|  | The Cavalier daily Wednesday, February 25, 1970 |  | 
English's Example
Several factors apparently went into the 
English Department's decision of last week to 
make comprehensive examinations optional. 
One of the most easily overlooked was the 
fact that a key member of the department 
who had supported comps is away from the 
University this spring. Another key to 
English's decision was the increased dialogue 
between students and faculty for the past 
several months. And finally, the English 
faculty realized that, whatever their theoretical 
justification, comprehensive exams were 
no longer educationally viable in practice.
The personal factor is especially significant 
in light of charges that other departments are 
being run by small groups of influential and 
tenured personnel who have what amounts to 
veto power over any academic innovation the 
department wishes to introduce. While the 
undergraduate chairman of the English Department 
was here and in favor of retaining 
comps, there was never even a majority vote 
in favor of doing away with them. He left, and 
the department voted unanimously for abolition.
The second and third factors are intertwined. 
When the English Department began 
to seriously consider the opinions of its 
students, it found that sentiment against 
comprehensives was vehement and widespread. 
Sensibly enough, the English Department 
realized that to force its students to take 
comprehensives under such conditions would 
be fruitless.
In theory, the comprehensive examination 
is the culmination of a student's undergraduate 
career, an exercise in which he 
demonstrates that he has acquired a degree of 
expertise in his major field and that his 
education is sufficient to allow him to 
integrate that knowledge into a functioning 
ability to work with the questions that face 
his particular discipline.
There are two things wrong with this 
theory. The first is that the body of 
knowledge in almost every field has expanded 
to the point where it is unreasonable to 
expect that a candidate for a B.A. be familiar 
with all of the various sub-fields in his 
discipline. And even if this were not the case, 
the typical comprehensive exam is not, and 
perhaps cannot be, constructed to fulfill its 
half of the theoretical bargain.
Students, realizing this, have refused to 
approach the exams in the manner in which 
they were intended to do so. They are looked 
upon as anachronistic hurdles to be surmounted 
with the least possible work and 
with no regard whatever for the supposed 
purpose of the exercise. This student attitude, 
coupled with the aforementioned difficulties 
with the theory of a comprehensive test has 
destroyed the ability of the exam to act as a 
useful educational tool. The English Department 
recognized this, and the College's other 
departments might do well to follow its 
example.
|  | The Cavalier daily Wednesday, February 25, 1970 |  | 

