EDITORIAL Sacrificing education just for productivity? Productivity — the savior of the University. Like an Arthurian hero riding up on horseback to save the day, productivity is being heralded as the solution to two of the University's most pressing problems — a shrinking budget and an expanding enrollment. i ne icif?a, as a is i.um* monlv expressed, is lhai by increasing productivity, the University can serve more students and spend less money doing so. Most of the time the claim should be taken with a grain of salt. Students and taxpayers should raise their eyebrows with skep ticism whenever produc No one want* the University to water down its degrees in Ns quest to Increase productivity tivity is touted as a way to "get more lor less. It rarely works that way. But every once in a while, it does. As part of the quest for increased productivity, the University Assomoly decider! earlier this term to change the credit value for certain courses. Many classes cur rently worth throe credits each will soon be worth four, beginning fall 1994. Of course, this means that graduating in four years will be easier. Most students are happy to hear that. After ail, who wants to stay in school an extra year and pay an extra year’s tuition? However, since merely increasing the credit value of a course hardly means increasing its educational value, some students might ask whether they are getting the same amount of education as they did before. And assuming that the University is here to educate, rather than just dispense degrees, that is a serious question in need of answer. The question is easily answered when it comes to lower division courses. Although the amount of time spent in lecture in most of these courses will remain the same as before (roughly three hours a week), an extra hour will be added as a required supplement to each class, making up the fourth credit. Computer labs and GTF-Ied discussion classes, among other possibilities, are being considered as ways of giving students that fourth hour. However, some of the courses which are going up to four credits — particularly those at the upper division level — may not actually involve any increase in seat time. Unless the class instructors miraculously manage to cram more information into the same amount of time, then a crodlt increase may not be warranted. As long as the University makes good on its promises, and rosists the temptation to just inflate each course's credit value without also correspondingly increasing its level of education, then students will surely benefit from the changes. However, students should keep a watchful eye out to make sure that that actually happens. No one wants the University to water down its degrees in its quest to increase productivity. Oregon Daily Emerald Tha Otagon DaJy Emerald t» pubhshad daily Monday through Friday dunog the school year and Tuesday and Thursday during the summer by Ihe Oregon Daily Emerald I’ubrnrung Co . loc al the University oi Oregon. Eugene. Oregon The Emerald Operate* independently or me University with ottices a* Suae 300 ol me Erb Memorial Union and |> a member ol the Associated Press The EmaraW is pnvale property The unUwtul removal or use ol papers e prosecutable by lear Editor Qraphlcs Editor Freelance Editor Ednor-tmCMel: Jake Berg •ports Editor Editorial Editor Photo Edhor Steve Mms Jdt Pick her <* r Forney r Soto Anthonj^Fo| Coney Anderson Oavid Thom Jen Paslay Jed Winters Supplements Elttor Night Editor Jell Pidihardl Aseoctete Editors: Edarard Kioplanatem. Sftjderd CknemmantrAcrnneiae. Rabaoco Marrm. Communrfy, Julia Seen sen. Fkghar EdtrcaOorvAdmmralralion Meets sun Mandy Baucum. wason Chan. Dave Charbormeau. Jan Dave. Mag Dodolph. Amy Davenport. Cera Echevarria. Mata Felds. Martin Fetor. Sarah Handarson. IMherta FSmaa. Ym Lervg l eong. Manus Malax). Tnatt Noel. Elisabeth Reeneljerna. Robbo Reeves Lia SMocca. Mchaal ShmdMr. Scott Sanonaon, Stephana Srsaon. Susanna Stallsna. Ji*a Swensan. Mn:h«i« Thompson Aguiar. Kevm Tnpp Amy Van Tuyt. Darnel Wad Qinxil Mmaoif: Juctv Riacfl Advertising Director: Mark Walter Production Moiugsr: Mcheu Rosa Advertising: Subu DutU. Nicole Hertmark. Teresa IsabeAe Jell Mar on Jeremy Mason. Michael MJIettn. Van V O’Bryan II. Rachael Trull. Kelsey Weke*. Angie Widen Classified Becky Merchant Manager Victor Meiu Sim Tje Tec* Distribution: Andy Harvey John long. Graham S-mpson Business: Kathy Carbone Superuser Judy Connolly Production Dee McCobb Product**’ Coontoator Shawns Abeie Greg Desmond Tara OauiMoy Brad Joss Stacy Mucnefl. Jenmter Round, Nail Thangyiyt. CUyton Yee Newsroom 1*0 5511 Dlspray Advertising 346-3712 Business Ottlca . 346-5512 Classified Advertising 346-4343 w«n wm7vm (sun vxxiNa f|A$S *4 OUR P*WL VOO«Ty ?' mom o*< ** pnomcr ounfsivts ~1T COMMENTARY History leads to tolerance By Dr Linda Scheie ontrary to expectations, the first history of the Ameri V_Jianv one whose writing began when Home was still a republic, continues in an unbro ken tradition today The Spanish ended the use of the ancient writing systems and replaced it with their own letters, but they did not in the tradition of history among the Maya The books of history and prophet \ uilletl the Qiilam Balam are still being kept and written toda\ They an* the Ah T/.ih, the scribe, of the Cruitob Maya of Quintana inscriptions of the Maya hold more than just history, because the political events and the li\ es of the individuals recorded in these inscriptions played them selves out within a world view that explained what it is to be human, how humanity relates to other living beings, where we come from, where we are going, what is justice, good government, social expectation and moral behavior. It is a view of the world so powerful and adaptive that it sur vives today among the numerous Mayan communities even after 500 years of deliberate and dead ly suppression. That history has the potential of changing the way ail of us. whether we are descen dants of recent immigrants or more ancient ones, perceive the past of the New World in which we all live. Archaeology is a discipline that studies the past as a way of understanding the present and the nature of being human. Dur ing the past three decades, the archaeology of the Maya has been transformed from a prehistoric field into a historical one because of the on-going deciphering of the Maya writing system. Now we have research available from the two. sometimes opposing, points of view — the outsider's view derived from the "science of archaeology" and the insider's point of view from the decipher ing of the Maya writing system and the study of images on them are artifacts of the past Both points of view have advantages because people who use them ask different kinds of Koo, Mexico. And the ancient questions about the past. The most successful approaches have combined the insider's history with the outsider's interest in how economic, ecological and political systems worked. But as a historian of the Maya past. I believe that we must recognize that "science" also has its limi tations I do not imply that the insid er's view is a perfect one either. All of the epigraphers. who are translating and interpreting this ancient history, are people from the modern European tradition. How is the history we are now writing and the world \ itnv we are now reconstructing any less biased by our point of view than an v other approach' The answer is that it is not. World view is so profoundly a part of every human’s mental software that I do not believe we can disarm it. but we can try to minimize its effects by tiecoming aware of the problem and paying attention to it For me, the impor tant thing is that the histories written by the ancient Maya give them a voice that speaks across the gulf of time and culture. And when the dead speak, we are no longer free to make them into images of what we want them to have been The Maya created a written history that is tied to linear time with a precision that far exceed ed similar histories in the Old World. It is precise to the day and sometimes to a 12-hour period, and it is full of heroes and vil lains. ambitions and disasters, and human stories as rich as the lives of Alexander and Augustus that have fascinated many of us. This written history is a potent resource for all Native Americans just as the history of the ancient Greeks and Romans is a source of inspiration for us. I have no Greek or Roman blood in me because my ances tors came from the Germanic tribes who finally destroyed the Roman Empire. Yet I have been taught my entire life that the foundation of my cultural tradi tion was Athens and Rome. The native peoples of the United States and Canada are as distant from the ancient Maya as I am from the ancient Romans. But as I learned of Julius Caesar and Claudius as famous fieople in my cultural past, so Native Ameri cans may one day learn of Yax un-Balam. king of Yaxchilan, or Manab-Pakal, king of Palenque. For me, this newly recovered history and all its rich detail is an important legacy for all of humanity — world history as it is taught everywhere in the Americas consists mainly of European history. Rarely are oth er cultural traditions explored, and usually those are only from the Old World. Our children, no matter their ethnic heritage, need i to know the emerging history of the ancient Americas. There were five “cradles of civ ilization" in the human past, and two of them — Middle America j and the Andes — were in the j Americas. These cultural tradi tions coalesced thousands of years before any people Irom the Old World encountered them. They have much to teach us about what it is and what it had Iteon to be human. It is my hope that one day all children will learn of these great people of the American past just as they learn about the heroes and sages of the Old World, i believe we need to create a world history that includes all of the people of the world. In the end, it may be less of a question of what is the ethical thing to do and more a question of survival. The world is chang ing around us in ways we cannot anticipate or control. The Maya and their cousins throughout the Americans have been dying for 500 years as they have fought to salvage their identities and way of living from the disaster of European contact. They are still fighting and dying even as I write these words. In other parts of the world, eth nic groups are surfacing again and demanding the right to be who they are without penalty or death. The nightmare of Bosnia looms over us all unless we learn to respect other ways of under standing the world and embrace the diversity of the human com munity with joy. Learning the history and world views of the people of the New World could be a start in fostering tolerance of that diversity. Dr. Linda Scheie is from the University of Texas. Austin