southern California, said she thought Leslie鈥檚 behaviour was bad form because leaders set institutional culture.听鈥淚f it鈥檚 OK for administrators to be on phone and ignoring our most important events then everyone thinks it is fine,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 see that as a real breakdown of academic culture and leadership.鈥

When all else fails, what about jamming cellphones during public events? Keith A. Williams, visiting professor of electrical and computer engineering at Virginia, said he seriously looked into the issue after faculty members complained about students using devices in their classes. (That鈥檚 only after his counter-argument about making class more engaging was shot down, he joked.)

Turns out, active jamming devices are illegal for cellphones, he said, and a Faraday cage of conductive foils around a lecture hall might get in the way of emergency calls. That leaves Wi-Fi jamming, which might have helped in Leslie鈥檚 case.

Or maybe just an explicit no cellphone policy for those onstage? Williams said he鈥檇 definitely support one. 鈥淯sing them for selfies and such is one thing, and that is actually good and fun,鈥 he said in email. 鈥淚 think if I were an actual commencement speaker I would make a spectacle of the issue somehow, maybe try to zap everyone鈥檚 phones with an 鈥榚mergency鈥 message telling them to turn the thing off, be wholly present, and live in the moment!鈥

As for Williams鈥 take on why Leslie鈥檚 behaviour has resonated so poorly with so many, he said, 鈥渨e all know that these ceremonies tend to be endurance events, with everyone sitting there for long, perfunctory enumerations of personnel and their credentials. So the obvious question is: if the ceremony is really so tedious, then why do it at all? Why come?聽Why not change it so that people actually want to be there, in the moment, actually celebrating their achievements?鈥

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