Boston University yearbook, 1967 |
Aurelia Plath’s teaching job at Boston University’s College of Business Administration began dissolving
in 1959 when a new dean dismissed all secretarial-program
faculty except for five aging tenured females. Aurelia was 52.
With 13 years left before BU retired her, Aurelia prepared
to teach in a different department, taking a night course in German and then courses in teaching remedial reading. [1] She could have quit BU for
a medical-secretarial job, her field of expertise, but even in her teens Aurelia wanted a teaching career, ideally in languages
and literature. Her daughter Sylvia wrote that Aurelia secretly hated teaching typing
and shorthand, yet 1) Aurelia taught more advanced courses than those, and 2) regardless of subject, Aurelia liked educating and advising young
people. It was Sylvia who had secretly hated teaching.
Shocked in September 1962 by the new College of Business
course catalog with none of her courses in it, Aurelia was not sure she was
still employed. Sylvia in England was “appalled to hear your department is
closing.” Secretarial studies as a college major was everywhere dying on the
vine. Yet however marginalized, BU’s secretarial major persisted and so did Aurelia’s job. She was lucky; she needed the money a tenured associate professor could make. During 1962 she bought
Sylvia a Bendix and lent her 500 English pounds to pay off Sylvia's house in Devon
and paid her own way there and back; and Aurelia then offered a very troubled Sylvia,
deserted by her husband, $50 a month.
BU’s yearbook for 1967 pictures 232 College of Business Administration graduates, 53 of them female. Of these, ten had secretarial
degrees: nine “executive
secretarial,” and a lone “medical secretarial.” One would think Aurelia sat
around with no students. Yet 22 more of the 53 graduating females were Business
Education majors. Taught secretarial and business skills and communications, they were also educated to teach those subjects in high schools or vocational programs where typing and shorthand were flourishing.
Business Education graduates thus bypassed secretarial jobs
for teaching careers better respected and paid. Essentially they studied to become new
Aurelias. Freshmen from Aurelia’s 1963-64 shorthand courses were in 1967 taking her course, limited to Bus Ed seniors, in how to teach shorthand. BU’s 1967 yearbook lists seven
College of Business fields of concentration. Secretarial and Business Education were not among them. The end had come: the last secretarial students enrolled in 1968, and Bus Ed moved to the School of Education. [2]
Entitled to a leave of absence, Aurelia took it in fall 1970, six months before she turned 65, when BU would retire her. During her leave Aurelia quietly worked at her new job: teaching medical-secretarial at a community college eager to have her teach until she was 70.
[1] ASP to Miriam Baggett, 6 February 1960; Sylvia Plath to ASP, 17 March 1960.
[2] Thus the College of Business Administration (later, School of Business; later, School of Management) was purged of female faculty, as the 1973-74 Bulletin shows, and of a large percentage of its female students. For a time.
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