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by patrickhogan1 575 days ago
This story really hits home for me. My dad was a physics teacher, and these complaints sound all too familiar—especially this part:

"I did what the University told me to do, and then these administrators ruined my life for it."

It’s frustrating how often dedicated educators are forced to navigate politics instead of focusing on teaching. The best educators are usually the least political, while those who thrive in politics often end up as administrators.

3 comments

Workplace HR “ethics” or “whistleblower” policies and processes are set up to protect the organization, not the person making the complaint. It’s you against the power structure in these situations, so you better have all your ducks in a row. Consulting with a very trusted advisor or attorney is probably a good idea.
> The best educators are usually the least political, while those who thrive in politics often end up as administrators.

The lady he accused of ethics violations was named Dept Head around the same time he made the complaint. An "old head" raising an issue against a new rising star...

My Dad was a university professor in mathematics. He loved his field! But the math department he worked in was taken over by someone who loved playing politics and maintaining power by playing favorites. My Dad refused to kiss the ring, and paid the price for that in his career advancement. He had tenure so it was never as bad as what happened to Marshal Brain.

Now we have n == 2, this could be a pattern. Of course it's a similar situation outside of academia too.

I think university politics is just horrendous.

I don't know the factors that lead to it though.

Meanwhile in the business world, I think market forces tend to balance a lot of this stuff out.