Regular Lounge readers should be well-versed by now in the
University of California’s woes, since we covered it here,
here,
here,
and here. Now the drama continues as professors
gear up for a walkout during the first day of class at many campuses.
On July 16, the University of California Board of
Regents:
approved
a plan proposed by UC President Mark G. Yudof to enact systemwide furloughs as
one of a set of actions to offset an anticipated $813 million reduction in
support from the state general fund. . . . More than 108,000
full-time-equivalent positions out of a total of 135,000 are affected. Under
the plan, UC faculty and staff will be required to take from 11 to 26 furlough
days — amounting to a salary reduction of 4 to 10 percent — with higher
earners being forced to take more furlough days and steeper pay cuts. The
specific number of furlough days each employee will take is based on a sliding
scale across seven pay bands, ranging from those who make under $40,000 to
those who earn more than $240,000.
Now from The Sacramento Bee:
Some
University of California professors are so peeved that UC's Office of the
President has forbidden them from taking furloughs on teaching days that
they're planning to walk out on their classes later this month. The date
they've chosen – Sept. 24 – is the first day of class at several UC campuses,
including UC Davis. . . .
The
letter [available here]
is signed by 16 professors, including four from UC Davis: English professors
Nathan Brown, Joshua Clover and Parama Roy, and physics professor Richard T.
Scalettar. Hundreds more UC professors have asked to add their names to the
letter since it began circulating Monday, said Clover, who helped draft it.
The
letter urges faculty at all UC campuses to suspend teaching on Sept. 24 unless
the university administration meets three conditions, one of which is to allow
professors to take furloughs on days they teach.
The AAUP “supports the system-wide walkout of all UC
faculty. Such action, the AAUP believes, would send a clear message that
disinvestment in colleges and universities reduces the quality of education and
does harm to students, faculty, and the public interest.” (AAUP Statement here)
UPTE, representing over 10,000 University Professional and
Technical Employees, will strike on 9/24 in solidarity with faculty: http://www.upte.org/publication-mm/2009-08-31.html.
Additional coverage in The
Daily Californian.
James Hamilton, Professor of Economics at the University of
California, San Diego, tells his
whining colleagues to take a hike:
There
are any number of things that happen in life that may not be as I would have
wished. But one of my core principles is never to take that out on the students
I am asked to teach.
If
some of my colleagues perceive that they now have better opportunities than
teaching at the University of California, I'd encourage them to resign so that
they can take advantage of those opportunities.
If
not, they need to stop whining and do their jobs.
And
perhaps even be thankful that, unlike many other Americans, they still have
one.
(HT: Rolfe
Winkler)
Also some crankiness from U.C. Berkeley Professor of
Economics Brad DeLong regarding the furloughs here
and here.
Meanwhile, UCLA law prof Steve
Bainbridge is not planning to walk out, but he is miffed. Professors are not allowed to cancel
any classes, and the furloughs do not reduce committee, service, or research
obligations. “So where exactly is
my furlough time off?”
Adding
additional insult to injury, while students are suffering from fewer and larger
classes and faculty are taking a pay cut (in the face of higher taxes and
health insurance costs), some at the top are getting richer:
Even
as the University of California was cutting $800-million from its budget in
July, leading to layoffs and pay cuts for many employees, the system's regents
quietly approved pay raises for more than two dozen executives, the San
Francisco Chronicle reports. System officials characterize the raises as
necessary compensation for people taking on new duties, but faculty and
employee representatives aren't buying it: They've been asked to do more for
less pay, they say.
It's
no wonder some of my colleagues are planning a walkout. I'm not much of one for
strikes and protests. And I think I have an obligation to my students to show
up for class as scheduled. But I also won't blame those who participate. It's
enough to make one a raging populist.
Emotions are running high enough that UC staff, faculty and
students have been voting on a statewide motion of
“no confidence” in President Mark Yudof. Stay tuned to the Faculty Lounge
when the drama returns – wherever academics are fighting, complaining, or misbehaving
in a public setting, we’ll be there to follow it.
Update: Brian Leiter also has coverage here.
Image Source:
Wikipedia
Furloughs for faculty members are just pay decreases, not work decreases; that's all. The name is misleading. Once we realize that, they may be easier to accept.
But, hey, the academy's been dealing with pay decreases for a really, really long time. One of my favorite antebellum cases involves the University of Alabama's attempt to reduce the salary of its tutors (from $1000 to $800 per year). The Alabama Supreme Court didn't allow it. Just goes to show that you never know when studying property jurisprudence and colleges in the old South comes in handy.
Through the magic of book.google, you can read the case, University of Alabama v. Walden (Ala. 1849):
http://books.google.com/books?id=Wb0KAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA655&dq="university+of+alabama"+date:1830-1855&ei=BYOiSvXLPIvgyQSxo9mLCA#v=onepage&q=%22university%20of%20alabama%22%20date%3A1830-1855&f=false
What a crock. Most of the sanctimonious professors only teach one or two courses a semester. What are they complaining about when they only teach about 6 hours a week.
My two UC professor friends make pretty good money, especially considering the work load. No one likes a pay cut, but compared to bringing in replacements, I think they're making a mistake if they strike or walkout. I mean, from a technology standpoint, someday, someone is going to figure out that we maybe need 8 to 10 professors in each field in the entire country. Record their lectures on the web, and hire a bunch of TAs. Then where will they be? I'm simplifying a bit I know, but as far as I am concerned, there is an education bubble.
Neither police nor fire nor EMS are allowed to strike. Neither should you professors be able to strike. There are those of us out here who are ready to rumble in the struggle to end tenure. You're helping our cause. And many of us are out of work.
So, either take your cut in pay like men, like the rest of us are taking ours. Or better, quit.
Since most tenured professor-taught classes are conducted by graduate assistants, what's the problem? The classes will continue as usual, and no one will notice the professors are missing.
christ is there a cushier job than being a tenured professor? upon refection being a judge in cook county, il. may edge it out.
Cry me a river. Adjunct professors like myself are lucky to make $4000 flat rate per course (that's $4000 for teaching a 4 1/2 month long course), with absolutely no benefits. We don't get the benefit of TAs to grade for us. We teach, grade, hold office hours, publish, and advise students.
On the other hand, tenured professors make obscene salaries, have cushy benefit packages, and often teach only one or two semesters/quarters per academic year.
I say let em strike. Hopefully universities will realize how unnecessary they are and also realize how valuable adjuncts, instructors, and TAs are.
Some clarifications:
"OBSCENE SALARY": As a tenure-track Assistant Professor, I make $20,000 less per year than a friend who teaches high-school history at a public school in the Bay Area. Corrected for inflation, after earning a Ph.D. from a top university and gaining 8 years of college teaching experience, I make slightly more now than I did 16 years ago as a recent college graduate working in public relations.
LOW TEACHING LOAD: They're called "research universities" for a reason, folks: unlike junior colleges, private liberal arts colleges, the Cal State system, etc., teaching represents just a portion of what our job responsibilities are. Research universities (and the faculty who work there) don't just transmit pre-existing knowledge, they PRODUCE new knowledge. Adjuncts, instructors, and TAs are ABSOLUTELY valuable, and their exploitation b corporatizing university systems is outrageous, but bears on the specific function of this walkout only obliquely.
In any case, READ THE LETTER that calls for the walkout. The very first demand is to stop paycuts and furloughs for UC employees making less than $40,000 per year: WHICH MEANS NOT PROFESSORS AT ALL. We're walking out on BEHALF of students and low-paid workers, NOT IN SPITE OF THEM.
This is interesting. This moment of crisis would be particularly useful if it would lead tenured professors to have my empathy for adjuncts — by, maybe, supporting their strikes, raising their pay and, yes, bringing them into the tenure track rather than using them as disposable teaching labor. However, if the UC folks must be cranky about it (and don't want to attack one another, by arguing for the elimination of other UC campuses or other departments!), I have an idea. Why not take furlough days whenever committees meet? No one likes committee work. It's boring, and it takes away from teaching and research. So — take furloughs on committee days, with the result that no one screens job candidates, no hiring takes place, no new courses are approved, no funky new programs are created, no reaccreditation reports are generated. Now *that* would send a big message, over time and across departments, to the Powers That Be! Sorry, President Udoff, but we simply can't read dossiers and applications, and ooops, we couldn't finish that self-study, so we're going to drop our ABA/AMA accreditation. UCers, unite! You have nothing to lose but your committee work, and a world to gain!
Want to have fun? Look up any one of the promoters of the walkout and take a look at their research. Thank goodness, while they walk out, none of this twaddle will be inflicted on their poor long-suffering students.
Here's the poetry of Joshua Clover at UC Davis
"…the remix the new glitch has been recalled melancholy of luscious Pictober the fall of the phenomenon into the iris back with another one of those Return of the Flâneur as hardcore Autumnophage echolocation…"
Or the very important research of Nathan Brown, another fraud in the UC Davis English department.
"His current book project examines concepts of form and practices of fabrication in nanoscale materials science and contemporary experimental poetry".
Please.
We also have Donna Haraway, a 'Professor of Consciousness' st Santa Cruz.
"This chapter is an effort to build an ironic political myth faithful to feminism, socialism, and materialism. Perhaps more faithful as blasphemy is faithful, than as reverent worship and identification…."
Haraway's book cover is priceless. Enjoy it at 'http://www.stanford.edu/dept/HPS/Haraway/CyborgManifesto.html'
And it's all like that. The once great University of California needs a thorough cleaning out.
Let me get this straight, STP – you want to screw over the students who have contracted with the university for an education, just to prove your magnanimity for "the little people"? GMAFB – and get to work.
You know, you guys must be the most coddled workers in all of America. I live in the "professor ghetto" of SUNY Stony Brook. I have regularly viewed tenured profs in their bathrobes reading the NYT at 9 in the morning while my husband in the private sector launched off for work at 6:45…
One of my best girlfriends, formerly, is married to a tenured prof in economics. I have actually heard him stress over getting pizza delivery to his TA's while they graded the final exams for his classes! (BTW, he did this stressing from the comfort of his own home.) The icing on the cake was his long winded stress out about getting his new computer before he went for a month to his summer lodge in Canada!
You don't want to take a pay cut when your state is broke? You want to "make a statement?" You are an arrogant prick. You are a government employee. Your gov't is broke. Go get a job in the private sector if you think your expertise is so invaluable. See how that suites you. Two weeks vacation and ten holidays baby…
"Why not take furlough days whenever committees meet? No one likes committee work. It's boring, and it takes away from teaching and research."
Vladimir for dean! Or provost or president. My own view of meetings: http://www.thefacultylounge.org/2009/08/i-need-another-faculty-retreat-like-i-need-a-hole-in-the-head-hey-wait.html
Hmmm…sounds like things aren't going so well on our Utopian Californian campuses.
Personally, I think all teachers should be paid the same amount, regardless of seniority, ability or load.
Seems only fair.
Never mind that the state is broke.
Education, like health care, is a right and should be "free" for all.
The campuses are Utopia, remember?