Disciplined
Minds: A Critical Look at Salaried Professionals
and the Soul-Battering System that Shapes their Lives
(Rowman & Littlefield, 2000) by Jeff Schmidt
Review of
Radical Political Economics
Volume 34, number 3, pages 363-366
Summer 2002
ISSN 0486-6134
Disciplined Minds: A Critical Look at Salaried Professionals and
the Soul Battering System that Shapes their Lives Reviewed by Terry Downes San Francisco, California terrydownes@earthlink.net Jeff Schmidt’s Disciplined Minds: A Critical Look at Salaried
Professionals and the Soul Battering System that Shapes their Lives is a
rallying cry to dissatisfied professionals and disillusioned students to
organize and reshape the system that is stifling them. Schmidt argues with conviction that the process of selecting and
schooling professionals is by its nature a means to weed out potential
troublemakers. Various stages of the
process of professional training, most notably the qualification exam, are
interpreted as “political” rather than “technical” tests that are designed to
reward those that demonstrate ideological obedience. The study is split into three portions. The first outlines the passive nature of
the contemporary professional, the second attributes this nature to the
selection process, and the third discusses alternatives to the present
system. Throughout the book, Schmidt
(who has a Ph.D. in physics, and 20 years experience editing a physics
journal) draws on his knowledge of industrial and academic research in
physics in the United States. At
first sight, this appears an odd choice.
Nevertheless, as Schmidt points out, the lay perception that science
is apolitical makes this field a useful vehicle for his argument. In the first section, Schmidt describes the self-deluded,
conservative attitude of the professional class. The author analyzes the difference between how professionals
may see themselves and how their actions reveal them to be. For example, he argues that since almost
80 percent of physics R&D is funded by the federal government, “many
professors could leave universities and take jobs in the military without
affecting the social or scientific significance of their work.” Moving to a military laboratory, however,
would take a “big toll on any university professor’s public image.” More broadly, Schmidt takes the “timid
professional” to task for projecting a liberal image, and yet failing to act
outside the interest of the status quo within their own field when they have
the opportunity. There are instances, particularly in this section, where the
author is guilty of generalizing and drawing conclusions based on limited
qualitative findings. Despite this,
some of the insights are valuable, and he makes it clear that he is not
tarring all with the same brush. One
can forgive this approach since the book has a target audience: people who
plan to or have entered a given profession in order to make the world a
better place. The aim is to alert the
idealistic would-be “radical professional” to the potential pitfalls, and
ensure that they qualify “intellectually intact,” and apply their egalitarian
principles when possible. The second and strongest section examines how professionals are
made, from selection to certification.
Schmidt lambastes the educational establishment, and the businesses
that have sprung up around it, for the cynical exploitation of those
searching for a sense of accomplishment from their work. He asserts that during the training process,
professionals are filtered based on their political bias towards the
mainstream. This is a continuous
process, but there are some striking examples of where it is applied
surprisingly early in the training for certain professions. For example, a convincing case is built to
support the argument that the qualification exam is often a potent secret
weapon precisely because it is seen as impartial and purely technical in
nature. The author demonstrates that
the exam can be shown to be a “political attitudinal exam” that measures the
willingness and ability to carry out tedious and repetitive work that is
abstract in nature. Schmidt discusses how the “backwash effect” necessitates that
the curriculum and student approach are dictated by such an exam when it acts
as an important hurdle to entering a career path to which so much time and
effort has already been devoted. If
the exam is limited to superficial tests of abstract rules, then the student
will be trained to absorb, accept, and repeat large volumes of abstract
theory rather than build critical reasoning skills. In addition, it is demonstrated that many qualification exams
also reward those that are willing to learn its “tricks” which can only be
garnered by targeted learning.
Schmidt illustrates how such an approach will not only reward, but
also produce, dependent thinkers. The author contends that students who pass this process are
likely to be the right ideological material for professional-hood. Students who do well in such environments
demonstrate that they can obediently do alienating, monotonous work, and
these are the skills that their future employers really want. Therefore, the “backwash effect”
originates in the government, corporate, or education job market, and its
implications wash back through the education system. It is for this reason that the study
focuses on tertiary education as opposed to elementary and secondary school. Whether you believe in an employer-educational conspiracy or not
does not detract from the strength of this argument. Nevertheless, it would be worth examining
if this conspiracy does exist. It
could just be that university professors are too lazy to change their style,
or to change their exam questions.
Superficial questions, such as calculations, are easy to set and mark. In addition, it is no secret that the most
prestigious universities are centers of research rather than of teaching
excellence. Competition ensures that
professors qualify in these schools.
In the publish or die wars, academics must feel tempted to keep
students in the system who will endure endless hours of tedious toil in order
to feed them results. An apparent conspiracy can also be merely a coincidence if both
parties have a common interest or agenda.
Academics may have an interest in curbing critical thinking, and
clearly business has it too. There is
a great deal of monotonous work to be done.
Much of it does not require any thought. As Schmidt points out, the professional class could be defined
as that doing the work that a machine is currently unable to do. Who better to do this work than a
bright-eyed graduate student, who will feel amply rewarded with an
opportunity to prove her/his worth.
It would be unkind, not to mention dangerous, to produce a master race
of socially conscious, free-spirited, independent thinkers if then only to
chain them to a desk and an in-tray for 40 years. It is no surprise that employers will look for ideological
obedience if they have that luxury. Schmidt concludes that a qualification process characterized by
a combination of long hours, poor diet, stress, faculty politics, and
financial pressure serves to focus even the most idealistic students on the
qualification process, rather than reflect on their values or reasons for
wanting to enter the profession in the first place. Eventually, he claims, the student will seek material
compensation for giving up these values.
Then begins a self-perpetuating search for material reward to
sublimate the compromise on core values, perhaps in the hope that there is some
nirvana at the top of the pyramid. As
a result, the once idealistic student is gradually molded into a mainstream
thinker before getting to a position in the hierarchy where she/he can make a
real difference. The alternative is
to remain an independent thinker, and bail out or be thrown out before
qualification. Through this process,
the hierarchy replicates itself. Schmidt aims his book at professionals who want to make the
world a better place. His central
question is whether the professional qualification process is designed to
produce the professional that will best serve society. His answer is an emphatic no. It could be that the majority of would-be
professionals are looking for an escape from the even more tedious work done
by their future underlings, and are interested in their own progress, not
that of society. Nevertheless,
Schmidt argues that the idealist, even if in the minority, must be nurtured. It is the nature of hierarchy that there is intense competition
for each step up. Schmidt has
concluded that the competition is resolved by selecting the most ardent
disciples of the status quo. He then
argues that any organization that feeds on dependent thinking will ultimately
fail, because it fails to adapt. The
crux of this book, therefore, is whether hierarchical institutions can ever
evolve to produce a more progressive egalitarian society. Schmidt concludes that hierarchical
systems are fundamentally flawed.
This is where a cursory glance outside contemporary U.S. society might
have proved illuminating. Among the
advanced economies of the world, the United States is distinguished by having
the highest ratio of managers and supervisors to workers. For example, this ratio in the United
States is almost four times higher than in Sweden. Several studies have shown that there is a correlation between
this ratio and the degree of cooperation in management-labor relations. The lesson is that a more inclusive
approach to management enables a flatter hierarchy, and this results in a
more egalitarian distribution of material wealth. This suggests that the United States is stuck, and that this
really may hamper its future ability to adapt and compete. Perhaps those at the top of the tree
should start to examine Schmidt’s thesis also. The last section of the book deals with how to survive the
ordeal of professional training, and keep your ideals intact, so you can
reform the system from within.
Schmidt advocates an approach that centers on organizing with
like-minded people wherever you can find them. This is a powerful concept since it fights the “divide and
conquer” nature of hierarchies. He
illustrates his suggestions with individual cases that highlight small but
important successes won from organization and resistance. This section has the most imaginative
source material, including the U.S. Army manual Prisoner of War Resistance. Throughout his study, the author avoids a theoretical
approach. This will attract criticism
from certain academics, but it is obvious that he has done this
deliberately. His tenet is based on
independent thinking, not the tweaking of existing theory to understand the
world’s problems. Also, ask yourself
whether, after spending 20 years editing a physics journal, if qualifying
every statement may be rather less fun than saying what you feel to be true. This book comes from the heart.
Shortly after its publication, Schmidt was fired for putting his
rhetoric into action. His employer
apparently resented the author’s claim that he used his spare time at the
office to work on the book, and he was fired after a 20-year tenure. His employer’s basis for dismissal was
that Schmidt was not “fully engaged” in his duties. This is hard to reconcile with the fact that Schmidt had
consistently received satisfactory or above average performance ratings, and
that when fired he was 2 months ahead of his objectives. The truth appears to be that Schmidt has
been taking his own advice for the duration of his career, and has come into
conflict with his employer several times when acting on his conscience. For example, he had pushed for increased
employment for minorities. The book
must have been the last straw, and an irresistible opportunity to get rid of
a troublemaker that had somehow infiltrated his profession. |