207 See It to Be It : Higher Education Industry (w/ Dr. José I. Rodríguez)
Episode Notes
On the tenth entry of our See It to Be It podcast series, Amy C. Waninger chats with Dr. José I. Rodríguez, a professor at California State University, Long Beach, about how he got involved in academia and what about it appealed to him, and he graciously shares the biggest surprise he had arriving into the industry. José also names several programs that are available for persons of color to help them feel supported and connected within the higher education space.
Connect with José on LinkedIn, Twitter and Instagram, and check out his website by clicking here.
Find out more about the programs José mentioned, BUILD, the Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship, and RISE.
Find out how the CDC suggests you wash your hands by clicking here.
Help food banks respond to COVID-19. Learn more at FeedingAmerica.org.
TRANSCRIPT
Amy: Hello, Dr. J. How are you?
José: Good, how are you doing?
Amy: Doing great. How’s the weather in California today?
José: Well, today the weather is good. It seems we have weather. [laughs]
Amy: Oh. That’s unusual for you guys. [laughs]
José: Right, right. It is highly unusual, but we’re happy. We need the weather.
Amy: So I was wondering if you could tell me a little bit–so you work in the education industry. You’re a professor at Long Beach State. And I was wondering if you could tell me, how did you get into academia, or higher education, and what about it appealed to you? Did you always want to do this or did you kind of happen into it?
José: Right, thank you. That is a great question. I got into it because I–you know, the pretty typical story that you have going to college, you know, your family tells you that that’s the thing to do, and–at least in my family–you have to either be a doctor, a lawyer, or some other profession of that ilk, and I thought, “Well, I don’t want to be a lawyer. I don’t want to be a doctor. I’m gonna be an engineer.” I started out as an engineering major, and I just got tired of doing math if I can be perfectly frank. By the time I finished a third semester of calculus I was done. [laughs]
Amy: Fair enough.
José: Yeah, exactly. You know how that goes. So I took this GE class in communication, and we sat around, and we were studying small group communication, and we would get together in groups and we would discuss topics and we would share ideas and we would have conversations in a college classroom–which I thought was revolutionary, because up until that point I really didn’t have experience with communication in the classroom, and I just fell in love with it. I thought, “Wow, this is really cool. I think that this might be my thing,” and the next semester I switched my major to communications studies. I started working with one of my favorite professors, who became a mentor, and one thing just led to another. So it wasn’t like I had this grand vision of, “Gosh, yes, I’ve wanted to be a professor since I was 4 years old.” That wasn’t me. I didn’t know what I wanted to do. I didn’t know what I wanted to be when I grew up. It was quite confusing. And I just stumbled onto what I do. I developed a nice relationship with some colleagues at the university. I got into a good master’s program, and then just created a trajectory, really through networking, which I know is dear to your heart, and that networking panned out in some really interesting ways. So it was a lot of networking and things that I really didn’t plan a priori but just seemed to work out in the process of doing and connecting with people, and I really loved it, and I still love it, and I think the idea of just connecting with people, connecting with people through conversations, connecting with people through teaching, through doing workshops, retreats, things of that sort, I find that very rewarding, very much, you know, aligned with the things that I value, and I find working with people to be, you know, useful. You see the results of it right away if you impact somebody’s life. If somebody is moved by something that you say, you see those results very quickly just by looking into people’s eyes. Somebody’s getting an idea or somebody’s asking a question or somebody’s emailing you and saying, “Oh, my gosh, that was great. That was fantastic,” and I think I really enjoy that almost-instant feedback in interactions through teaching, through doing workshops and things of that sort.
Amy: That’s fantastic. So what I heard in that was that you grew up with a value around education–and a lot like I was, right? I went into my college programs not knowing, like, what does that mean, what am I gonna be when I grow up, and sort of through the role of a mentor and sort of happenstance you were able to channel this value of education into something that’s giving forward to new students and is true to your values and maybe not so much math. [laughs]
José: [laughs] It’s true to my values, that’s for sure. Yeah, giving forward, you know, connecting with people, making a point or having a conversation with somebody that wasn’t there before, right? So you enter into conversation or you enter into dialogue with someone, and in moments that come seemingly from nowhere you develop a line of thought or a line of argument or a conversation that is really meaningful, enriched, and it almost seems like magic is happening, that you’re co-creating or co-inventing with someone, and that’s really kind of fun and engaging and becoming more and more rare as we lead mediated lives, and I find that really rewarding.
Amy: Yeah, I want to come back to that idea of mediated lives in just a moment, but can you tell me first – what’s been the biggest surprise to you? So you moved down this path of becoming a professor, and then you got there. So what surprised you now that you’re on the other side of that particular journey? What didn’t you expect–good or bad–about your industry?
José: Yeah, the thing that surprised me the most was the variety of activities that one needs to perform as a college faculty member. so I got into it because I like to teach and I like the interaction with students, I like being in the classroom, I like getting into discussions, I like lecturing, I like having that experience where you share a concept or an idea and it makes sense to somebody. They get it. Their eyes light up, and all of a sudden they are impacted in some positive ways. I really like that, and I thought that that was the majority of the show, but no, that’s not the majority. In fact, that’s just one third. There’s this whole thing about publishing and being on committees and having service obligations, and I found that to be surprising and extremely time-consuming. And not that it’s bad. It’s just typically not my thing. I think in most areas of academia people have their strengths or their weaknesses or their preferences, and my preference is on the teaching side of things. Service and academic publishing are great and I’ve done some of that, but that isn’t really where my passion lies. So that was a bit surprising at the beginning and at times a bit daunting, just because it’s time-consuming. It’s a lot of work, especially in publishing and getting your work out there and the process of revision and working with reviewers. All of that can be very time-consuming, and so that’s a challenge, yeah.
Amy: So I remember being in college, and I can tell you that my favorite professors were the ones that were there because they enjoyed teaching, not the ones that were there because they enjoyed the publishing aspect. They were usually not the best ones in class. I usually learned a little less from them because they tended not to care as much about making connections so much as, you know, they were worried about the publications and that sort of thing. So on behalf of your students I want to thank you for sticking with it and being there for them. I think that’s so important.
José: Thank you. I hear that. I hear that from students every once in a while, at times. You know, some faculty are very blessed. They won, like, a genetic and I guess personality lottery, right? They’re very good at teaching, they’re really good at publishing, and they’re very good at doing the whole service thing, but I think most people have a strength in a particular area and everything else is okay but isn’t as, I guess, you know, dominant in their professional life. So yeah, I think your point is well-taken, and at times it’s a struggle for faculty who really are into the whole publishing game to teach as effectively as possible. And don’t get me wrong, that’s not everyone. I think the vast majority of faculty do a great job, and sometimes people who are very well-published are actually very good teachers because they’re kind of on the cutting edge of their field and they are really excited about it and they bring that excitement to the classroom, and that’s fantastic. But in my experience, that’s fairly rare.
Amy: Yeah, absolutely. So if somebody’s not in academia now, if that’s something they aspire to, maybe they’re an undergrad or even a grad student at this point and they’re thinking, you know, “Maybe this is for me.” Where would they go to learn more?
José: One of the places to learn more is through a mentor or a colleague or somebody who’s already quote-unquote arrived. If you find a professor, a colleague, who is really a mentor, that’s really the best way to find out if the career is for you. Usually when you go to grad school, especially if you’re getting a Ph.D, you’re gonna have a committee of people that are working with you as you finish your dissertation, and you usually have a faculty mentor or a faculty adviser, and that person typically is the type of person that guides you, that, you know, writes your letters of recommendation, that has you on their research team, and that is the primary way that you get socialized into the process of becoming a professor. Another thing that people tend to do is go to conferences and, you know, networking events where once, twice or three times a year there are national conferences, local conferences, international conferences, where graduate students go and meet people across the nation and really create a growing body of colleagues across the globe or across the United States and find opportunities to work. In fact, most people I believe, still today, get hired that way. You hire people that you know or you hire people that have worked with people that you know. In my experience, that probably happens 60 to 70% of the time. And again, just like in almost any other industry I would assume, networking becomes very critical. It becomes a part of your professional practice, and it’s a great way to find out if the profession is right for you.
Amy: So you said something interesting, and I know that–I’m betting that you knew I would pick up on this. You said that people typically hire people that they know and networking is important, and since the audience, for at least part of this interview–to use Living Corporate’s terminology–black and brown professionals who maybe feel like they’re outside of the in group and in academia, right? If we hire who we know, that tends to self-perpetuate the demographics of a department or of a school or of a profession, and so what resources are available to young people of color or to professionals of color in your area that help them maybe navigate those waters in a way that someone like me wouldn’t have to do? What advice can you give them to kind of overcome that feeling of otherness?
José: The feeling is a challenge, no doubt. No doubt. What’s really exciting is that there’s more and more programs for persons of colors and individuals from historically marginalized groups, programs like BUILD and the Mellon Mays Research Fellowship. There’s another one called RISE, and we have those types of programs on campus–and they’re national, they’re all over the country, and essentially those are programs designed to help students from minority groups form a relationship with a faculty mentor in a larger community that is designed to help them navigate the murky waters of their professional development. They would start their undergraduate program with BUILD or with Mellon Mays or with the RISE program, let’s say, perhaps when they’re, like, a sophomore in college, and they would be assigned to a faculty mentor, to a research team. They would participate in conferences and get mentoring advice, and they would get help putting together a statement of purpose, a resume, a [?], and have publications with faculty members or, let’s say, conference papers on their own as a part of a research team. All of those things are not only very possible, but I see them happening on campus every day. It’s part of–what I do is I train faculty mentors on how to create conversations that are empathic and nurturing and holistic so that people know the kind of language that might be best, the kinds of things to say, how things might be interpreted, and we try to create scenarios where we’re asked to engage in everyday conversations in a way that is much more inclusive and less divisive. So that’s my best answer. Find one of these programs on your campus and join. Put in your application and take it from there. That’s one of the best ways to do it.
Amy: Yeah, that’s fantastic. Thank you. Sometimes we just don’t know what we don’t know, and if the target demographic for these organizations, if the target age or, you know, the target year is sophomore year, that’s very early for a lot of students even where they want to head or, you know, what they might want to do. I know I was, like, mid-senior year and then all of a sudden panicked because what I thought was gonna do wasn’t gonna happen, right? So I think it’s great that if we can engage students earlier in these kinds of programs so that they can explore what out there, and specifically what’s out there for them in terms of help so that they can overcome some of the affinity bias or some of the self-perpetuating selection processes that maybe existing faculty have, so thank you for that.
Find out more at https://living-corporate.pinecast.co