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WTJU shuffles the schedule and relaunches public affairs programming

 

WTJU’s General Manager Nathan Moore is taking it on the road with a new live remote system. (Photo by John Robinson)

In 2010, WTJU was uncertain of its future. The unpopular general manager, Burr Beard, had just resigned after proposing a number of drastic programming changes. WTJU was left without a leader while the office of public affairs undertook the search for a replacement, and many wondered where the station was headed. In the interim, volunteers formed committees to guide the future of the station. One year later, Nathan Moore was hired as general manager and the programming committee began to wrestle with the difficult task of reviewing and redesigning the station’s weekly schedule. (It should be noted that the author of this article serves as a member of WTJU’s programming committee.)

Designing the ideal weekly schedule for a radio station is trickier than one might think, considering the task of balancing the station’s four departments: folk, rock, jazz, and classical, while maintaining consistent programming from day to day. “One of our goals was to make it less of a patchwork,” Moore said. “We’re a station with a lot of variety, so it’s important to have block programming, so there’s consistency during the week, which is just basic conventional radio wisdom. People get into their cars, coming home from work, they expect something similar from day to day. We’ve arranged our schedule so that it’s easier for folks to find what they’re looking for; it’s easier for them to tune in, and stay tuned in.”

For much of the week, the new schedule will look pretty similar to the old one. The most significant change is that the 4-6pm “drive time” hours will now be occupied by folk and roots programming. The evening classical shows will be bumped forward an hour; jazz will lose an hour of morning programming but gain an hour in the evening.

The schedule also allows the station to feature live music, with bands appearing in the studio and via broadcast from local concert venues. The station recently set up a live remote system, and has aired shows from around the region. “Over the last year we have made live music a priority,” said WTJU’s folk director Peter Jones.

Another significant change is the addition of public affairs and news programming from 9-10am every weekday. WTJU had public affairs shows in the past, but for most of the last decade the only major public affairs show was the syndicated program “Democracy Now.” “It’s a great program, but it wasn’t fulfilling the core goals of what we’re after at WTJU” said Moore. “We’ve decided to give public affairs at the station a fresh start.” In February, the Charlottesville Tomorrow staff approached Moore and C-VILLE Weekly editor Giles Morris about starting a new local news podcast. “As we talked, it became clear that what we were talking about was a radio show,” Moore said.

“Soundboard” had a “soft launch” in early March, and currently airs every Friday. “There’s a lot of music-heads at the station who were skeptical of public affairs programming—we had to show them that it could be done, and that it could be done well.” said Moore. By mid-July, he hopes to expand to twice a week, and eventually air it for an hour every weekday. “We’d like to run it when it has a shot at succeeding. It’ll be airing right after NPR’s “Morning Edition,” so hopefully a lot of listeners will carry over from that.”

WTJU found itself doing an unexpected bit of public affairs reporting as the Teresa Sullivan resignation scandal erupted two weeks ago. As thousands gathered on the UVA Lawn to protest the actions of the University’s Board of Visitors, WTJU brought its live remote system along to broadcast comments from the crowd on-air. Moore said, “It was an important thing for us to do. At that time things were still really up in the air, and we wanted to be a platform for people to share their views, and to share their vision for the University. It’s important to go out into the community, not only to be present, but also to bring those voices to our listeners.”

With the new schedule set to launch on July 15, Moore’s plans for the station include strengthening the FM signal, increasing student involvement, and revamping the station’s website with the help of Ken Garson, web guru for forward-thinking New Jersey station WFMU, and a recent Charlottesville transplant.

“It’s not just about increasing our online listeners, but thinking of ourselves as a media outlet, and showing the same attention to our website that we do to our radio station,” Moore said. “What’s gonna keep us going—and thriving, not just staying afloat—is the things that listeners value about WTJU. Not just that it’s well-curated, but that we can really connect with listeners, that we bring the community together.”

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News

Quoting Thomas Jefferson at UVA

The ever-quotable Thomas Jefferson had plenty to say during his lifetime about governance, transparency, and the future of the university he founded. No surprise, then, that his name and words have been invoked a number of times over the last three weeks by people on both sides of the debate on Grounds over Sullivan’s resignation. So who said what?

1. “The great object of our aim from the beginning has been to make this Establishment the most eminent in the United States.”

2. “…as new discoveries are made, new truth discovered and manners and opinions change with the change of circumstances institutions must advance also to keep pace with the times.”

3. “For here we are not afraid to follow truth wherever it may lead, nor to tolerate any error so long as reason is left free to combat it.”

4. “This institution of my native state, the hobby of my old age, will be based on the illimitable freedom of the human mind, to explore and expose every subject susceptible of its contemplation.”

5. “…Though you cannot see, when you take one step, what will be the next, yet follow truth, justice, and plain dealing, and never fear their leading you out of the labyrinth, in the easiest manner possible. . . An honest heart being the first blessing, a knowing head is the second.”

6. “It is pleasant for those who have just escaped threatened shipwreck, to hail one another when landed in unexpected safety.”

 

A. UVA faculty who are also alumni, in a letter to Governor Bob McDonnell on Thursday, June 21.

B. Faculty Senate Chair George Cohen, in a statement delivered before the emergency meeting of the Board on Tuesday, June 26.

C. Governor Bob McDonnell, in a letter to the Board of Visitors, Friday, June 22.

D. Rector Helen Dragas, in the initial press release announcing Sullivan’s resignation sent out Sunday, June 10.

E. President Teresa Sullivan, in a statement to the Board of Visitors at the start of its marathon closed session June 18.

F. President Sullivan, in her statement on the Rotunda steps on Tuesday, June 26.

 

Answers: 1. (D); 2. (E); 3. (A); 4. (C); 5. (B); 6. (F)

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News

Higher ed scholar says Sullivan reinstatement ‘unprecedented’

Leaf to the back of University of Georgia sociology professor Joseph Hermanowicz’s 2011 book The American Academic Profession: Transformation in Contemporary Higher Education, and you’ll find a familiar name.

A few weeks ago, Teresa Sullivan’s contribution to the book, an essay on the institutional importance of university faculty that was written while she was still provost at the University of Michigan, might have been called thoughtful. Well-reasoned. Insightful, even.

Now, it’s hard to call it anything but prescient.

“As funding becomes tighter, and as the timeline for decision making grows shorter, decision making is likely to become more centralized, with fewer opportunities for input,” she wrote. “Under these conditions, administrators are likely to become more reliant on specialists in finance.”

But faculty input is key, Sullivan said—even though it’s increasingly under threat.

“Shared governance is the tenet of the academic profession that may be in the greatest jeopardy,” her conclusion reads. “Maintaining professional solidarity in the face of intellectual diversity and shifting loyalties between discipline and university may prove to be the most difficult task for the faculty.”

Professors at UVA, at least, have proved to be the exception. Their fierce, organized pushback in the wake of the forced resignation of their well-liked president gained national attention, and ultimately, their relentless pressure and ability to rally other members of the University community was the driving force behind the Board’s decision to reverse its decision and reinstate Sullivan.

But can they keep their momentum and spin a public victory into a more permanent expanded role in UVA’s governance?

Blindsided
It’s safe to say George Cohen had no idea what he was in for when he became chairman of the Faculty Senate on June 1. The genial law professor was nine days in and enjoying a family vacation in San Diego when the news of Sullivan’s resignation hit.

“I certainly spent more time in my hotel room on my iPad than I’d intended,” he said. Days later, he returned to a university already in an uproar, and presided over what was probably the most well-attended meeting of the Faculty Senate in UVA’s history.

The faculty, and especially the Senate leadership, spoke out early and forcefully against the ouster. They filled the Lawn for a series of protests and vigils. They held office hours to sign colleagues up for work groups and task forces. And they kept their departments’ students and alumni in the loop with a steady stream of e-mails.

Cohen said the scope and intensity of the reaction on Grounds was completely unexpected. But as details of the secretive ouster leaked out, he said, the faculty recognized that they could—and should—have a significant role in keeping pressure on the Board, because their positions gave them power others within the community lacked.

“We couldn’t really say everything about the people who talked to us and helped us, because they were in a more vulnerable position than we were,” he said. “Tenure is still a valuable thing. The faculty were the people who really could speak out on this issue, and we tried to do that in as respectful a way as we could.”

Ultimately, it worked, and now there’s a sense that those who want to see faculty play a bigger role in university governance have a chance to make a move.

Much of the anger over the secretive attempt to remove Sullivan was directed at UVA Rector Helen Dragas, who has since apologized for the way the Board of Visitors handled the affair. (Photo by Cole Geddy/UVA Public Affairs)

Shifting power

As the Board’s silent, unified stance on the Sullivan affair unraveled, some currently in power indicated they were open to change. Hunter Craig, who originally met with the rector and vice rector to accept Sullivan’s resignation before becoming a vocal supporter of her reinstatement, said he’d even give up his seat on the Board to make way for a faculty representative. It’s an idea many professors have echoed as a necessity in the future.
But John Thelin, a professor of higher education and public policy at the University of Kentucky, former chancellor professor at William & Mary, and the author of A History of American Education, said while many public universities have incorporated faculty representation into their governing boards, an appointment or two wouldn’t solve every problem.

“On the one hand, it’s a big gain, and it provides some continuity and formality, and it’s not going to be evaporated,” Thelin said. “It’s going to persist. But in some ways, those faculty members face a very hard situation. They can be coopted.”

Cohen agreed. The discussion now is about more than a representative on the Board, he said.

“We should take this opportunity to think as deeply and creatively as possible on the question of how the Board should be made up, how the Board should interact with the different constituencies of the University,” said Cohen.

It’s not something faculty can do alone, he said. Any change in Board rules, for instance, would require legislators to step in.

“So right now, we as the Faculty Senate are doing what we do best, which is try to figure out the pros and cons, do some research about what other places do, figure out what works and what doesn’t, try to come up with some proposals, and see what happens,” he said. The process has already started. Cohen said faculty members are signing up for workshops and scheduling symposia to talk governance in the coming months.

They could have an important leveraging tool at their disposal, Thelin said. Before Sullivan’s reinstatement, the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools put the UVA Board on notice, saying it had questions about UVA’s ongoing compliance with accreditation rules and calling into question the integrity of the Board. That should make UVA leaders nervous, Thelin said. The SACS is responsible for accrediting the University, and running afoul of its rules could have a serious negative impact on funding eligibility—not to mention the school’s reputation.

“Anything that would jeopardize the regional accreditation of the University is very high stakes,” Thelin said, and that might make Board members and state legislators more willing to entertain reforms.

Miracle on Grounds
Whatever the long-term effects on governance, Thelin said the turmoil at UVA was extraordinary. A president getting fired is nothing new, he said. Neither is faculty unrest. But a University community rallying around an ousted leader until there’s a reinstatement?
“As far as I know, it’s unprecedented,” he said.

Cohen seemed as surprised as anyone that he and the faculty he represents fought as hard as they did—and prevailed. But their message has remained the same throughout the last three weeks, he said, and it will guide them going forward.

“What we have been saying all along is that we understand change has to come, but let us be a part of the process,” he said. “Let us contribute. Let’s have the debate.”

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News

Don’t I know you? Getting reacquainted with Teresa Sullivan

UVA President Teresa Sullivan grew up in Little Rock, Arkansas until the age of 13, when her family moved to Jackson, Mississippi, where she went on to become valedictorian at St. Joseph’s High School, the first high school in the state to integrate, in 1967.

“We were all touched by those times. They were what led me to become a sociologist,” Sullivan told UVA Today just after she was hired.

She attended Michigan State University, where she graduated with high honor from the honors college. After her graduation, then-president Clifton R. Wharton Jr., the first African-American president of a public research university, asked Sullivan to stay to be an intern in his office. Wharton became her mentor, and at the end of the internship, he told her, “If you want to do anything in higher education, you’ll need a Ph.D.”

Sullivan took his advice and got her Ph.D. from the University of Chicago, one of his alma maters, focusing on demography and the sociology of education.

She joined the University of Texas as a sociology instructor in 1975, where her early work focused on discrimination in the labor force and the economic pressures impacting the lives of Mexican immigrants. Sullivan worked her way through the ranks of assistant, associate, and full professor, and in 1990, she became chair of the sociology department.

A prolific writer, she is the author or co-author of six books and more than 80 scholarly articles and chapters. Sullivan’s research is now centered on labor force demography with emphasis on economic marginality and consumer debt. She has served as chair of the U.S. Census Advisory Committee and is a fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science.

In 1994, Sullivan became vice provost and a year later was named vice president and dean of graduate studies at the University of Texas. She was named executive vice chancellor for academic affairs for the university’s system in 2002, a role in which she served as the chief academic officer for nine academic campuses, with the president of each campus reporting to her.

Sullivan joined the University of Michigan in 2006, where she served as provost and executive vice president for academic affairs. As the university’s chief budget officer, Sullivan oversaw $1.5 billion of Michigan’s $5.4 billion annual budget, supervised the deans of 19 schools and colleges, and served on the board of the health system.

Sullivan became the University of Virginia’s eighth president on August 1, 2010 succeeding John Casteen III, who held the position for two decades.

Sullivan is married to Douglas Laycock, a faculty member at the UVA School of Law. The couple met at Michigan State when Laycock was president of the debate team that Sullivan wanted to join. They have two sons. Joseph, 29, is a well-known “vampire scholar” who holds degrees from Hampshire College and Harvard Divinity School and is working on his Ph.D. at Boston University. John, 22, is a graduate of the University of Chicago.