“Sylvia Plath’s father was an entomologist and professor of
biology at Boston University. Her mother was a shorthand teacher” is how biographies commonly explain it when Aurelia Plath’s job is mentioned at all,
although she taught for 29 years at the same university. History.com says that
after Otto Plath’s death in 1940, “Sylvia’s mother went to work as a teacher.” End of story. Less vague, from poetryfoundation.org: “Aurelia Plath taught
advanced secretarial studies at Boston University.”
At Boston University, Aurelia was Professor Plath. Sylvia
Plath called her that in one letter, but only one. [1] Aurelia Plath’s New
York Times obituary calls Aurelia an “associate professor.” Yet no Plath biography
or archival materials, including Aurelia’s own writings, answered the question: Professor of what?
Seeking information about Aurelia’s work life -- territory entirely unexplored -- I knew only that B.U. hired her in 1942 to establish a medical-secretarial program and teach it. Her employer, Boston
University’s College of Practical Arts and Letters, closed in 1955, and B.U.’s
College of Business absorbed it. Sounds disastrous, but in fact Aurelia got promoted. Sylvia
wrote Ruth Beuscher in 1962 that her mother had lost her job. [2] Is that true? [3] And besides
Gregg shorthand, what did Aurelia teach? Can we have any sense at all of how Sylvia
Plath’s mother spent most of her days?
I found out, thanks to Boston University archivist Jane Parr,
who scoured and photocopied B.U. General Catalogue annuals. Meet the other Professor Plath:
1942: Instructor in Secretarial Studies
1947: Assistant Professor of Secretarial Studies
1957: Associate Professor of Secretarial Studies, College of
Business Administration
1971: Associate Professor of Secretarial Studies, Emerita
But really, now: How demanding could secretarial
studies be? It’s not as if it was a real discipline like Otto’s, or taught anything serious, right? Here’s a sample of what Aurelia taught, from the 1967-68 Boston University General Catalogue’s
course listings, with my commentary:
SE 203, 204. MEDICAL SECRETARIAL PROCEDURES. Prerequisite:
SE 102, 104, 131, 134.
-Prerequisite SE 102 was Shorthand II; SE 104,
Typewriting II. From the B.U. School of Medicine, Professor Plath brought Drs. Alice
Marston and Matthew Derow to teach SE 131 and 134:
SE 131. Human Biology for Medical Secretaries. Background in
anatomy and physiology for the secretary in the physician’s office. Lectures
and demonstrations using skeletons, dissections, histological slides, films,
and other practical material.
SE 134. Bacteriology for Medical Secretaries. Survey of the
principles of bacteriology. Application to the fields of food, nutrition, and
medical diagnosis.
-After acing those courses, you may enroll in Professor
Plath’s 12-credit two-semester course:
SE 203-204. MEDICAL SECRETARIAL PROCEDURES. Development of
secretarial skills, with emphasis on accuracy and speed in transcribing from
shorthand and from recording machines. Use of office machines, including the IBM
Executive typewriter. Medical terminology and transcription of medical case
histories and correspondence. Practical problems in office and records
management, including filing systems.
-The medical-secretarial student then faced
SE 232, which Professor Plath might have coordinated, but others must have taught:
MEDICAL SECRETARIAL LABORATORY.
Lectures and demonstrations in hematology, clinical pathology, tissue pathology,
and clinical chemistry. Lectures and library research in areas related to the
present-day practice of medicine. Field trips.
-I cannot prove, but I will bet, that Professor Plath taught also the course SE 419, limited to senior students in the Business
Education division:
SHORTHAND METHODS LABORATORY. Perfection through practice of the basic techniques of teaching shorthand, such
as blackboard shorthand writing, introduction of principles and brief forms,
and dictation.
-Aurelia’s boss at that time was Donald G. Stather, Professor
of Secretarial Studies and Business Education; B.S. in Ed., State College at
Salem; Ed.M., Ed.D., Boston University. He supervised an all-female faculty
of five.
Then, in the 1969-70 General Catalogue, the College of
Business Administration announced:
The programs in Secretarial Studies have been
discontinued with the last entering class in September 1968. Students presently
enrolled in the program should consult the Division of Secretarial Studies for curriculum
requirements.
The end was near for what must have been among the most rigorous of medical secretarial programs. In 1970, Professor Plath was age 64, one year away
from mandatory retirement. B.U.’s pension plan for profs was 20
percent of their salary. [4] Lacking the money to retire, Professor Plath hoped for five more years of teaching work at Cape Cod Community College, where she taught secretarial studies from the autumn of 1970 until 1973. Then Professor Plath asked for and was granted time off to edit Letters Home.
[1] SP to ASP, November 22, 1962, refers to Aurelia as
“Professor A.S. Plath.”
[2] SP to Ruth Beuscher, September 22 and 29, 1962.
[3] No, it is false, according to the Boston University General Catalogue 1962-63. Aurelia had tenure, so perhaps she was simply not hired for a desired second or "fallback" job at the university, teaching remedial reading, which Aurelia had been studying in B.U. evening courses since 1959. Aurelia wrote that a Dr. Cole had promised her such a job.
[4] ASP to Hilda Farrar, April 20, 1970.
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A favorite piece of Aureliana: B.U. President John Silber’s letter promoting Aurelia into joblessness, with Aurelia's correction of his Latin.
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