AuthorVicky Cheng

Passion, Burnout, and Liking What You Write

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A pastel cartoon. A mustached figure in suspenders and a tie hangs a poster as employees watch in the first panel. In the second panel, he tugs his suspender and the poster is visible: "Dress for the job you want, not the job you have." The third panel has him survey his employees in a group of cubicles and at a water cooler, his poster in the background; the employees are dressed as superheroes, cowboys, witches, bondage sex workers, and the boss himself.

Write what you like. Dress for the job you want, not the job you have. If you do what you love, you’ll never work a day in your life. From Thomas Carlyle’s vision of the Victorian work ethic, otherwise known as the gospel of work, to the twenty-first century’s increasing focus on developing a comprehensive self away from time spent in productive labor, the concepts of labor for pay versus leisure...

Empathy and Education Revisited: Fight or Flight

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A black-and-white graphic of an abstract human-shape pulling on the reins of a horse, who is leaning back against the reins. Between them is a bucket, presumably filled with water.

This week, we look back at Vicky Cheng‘s December 2016 post on engaging with students in the classroom. Vicky will be back next week with more on teaching and writing. “A good teacher will lead the horse to water; an excellent teacher will make the horse thirsty first.” — Mario Cortes Inside the academic classroom, we instructors face a number of pedagogical challenges, ranging from...

“It’s Lit!”: Memes, Linguistic Play, and Academic Terminology

The "is this X?" meme. The male Asian anime character has a meteor superimposed over his face, and he gestures at an image of Earth. The meme is captioned "Is this [X]?" where [X] is an image of the eyes of the man from the commercial real estate meme.

As a first-generation immigrant who first grew up speaking Mandarin Chinese, which then became superseded by English as my entire family struggled to learn the ins and outs of this truly ridiculous language, reading student papers submitted by those wrestling with the language will always provoke a bit of extra compassion from me. Working toward a doctorate’s degree in English may be no small...

Learning Writing By Teaching Writing

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A cartoon from PhD Comics, titled "Grader Types." Three panels, three different instructors in an office with stacks of papers to grade. The "Optimist" says "These answers are half right!" The "Pessimist" says, "The answers are half wrong!" The "Realist" says, "Statistically speaking, my teaching has had no impact."

Generally, there are few things that unite teachers more than a mutual aversion to grading. For some, the marking up of assignments and assigning of earned grades may be a mere annoyance; for others, the unavoidable nature of subjectivity inherent to that process, plus the amount of feedback necessary, multiplied by the time consumed makes for one distasteful equation. That being said, there are...

Developing the Writing Process: Cleaning the Litter Box, Constipation, and Other Metaphors

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A meme of Spongebob holding a piece of paper with an elaborate illuminated "The" inscribed on it. The meme text says "After 4 hours of writing your dissertation"

Most people don’t usually experience quiet moments of realization while cleaning out a cat’s litter box, but this is sort of how the writing and editing process goes: Here I crouch, sifting through environmentally-friendly litter and scooping out poops. Several paces away, my handsome tuxedo derpface sits primly, tail curled around his hind legs, silently judging. After I’ve bagged the waste and...

Reading Privilege and the Privilege of Reading

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A photo of a classroom with many mobile cabinets of brightly colored books. A table with a teal tablecloth and more books is in the center front. Bright murals cover the walls.

[7-10 minute read] As a child, I was a voracious reader. Scholastic Book Fairs were the best part of the elementary school fall season; no questions asked. J.K. Rowling was still publishing book after book in the Harry Potter series, The Reading Rainbow featured heavily as parent-approved public broadcast television, and I distinctly remember the pride I felt after making my way through my dad’s...

Empathy and the Danger(s) Disengagement

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      For the past couple of years, I’ve been keeping a list. Admittedly, it’s not an original concept, being a mental exercise adapted from one of many optimistic Pinterest boards encouraging meditative mindfulness and gratitude in the upcoming New Year. Instead of coming up with a soon-to-be neglected resolution, this effort at self-improvement requires little more than keeping a...

Empathy and Education: Fight or Flight

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A black-and-white graphic of an abstract human-shape pulling on the reins of a horse, who is leaning back against the reins. Between them is a bucket, presumably filled with water.

“A good teacher will lead the horse to water; an excellent teacher will make the horse thirsty first.” – Mario Cortes Inside the academic classroom, we instructors face a number of pedagogical challenges, ranging from constant apprehension regarding proper time management, to confusion over how to best incorporate new media technologies in diverse lesson plans. If the multitudes of our profession...

Empathy and Education: The Double Burden (Part II)

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In the numerous fields comprising that artistic and cultural field we call “the humanities,” we who self-identify as scholars must constantly be on the defense regarding our own choice of profession. An increasingly corporatized world sees banks encouraging ballerinas and actors to become engineers and botanists instead, and federal agencies such as the CBO actively suggesting reducing federal...

Empathy and Education: The Double Burden (Part 1)

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A couple of weeks ago, toward the end of our class’s unit on “Thrills, Sensations, and the Ethics of Nonfiction,” I assigned my students the University of Chicago’s Welcome Letter to the Class of 2020 alongside Sara Ahmed’s thought-provoking “Against Students” (June 2015). The former, a document separately decried or praised as patronizing and oppressive or timely and appropriate, comes from a...

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