Thursday, April 16, 2015

Fraud and Adjunct Training

For Profit universities are increasingly coming under fire for having deceived their students about the university's ability to place them in careers related to their field of study.  If you do this and you're Corinthian University, or more topically, Heald Business College in California's Bay Area, the government steps in and shuts you down.  It's fraud.

Also on the increase is the traditional university's reliance on the For Profit university's model, which they call "The Business Model".  It seems to me that the Business Model makes NPO universities vulnerable to the same kinds of litigation brought against the For Profit University.  Read that sentence again, it's the heart of this thing.

For instance, I have a Ph.D..   Getting my Ph.D. took a lot of time and money.  I did it because I was assured by everyone in my program that getting a job as a tenure track professor was extremely likely given that 2010 would mark the beginning of baby boomer retirement.  I have no qualms saying that I sacrificed for the Ph.D. in order to get a tenure track job as a professor:  everyone involved in my training knew this, and no one raised issues with that plan.

But getting a job as a tenure track professor is NOT assured because of the adjunct problem which these same universities propagate.  So, if nursing students at Corinthian can sue that university for not getting jobs as nurses, why can't I sue my alma mater for having taken my money to train me for a field where there are no job openings.  I assume that people with master's degrees are operating under the idea that they could get tenure track positions in community colleges.  I trained under the assumption that I would get a tenure track job at the university level.  In both cases, we've been lied to.  That's fraud.

What makes matters worse is that Corinthian could say, "well, we don't control the nursing industry," which I'm sure they did say (it didn't work or else they'd still be open), but our alma maters cannot say the same thing.  They are the education industry and thus are directly linked to the employment crisis.  They're telling us that they're training us to be faculty, but they're actually training us to be adjuncts.

Perhaps someone should call the department of Education and make the complaint.

Here's the website:

http://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/oig/misused/index.html

As per usual, our FB group is:  https://www.facebook.com/groups/ClevelandStateUniversity/

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Ask and You Shall Receive

The Cleveland State Adjuncts asked that Senator Sherrod Brown acknowledge our plight on Saturday.  Today, is Tuesday.  Want to see his letter?


Thank you Senator Brown.  We, the adjuncts at Cleveland State University, appreciate your support.

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Supply and Demand

I often see, in regards to the plight of the adjuncts, that supply and demand are at issue.  The argument usually goes that there are just too many people with graduate degrees out there looking for a job for anyone of us to expect a fair wage.

I wonder at the truth of it.  My initial response is that there is truth to it.  After all, my doctoral program alone graduated 4 other Ph.D. students along with me.  When one considers that the Modern Language Association advertises for about 50 jobs in my field a year, it's easy to see that there is a possibility that there are, in fact, too many of us.

The real evidence of jobs, however, isn't a professional organization's Job Information List; it's whether or not you can get a teaching gig.  So, let's just consider that for a minute.  Last Summer, I looked for adjunct teaching jobs in my area.  I applied to four schools.  I received offers from 3.  One wanted me to teach 3 courses a quarter.  Another wanted me to teach a 2/2 load.  Finally, the third wanted me to teach a 2/3 load.  The fourth has a policy in place against hiring people with Ph.D.s. so I didn't get a job there.  I was also asked to teach at a Sylvan Learning Center.

Even turning quarters into semesters, I was offered a 7/8 load.  Essentially, I was given the opportunity to cover the job of 2 1/2 teachers/instructors/adjunct.  Why is that?  Am I a super teacher?  Am I known throughout the land?

No.  Again, no. And in fact, if you don't believe me, I urge you to call the people who write your letters of rec. Were any of them called when you were hired?  Did anyone check on you to help break a tie in the hiring process?

The reality is that there aren't enough teachers to go around.  That's why all of us are capable of getting enough jobs to teach 2x or 3x as much as we should.  If there were a bunch of people waiting in the wings to take our jobs away, they would have.  Perception is an interesting thing.  I am assured constantly that there is a desperate supply of English professors out there waiting to take my position.  Well, where are they?  I don't know any of them.  Do they hide somewhere?

No.  They don't exist.  Look, this isn't McDonald's.  You can't just be replaced.  You have a graduate degree and they have A LOT of students.  They need us.  They should pay us.

Our Facebook Group can be found at https://www.facebook.com/groups/ClevelandStateUniversity/

Friday, April 10, 2015

Rope

I hope we all understand that, generally speaking, you can be let go as an adjunct (your contract expires without anyone renewing it) for almost any reason, except, really, one.  At least in Ohio, if you are let go because you are trying to organize, you have, for the most part, a pretty good legal case against your former employers.

The thing is, though, you have to have good evidence that you are being treated differently because of your union activities/affiliation (and not for some other reason),   That's not always easy to get.

One thing that seems to be on our side in all of this is that we are dealing with a whole profession of people who have gone without anyone questioning their behavior for so long that they do not have the proper understanding of what they can and can't say.  I think the phrase is, "give them enough rope and they'll hang themselves."

Because what administrator doesn't have that rope?  What anti-union tenured faculty member doesn't have enough rope?  Don't get me wrong.  Most of the people I  work with are on my side regarding the condition of adjuncts.  But those that aren't are amazingly brash and vocal in their opposition, and often to the exact wrong people.

Now, I think there's a moral in all of this.  You see, anywhere else, I think some HR person would have come around and trained people what not to say in order to keep lawsuits from happening...that doesn't seem to have happened in the universities, and I can't imagine it happening any time soon.  I don't think the faculty would put up with being censured.  As a result, there's this weird effect such that, the more open you are about your feelings towards organization, the more you invite faculty to voice complaints about you specifically on that grounds...thus insuring that you can't be let go without lawsuits.

The lesson here is that you don't want to operate in the shadows, because if you do, you can be quietly removed.  It's much better, strangely enough, to be out in the open with a giant target on your back.  When you're public, they seem to feel the urge to be public themselves.   That's bad news for them.

In other news, today sure was weird.  Be sure to ask me about it if you get a chance.

Thursday, April 9, 2015

How to Leave the Profession

I'm hearing a lot of people tell me that they're done.  They tell me that at the end of the semester, they are walking away from higher ed.  If being an adjunct is all that there is to this profession, it's time to cut bait.

...and that's a tragedy.  Teachers with experience, teachers who love their jobs, we shouldn't lose them.  It's a damned loss to the entire country that these people have no choice but to quit the profession or else live a life of abject poverty.  That being said, I totally understand.  What else can you do?

What I don't understand is this:  why are you telling your university that you're leaving?  These are people who've made a mockery of your profession.  They have trashed the thing you love.  These are people who've forced you to go on public assistance or to teach at three different campuses just to make ends meet.

These are people who have tried to starve your children.

Why in the world would you give them extra time to replace you?  The moment that they find out that you won't be picking up your two classes next semester is the moment they try to track you down to sign your contract.  That's some time next Fall.  Often, moments before the class starts.

Get it.

I know, you want to ask for more money, some extra pittance that would pay for you to park at the place where you work.  I know that you want to see their face fill with those moments (moments!) of regret as you shame them for forcing you to leave.  But these are hollow victories.  They are almost meaningless.

If, on the other hand, the university were forced to recruit new adjuncts a day before classes start for every adjunct who leaves the profession this Spring without thought of returning next Fall, they would fall apart.

This is no minor shot across the bow.  A university that had to find 30-40 adjuncts every year to cover their lost faculty, and is forced to find those replacements in a day's time, would panic.  Students would go crazy as their classes began to be cancelled.  Parents would become infuriated as they found out that classes their children needed to graduate were no longer being offered.  Yes, we are somewhat replaceable, but we are not that replaceable.

You thought NAWD was bad.  NAWD was nothing by comparison.

Full time faculty can't cover those classes.  They have contracts that keep them from being overworked.  Existing Adjuncts can't cover those classes, or else they would have too many hours and could then demand health care.  Heck, at my school, I have started every semester without a contract and have taught for at least a week without one.

And the best part is, it's all legal.  They can't get you for a breach of contract because there was no contract in place.  They like to keep you contingent.  Let's hope they have a contingency plan.



Our Facebook group is https://www.facebook.com/groups/ClevelandStateUniversity/