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Think Being an Adjunct Professor is Hard? Try Being a Black Adjunct Professor.

This article adds another pertinent layer to understanding the adjunct condition. I would be willing to bet that women and other minorities in general comprise a disproportionate share of college adjuncts as well. More marginalization for the most marginalized.

 

http://www.slate.com/articles/life/counter_narrative/2014/01/adjunct_crisis_in_higher_ed_an_all_too_familiar_story_for_black_faculty.html

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2014 Inaugural Op-ed: Social Justice & The Plight of Adjuncts: A Call to Action

This essay, from the Catholic Higher Education Advocate, relates the exploitation of a currently unemployed Texas adjunct who draws clear parallels between her situation and Edward R. Murrow’s famous 1960 Teledocumentary “Harvest of Shame”. Harvest of Shame indeed.

P.S.: Please sign the Moveon.org petition Dr. Tamayo links to at the end of her essay.

 

http://cheausa.org/social-justice-plight-adjuncts-time-act-3/

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The Just-In-Time Professor

The Just-In-Time Professor

Here it is: the House Committee on Education and the Workforce’s report on the working conditions of contingent faculty. What do you make of it?

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The Adjunct’s Lament

While this article does rehash some of the events concerning the death of Mary Vojtko, its references to the Ehrenreich’s discussion of the creeping decline of the professional class and Gary Standings’ observation of the rise of the “Precariat”, or precarious workers is apt, and not only applicable to adjuncts, but to everyone who lives outside the capitalist class.

http://inthesetimes.com/article/15975/the_adjuncts_lament/

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A Personal Profile of an Alaskan Adjunct on Food Stamps from Huffington Post

Reblogged from the Huffington Post.

 

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/kate-quick/professor-working-poor_b_4645217.html

 

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House Committee Report Highlights Plight of Adjunct Professors | Inside Higher Ed

House Committee Report Highlights Plight of Adjunct Professors | Inside Higher Ed.

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An Update to the Previous Entry: It Gets Worse

Dear “Good” Adjuncts:

Things actually got worse.  Apparently management had decided that “one” class means any class under 2.4 credits.  Being that 95% of classes at my unnamed institution are between three and five units, it effectively means that break-in-service or no, there are, if the arbitration mediator so allows for management’s interpretation of the contract, no rehire rights.

To add insult to injury here, when previous union execs members were called in to meet with the mediator under oath and testify as to what was actually meant when the rehire/vesting language was written, they stated they did in fact mean classes under 2.5 credits.  WTF?

This means that these members (all full-timers) intended to establish a rehire policy that was never realistically going to actually give adjuncts rehire rights.

I feel like a cheap date in a dark room.  I don’t know who’s going to screw me.

Geoff Johnson

The “good” adjunct

 

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One Administrator’s Convenience is Many Adjuncts’ “Insecurity”

Happy New Year my “good” adjuncts! I trust that as many of you were enjoying your unemployment, er…I mean end-of-term break, you had a good time grading 300+ tests and essays before the grading deadline so that you could celebrate your utter exhaustion, er…I mean good cheer, as you sat and reflected on how you were going to make your last paycheck stretch, er…I mean the tremendous bounty that you have to be thankful for…

Who am I kidding?

One of the schools at which I am teaching, which shall go nameless, is after some two years of negotiation, going into arbitration with the local teacher’s union after more or less a year of stalling and outright obstinacy. The “greedy” teachers, including the full-time faculty, have not only not seen a pay raise in seven years, but in the last contract were cajoled into taking a 5% pay cut. Adjuncts, who tipped the scales in approving the previous contract, did so under the fear that if they didn’t do it, then class sections would be drastically cut. In reward for their sacrifice, the school cut 30% of its class sections anyway, all taught by adjuncts, then turned around and gave its three vice presidents a 25,000 dollar-a-year increase each.

But being a vice president is hard work…

Anyway, one of the present sticking points in the present contract has to do with what we call here vesting. The idea of it is simply this: After a period of two years, if an adjunct’s evaluations have been good (and not once or twice, but always), he or she will be given consideration for the assigning of “one” class over another adjunct who has taught at the school less than two years. After two years, it doesn’t matter whether you’ve taught for two years or 25, you have no priority over another adjunct who has also taught for more than two years, and the scheduler, usually a department chair, can assign you whatever he or she wishes at wherever and wherever they wish without any reason or justification. This vesting policy is supposedly a great benefit to adjuncts, and a shining example of how they are valued.

The union, to its credit is trying to change the language of the policy, not so much to establish anything that would even remotely resemble a true seniority hiring policy for good adjuncts, but to allow them a one-semester break in service in the event that they get ill, must take care of an ill or aged loved one, etc. In one recent case brought to the union, one adjunct with 14 years of outstanding evaluations lost all rehire rights when she had to take off one semester due to illness.

School management has responded by emphatically saying “no”, with the rationale that it will make it “inconvenient” to schedule classes. What exactly does “inconvenience” mean? Well, one can suppose it means that administrators would have to spend a little more of their relatively well-paid time working on the schedule, that they may have to recognize that individual adjunct instructors have certain talents and skills and are an indispensable part of the institution. It may also force them to see over time, that a continuity of instruction might aid in student retention and completion rates, but I digress…

By making things “convenient” for administrators, what does this mean for adjuncts? Well, it means hoping to hell one of your other family members, if you have one, will take care of your elderly mother or father who can’t take care of themselves if the need arises. The same applies if an adjunct has a sick child or spouse. It also means that you’d better not get seriously ill yourself, or if that if you do so, that you had better “gut it out” until the end of the term, and hopefully recover over the break. Of course, you could just die, which might bum out yourself and your family, but at least an administrator won’t have to worry.

Now that the union and management are at impasse, there are several full-time faculty that have had the nerve to say, since vesting is the real sticking point here, that the union should just drop it from the contract language. One could confer that that this push for a minor improvement in the vesting language is “inconvenient” to them to.

I’m not willing to simply be “convenient” in this way, and I hope, my fellow “good” adjuncts, you won’t be either.

Geoff Johnson

The Good and Inconvenient Adjunct

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It’s Our Crisis, Not an Adjunct Crisis

aaronbarlow's avatarACADEME BLOG

In The New York Times yesterday, there’s an article by Rachel Swarns called “Crowded Out of Ivory Tower, Adjuncts See a Life Less Lofty.” In it is this line:

Adjuncts say that much more is needed.

It shouldn’t just be adjuncts. It should be all of us, from the newest student to the full professor getting ready to retire.

The comment is in regard to what CUNY is doing relating to adjuncts–and there has been a little bit of progress, an attempt (that now seems stalled) to turn more adjunct lines into lecturer (and even tenure-track) full-time ones and improved medical benefits–but little more. The union, the Professional Staff Congress, wants better job security for adjuncts as part of the next contract (which has been in negotiation for close to eight years, I think it is, since the last one expired).

None of this, though, is going to solve the…

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