Posted by Jay Livingston
When my son lived at home, a favorite family game when we ate out was MenuSpeak – scanning the restaurant menu for meaningless adjectives and adverbs.
Tender moist morsels of succulent chicken sauteed to perfection and topped with a reduction of the finest white wine delicately seasoned with fragrant, aromatic spices and herbs carefully selected by our talented chef. |
Restaurants are always cooking things “to perfection,” probably because the instructions on the pre-portioned, flash-frozen dishes tell the staff exactly how long to set the microwave for.
I was reminded of our game recently when I received* a copy of the Executive Summary of a report that a university prepared for an accreditation review. The Key Findings of the Summary comprise seven “standards,” written to perfection in EdSpeak. I give you Standard III.
Design and Delivery of the Student Learning Experience. The University provides students with rich and diverse interlocking learning experiences that include a revitalized General Education Program that reflects stronger coherence, rigorous and innovative academic programs that are relevant and integral to the generation of the flat global world, and a range of other high impact co-curricular activities that offer significant opportunities for students to enrich their learning experiences. |
I took out the adjectives and similar verbiage. Here’s what was left.
The University provides students with a General Education Program and co-curricular activities. |
I think this means that they offer a lot of courses and also credits for non-classroom work. As for the rest, I have no idea. I do see that if I were there, I would not be a teacher. I would be a Student Learning Experience Deliveryman. I would deliver tender moist morsels of learning experience.
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* In keeping with the political spirit of the times, I am not going to disclose my sources.
1 comment:
Bravo. Great example. Such verbal nonsense is common in higher ed, as you point out.
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