Academic sweatshops: Adjuncts, unite!

Sinyai, Clayton

IO Clayton Sinyai ACADEMIC SWEATSHOPS The higher unionizing On March 1, hours before a threatened strike at New York University by graduate teaching and research assistants, the school's...

...This is precisely why administrators argue that collective bargaining in the academy can only endanger the university's academic mission...
...The standard objection to campus unionization is that higher education is not a business...
...IO Clayton Sinyai ACADEMIC SWEATSHOPS The higher unionizing On March 1, hours before a threatened strike at New York University by graduate teaching and research assistants, the school's administration agreed to bargain with the graduate assistants' union...
...Adjunct positions are often filled by Ph.D.s who, though nominally part-time, actually cobble together a full-time course load at half the salary (or less) of a full-time tenured professor—and with no benefits...
...NYU tried to persuade the NLRB and the public that graduate assistants were not eligible for the right to organize because they were students rather than workers, and that academic issues might eventually be introduced into collective bargaining—to the detriment of the university's academic mission...
...Thirty percent of part-time liberal-arts faculty reported no scheduled office hours, and adjuncts were 50 percent less likely to require essay exams than full-time faculty...
...That can't be done when the economic pursuit of short-term economic efficiencies comes at the expense of more enduring educational ends...
...The ambiguity about the status of contingent instructors at the university arises exactly from that which makes them different from so many other employees: they have chosen their work not merely as a means to a paycheck but out of a love for education itself...
...Only after a public campaign by the union, a strike threat, and back-channel negotiations did the university agree to negotiate...
...The main reason for the leap in organizing activity, however, is to be found in the changing face of higher education...
...Tenured faculty, adjunct faculty, and graduate assistants are all deeply committed to the mission of the university, and the university is more likely to be enhanced than endangered when they gain the right to organize...
...But NYU's administration continued to balk, despite an NLRB complaint against it for refusal to bargain...
...University officials point to this agreement, rather than the strike threat, as the breakthrough that allowed negotiations to begin...
...University campuses have reflected this outreach with a proliferation of student groups such as United Students against Sweatshops, as well as with increased campus labor organizing activity...
...Today, many universities see adjuncts as inexpensive substitutes for full-time tenured faculty...
...In November, it was announced that the graduate assistants had chosen to join the United Auto Workers (UAW) Local 2110...
...Research by the American Association of University Professors (a professional association of university faculty that engages in collective bargaining) suggests the answer is often no...
...The organizing effort at NYU is not an isolated case but part of a rising tide of union activity on university campuses...
...Consequently, graduate students and adjunct instructors don't want to gut the university's mission but fulfill it...
...In the March agreement, NYU and the UAW agreed to move forward with negotiations under a shared understanding that a number of academic decisions, such as the structure and content of curriculum, would be excluded from the bargaining table...
...The historic pact places NYU graduate assistants in the forefront of a national organizing movement among contingent faculty that aims to secure decent working conditions while defending academic values...
...candidate in political science at Rutgers University, where he is studying the labor movement and its contribution to American democracy...
...Will they have the time or the energy for the same excellence in the classroom...
...Traditionally, adjunct faculty were successful professionals in their fields who would teach an occasional course for a small stipend and, in the process, enrich the university with "real-world" experience...
...Stipends averaging $13,000 per year are not enough to live on in New York City, and graduate students are obliged to seek outside jobs to supplement their incomes...
...When less than half the instructional faculty are protected by tenure, academic freedom—at least in principle—is endangered...
...But this put the university in the difficult position of arguing that graduate students— who were hired not for conventional employment considerations but rather their "academic credentials and promise"— were likely to make demands that would hurt the university's educational mission...
...While it may be a bitter pill for some university administrators, collective bargaining for adjunct faculty and graduate students is ultimately in the best interest of higher education and offers it the best prospect for protecting academic values...
...Whereas adjuncts were less than a quarter of all faculty in 1970, today they are about half...
...Many activists in faculty unions think that the best response to these developments is to acknowledge them...
...Collective bargaining is appropriate to workers in private enterprise, but it does not belong in universities where the purpose is not to accumulate profits but to foster learning...
...The case of "parttime" adjunct faculty is especially striking...
...When you have graduate students who aren't working three or four jobs they can focus on their teaching work," she says...
...The NYU graduate students' campaign for recognition included a visit by AFL-CIO President John Sweeney to NYU President L. Jay Oliva...
...The UAW represents graduate assistants on a number of other campuses, most prominently in the University of California system...
...The effects of this "casualization" of university education, as it has come to be known, are deleterious to the university's educational mission...
...Kimberly Johnson, an NYU teaching assistant, agrees, and hopes that unionization can help...
...But the larger point remains...
...But the increasing use of contingent instructional faculty suggests that the university has already gone a long way toward adopting business modes of behavior, and the intrusion of for-profit educational institutions like the University of Phoenix will only increase the competitive pressures toward this transformation...
...Adjuncts and graduate students who deliver quality instruction, the AAUP's Rich Moser argues, do so in spite of the conditions of their employment...
...I I...
...Organized labor, in a bid to renew its mission as a social movement rather than an interest group, has reached out to academics, religious groups, and social activists...
...Are adjuncts, who may teach courses on two or three university campuses, and graduate students, who are students themselves, likely to offer undergraduates the same quality of academic counseling...
...Clayton Sinyai is a Ph.D...
...Last year the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) had ruled that, as university employees, graduate assistants were entitled to union representation if they wished...
...Barbara Bowen, president of the Professional Staff Congress—a union representing City University of New York faculty, full-time, part-time, and graduate assistants—says that "academics are workers and we must learn to defend ourselves as workers...
...Universities, under pressure to reduce costs, are transferring more and more of their undergraduate teaching to lowercost graduate assistants and adjunct faculty...
...The agreement followed a three-year fight by graduate assistants to secure recognition...
...Furthermore, contingent faculty cannot provide undergraduates with the sort of contact possible with full-time, tenured professors...

Vol. 128 • May 2001 • No. 10


 
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