H Battalion/Pags L _ April a «;o rC Dilemma (continued from page 1) said. Groot also denied that the University administration places more emphasis on research. “I am personally convinced that A&M does not pay people more because they’re doing re search,” Groot said. If the administration found the research of a faculty mem ber excellent but his teaching poor, it would not approve a sal ary raise, he said. However, O’Connor, who has served on the personnel and te nure committee that makes deci sions on promotion and tenure in his department, said the com mittee looks at research dollars and the number of publications a faculty member has, but relies more or less on heresay to evalu ate teaching. “In the College of Science, in (the) nine years we have given Clergyman backs gay in pulpit teaching evaluations in our clas ses, they have never been col lected and looked at,” he said. But Groot said such surveys are difficult to measure because students with good grades in a class tend to give a teacher a higher rating, while students with bad grades might give him a lower rating. Sending someone to monitor the teacher’s performance in the classroom also would be an un reliable method of measuring his performance since the teacher would be aware of the person’s presence, Groot said. “It’s really very dif ficult to get a real objective view of a faculty member, and this is a problem not just at A&M — it’s a national problem,” he said. Patrick Taylor, president of Students for Academic Excell ence, said student surveys would be more effective if the depart ments looked at evaluations from a cross-section of each class. Taylor and SAE stress the im portance of students letting their instructors know whether they are doing a good or bad job of teaching. Groot, O’Connor and Taylor all seem to agree research and teaching go hand-in-hand, but O’Connor said he has his doubts about whether research, teaching and service are being treated equally by the faculty or the administration. A teacher is faced with a deci sion of how much time he should spend on each of the three responsibilities, O’Connor said. “When they sit down to evalu ate your work for a merit raise, or you know that you’re coming up for a tenure decision, or you’re hoping to get promoted, if what they look at is mostly your research effort, then ... in order to survive in that system you’ve got to put most of your time and effort on that,” O’Con nor said. He said he does not know of anyone who is not trying to do a good job at teaching, research and service, but the pressure to time away do research takes from teaching. “If it comes down to where you’ve got to feed a family and you ... would like to have your ego flattered — you’d like to be a full professor, too —- you have got to put a major ef fort on that research,” O’Connor said. But Groot said it is not true that teaching is only casually mentioned, and the administra tion does not consider research as the most important element in considering promotion or te nure. “I’m sitting in all meetings when they (the administration) review the salaries for all indi viduals,” Groot said. “They do not take into consideration whether a person is an outstand ing researcher.” He said the University plans to build a teaching excellence center, which will prove the administration is concerned with teaching. However, O’Connor said the administration need not spend the money on such centers, but should give faculty the oppor tunity to choose from teaching, research and service. Outstanding researchers could teach graduate classes, where students do not need as much assistance, and spend most of their time doing re search, he said. Outstanding teachers could spend most of their time in clas srooms with undergraduates, while good advisers would have time to spend with students as well as teach and still maintain enough research to keep cur rent in their fields, said. Groot said profess^ extensive research i mainly graduate classy University already as» on the basis of what a J does well. Now Better Than Ever. You Will Be Pleased These Carefully Prepared and Taste Tempting Each Daily Special Only $2.19 Plus! “Open Daily” Dining: 11 A.M. to 1:30 P.M. — 4:00 P.M. to MONDAY EVENING SPECIAL United Press International DENVER — A United Methodist bishop is standing firm on his decision to appoint a homosexual minister to a De nver church and says he isn’t bothered by a possible church trial on the action. Eighty-nine members of three Georgia churches are asking that Bishop Melvin E. Wheatley Jr. be tried on eccle siastical charges for his appoint- mentof the Rev. Julian Rush to a special ministry at St. Paul's Un ited Methodist Church. Wheatley said a 1979 ruling by the church’s Judicial Council allowed the appointment of a homosexual clergyman in New York, with a stipulation the minister be a member in good standing with his church confer ence. Society of Plastics Engineers will have a meeting on April 15, Thursday, in Room #57 of Zachry Engineering Bldg. New officers to be elected for the 1982-83 school year. Everyone Welcome Salisbury Steak with Mushroom Gravy Whipped Potatoes Your Choice of One Vegetable Roll or Com Bread and Butter Coffee or Tea TUESDAY EVENING SPECIAL Mexican Fiesta Dinner Two Cheese and Onion Enchiladas w chili Mexican Rice Patio Style Pinto Beans Tostadas Coffee or Tea One Corn Bread and Butter United Pr< WEDNESDAY EVENING SPECIAl Chicken Fried Stea I w cream Gravy ^AShTngT< Whipped Potatoesarcagan’s efforts Choice of one other ^ Islands dis] Vegetable l and Britai Roll or Corn Bread andfcge today wit Wsers reviewii ves that rem; Coffee or Tea THURSDAY EVENING SPECIAL tm Italian Candle Light Spaghetti Dinner SERVED WITH SPICED MEAT BALLS AND SAUCE Parmesan Cheese - Tossed Green Salad Choice of Salad Dressing — Hot Garlic Bread Tea or Coffee FOR YOUR PROTECTION OUR PERSONNEL HAVE HEALTH CARDS. Reagan invin xander Haig abriefmg on Spa: FRIDAY EVENING SPECIAL BREADED FISH FILET w TARTAR SAUCE Cole Slaw Hush Puppies Choice of one vegetable Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SATURDAY NOON and EVENING SPECIAL Yankee Pot Roast (Texas Salad) Mashed Potato w gravy Roll or Corn Bread & Butter Tea or Coffee SUNDAY SPECIAL NOON and E Sup ROAST TURKEY Dll Served with Cranberry Sauce Cornbread Dressing Roll or Corn Bread - Bultei Coffee or Tea Giblet Gravy And your choice of any One vegelable AGGIE MUSTER FELLOWSHIP barbeque mm • i Wednesday? April 21,1982 4:30 harbeque Tickets $4 - MSC the Park by Mt. Aggie /^T Muster Ceremony 6:30 G. Rollie White UNI ^ F* s 1 T Y Speaker: William Heye