Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Adjunctification: Living in the Margins of Academe



















Tiffany Timperman
November 27th, 2013

Article was originally published at Hybrid Pedagogy: A Digital Journal of Learning, Teaching, and Technology

Article was reprinted at Hampton Institute

Unfair labor practices are commonplace in American higher education, public and private. Hardly anyone denies the problem of adjunctificaton and contingency, and, more epidemic, laborers on the fringe in any trade or profession recognize this deficit; yet we continue to work for less, essentially exploiting our worth, thus the possibility of a solution is vexed. And the issue is not unique to adjuncts, but many other university laborers, including students who are uniformly paid minimum wage for providing essential services. But how can a problem so transparent and pervasive fail to generate actionable change? Why can't I get equal pay for equal labor? And why is silence the norm? These are self-posed questions that warrant wider consideration.

Multiple labor hierarchies exist campus-wide, all arguably fundamental to the operation of the university, and the adjunct problem begs reformation right now. I do not believe all adjuncts are qualified for tenure, and some tenured professors likely don't deserve it either. But many adjuncts who are every bit as qualified as those with tenure don't get equal pay for equal labor because we are powerless in a system that is indifferent to faculty working conditions. This was certainly the case for Margaret Mary Vojtko. Let's stop to remember Vojtko through Elie Wiesel's statement: "I believe that a person who is indifferent to the suffering of others is complicit in the crime." And this means, of course, that in our silence we are equally complicit in this problem.

Nigh 75% of us are complicit in this problem, so why blame the complicit elite, the other 25%? Because the majority of them are content and quiet? I believe we are stronger together, as one faculty, than pitted against one another. So let's question the hierarchy of the institution instead. Let's reevaluate tenure, as "tenure has hamstrung colleges' ability to fulfill their two fundamental missions of advancing knowledge and disseminating it" (James C. Wetherbe). Let's also demand transparency and redistribute the top-down wealth, starting with the president of the university.

A realistic approach would embrace reorganization that values mutual interest in pay equity and job security alongside innovative teaching, research and publication, and continuing education. Though levels of teaching and/or research focus differ among universities and colleges, the stereotypical system holds ranked professors accountable for research and publication, but marginalizes the significance of teaching or vice versa. We need to find a new balance that values both teaching and research equally and imagine something other than the disparity of tiered faculty, a hybrid plane where both/and rather than either/or are equally valued and compensated. We should at least look to other models that manage to balance teaching and research pathways and roles more equitably.

Dan Kovalik, senior associate general counsel of the United Steelworkers, says the two-tiered faculty model is "destroying the academy," and that our CEO-like presidents and administrators are not all to blame. Yet, even though the failure of our system is apparent to outsiders, we remain paralyzed. So why do we contribute to a fatally flawed and oppressive system when so many of us, like Vojtko, will die sick and penniless after years of service to our students and university? Why, when we are ripe for reorganization, do adjuncts fail to organize? For my own part, I am stuck in a spiraling cycle, afraid to lose what little seniority I have as an affiliate adjunct, and I am stretched thin juggling heavy course loads, which makes it hard to look for work elsewhere or dig my way out of this hole through publishing. As is, I know a tenure committee would not look at my file because I have been an adjunct for a decade plus now: I am branded. This stigma needs to change.

I can't say I've ever met a complacent adjunct, but I have met several who, like me, have both front and back burners on high. Sometimes I wonder how long I can sustain the workload without burning out or boiling over. Even after a decade of extreme adjuncting, what I find most oppressive is not the workload itself, but the cyclical fear of unemployment without benefits. And sometimes, though it seems a past life away now, I remember that I was a privileged housewife, married to an affluent periodontist with a house in Kings Heights. And I left that life to pursue academia, to contribute to society, to be something more socially and economically valued than a mother and a wife. Of course, devalued and un(der)compensated domestic laborers of all sorts have more in common with adjuncts than I anticipated. Reflecting on that privileged life now, knowing I left because he told me he could make more money in one hour pulling teeth than I could in one year teaching English (and he was about right), I don't regret my decision. And even though I found out the hard way that society does not value teachers either, I am proud to own both identities: mother and teacher.

So where do we start to reform and reorganize? I would like to see revised promotion and tenure guidelines, though this is an unlikely scenario unless the national academic consciousness revalues the teacher's role in education and its administration. The natural place to start this revaluation is with students. The classroom is not the place to politicize faculty working conditions, but asking students what they value in an education, administrative bloat or innovative teaching, technology, and facilities is an ethical way to approach the topic. Education should be mindfully pursued and questioned. Kovalik believes that once students and parents are savvy to the system's failures and abuses that they will begin to more thoughtfully question the value of a university education. If he is right, then we are sinking our own ship, and even those who feel most insulated in the upper echelons of academe will eventually drown.

I've lived in the margins of academe for so long that I am conditioned to inhabit the space without too much adverse reaction. When I do stop to reflect on my experience, it's maddening. But I don't want to become embittered by years of unfair labor conditions and compensation. I want to keep doing what I love: teaching. So far, I've maintained buoyancy because I've adopted an attitude of submission and survival (denial), but in doing so I've compromised professional integrity and quality of life. And sharing my thoughts openly and publicly may put me at risk for reprisal, but what is the alternative? Going quietly into that good night? No, all of us need to stop doing what adjuncts do all too well: glossing over the problem, remaining anonymous, waiting silently for last minute appointments and course cancellations, and pretending we're free agents of our universities when in reality we are all bait on a hook.

Like Vojtko, I keep waiting for the guillotine, knowing full well that my life could shatter any minute if I get ill or lose affiliate status. In many ways, I am the model puppet flitting between jobs habitually and efficiently, only pausing occasionally to imagine myself a full professor in an office with windows, working on my book or waiting for the soft knock of a shy student with paper in hand for conferencing. But then I remember I have multiple courses at multiple colleges to juggle for the 3rd consecutive academic quarter for years ongoing. I am a well-oiled work addict.

The reason I am sharing my adjunct narrative is simple: I want to help break the silence of contingency and complicity. I want equal opportunity to research, publish, and teach with job security and fair pay. I am sick of living in the margins of academe. And this is not a white-collar problem; my woes are real and widespread.

I wonder how much my voice matters, but I fear cowardice more. I trust sharing my story here because I trust Hybrid Pedagogy's unwavering and un-egotistical ethos. They have created a safe place to share openly and honestly, wherein I feel insulated and empowered to talk. I value their moxy and willingness to tip the elephant in the room, and if enough of us join the conversation, here and elsewhere, our chances are greater.

Fortunately, there is a growing body of academic colleagues advocating for change and pinning their names on the unpopular Problem of Contingency in Higher Education, including Joshua Boldt, William Pannapacker, Jennifer Ruth, Karen Kelsky, the editors here at Hybrid Pedagogy, and more. We can no longer justify silence, denial, or complicity in the problem of contingency; rather, we have to work together toward an equitable solution.

It's not too ironic that I turn to bell hooks, who reminds us that "marginality [is] much more than a site of deprivation; in fact […] it is also the site of radical possibility, a space of resistance […] It offers to one the possibility of radical perspective from which to see and create, to imagine alternatives, new worlds." The new world I imagine is not radical but just; it is closer to the romantic ideal that I thought existed back when I was an undergraduate, before I realized that the corporatization of higher education has fundamentally flawed the idea of the university.

The Adjunct Crisis Manifesto











from The Adjunct Crisis


Adjunctification is the first stage of privatization: adjunctification, corporatization, privatization. The end.

We have been adjunctified.

American higher education is in a state of crisis: an adjunct crisis. We, the professoriate, are, for the most part, in denial.  The longstanding trend in higher education of hiring faculty on a contingent, part-time basis to replace retiring, full-time faculty and teach an increasing student population has resulted in three or four generations of marginalized college faculty who are not living the professional lives they envisioned when they were earning their advanced degrees, and who, therefore, face a personal crisis.  And we, both full-time and part-time professors, as well as the institution of higher education itself, face a crisis as tenured faculty slowly disappear and are replaced by a pool of temporary workers or, eventually, perhaps, technological “innovation,” and higher education as we know it dies.

The crisis of identity for adjunct faculty takes different forms, at different times, in different places, but is an undercurrent that flows through their lives. Adjunct faculty, a de facto underclass, carry the institution of higher education on their backs for just above poverty wages. For many, the lure of a tenure-track position keeps them from facing their actual circumstances. Some are simply so busy maintaining a professional practice, and trying to make ends meet, under oppressive conditions, they hardly have time, between campuses, to consider their dismal fate.  Rationalization is the dominant coping mechanism.

This site is intended to be a forum for individual adjuncts to share their personal stories, their “adjunct moments,” but also for a discussion about the current crisis in higher education, and its effect on the insitution as a whole.  Everyone is invited. We hope to radicalize the conversation, ultimately, with the hope of changing the discourse from one about improving adjunct conditions to one about reversing adjunctification. Reversing adjunctification, with justice, means transitioning part-timers into full-timers.  Any other outcome will be unjust.

Together, contract and adjunct faculty, and students, must face the crisis towards which we are heading before, perhaps, it is too late to take action to reverse course. We aim to awaken more of the professoriate to the dire situation we together face.

Thursday, November 20, 2014

America, Y U no pay adjuncts living wage?!



CNN, aka Contains No News, may be back to actually containing some news. I just watched their Ivory Tower program. A good, wide-ranging discussion of the cutting edge issues facing higher education today. There was a lot worth discussing but I would like to focus on the "hack education" segment. A speaker in that portion made three good points.

Education is:

1) Content,

2) A network of people who can help you in life, and

3) The credential.

I think this is perfectly true.

In a fascist, imperialist country with neoliberal universities destroying the humanities and social sciences we must ask the crucial question:

How can we reimagine education to fulfill these objectives in a way that bypasses colleges and universities and creates new scholarly journals run by adjuncts and contingent professors?

An extremely tall order, to be sure, but I think it is the future we must pursue. Because the past really isn't working. And technology makes a lot of new things possible.

But maybe MOOCs aren't it. They have terrible student persistence rates, customer satisfaction and learning outcomes.

Udacity, Cousera, EdX and the like still need to be given a fair shake and time to work out the kinks. But the initial data is not indicating the Brave New World we thought we had in our grasp.

My peripatos, this perpatos, our peripatos, is open for a walk.

Let us journey and reason together.

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Let us be realists, let us demand the impossible



















Adjuncts, contingent professors, newly minted Ph.D.s, Romans, country men and womyn, lend me your ear!

We know the issues, the struggles, the hustle, the grind.

We know what we want to do. We want to inspire students to greatness and conduct high quality, peer reviewed research, while also earning a living wage.

We do not know quite how to demand that out of the ever-increasingly corporatized neoliberal university.

I envision a journal to come - peer-reviewed by adjuncts, contingent professors, and newly minted Ph.D.s.  Serious in nature - and worth little for your CV - but - you know what? - let us presage an entirely new way of approaching the crisis in the humanities and social sciences education labor market in the Anglophone world.

If you want to chair the publication of any discipline or anti-discipline committee in the humanities and social sciences, gather at least two other top adjuncts in your field and send us a 250 word proposal. Let us begin to create an entirely new paradigm for higher education. One to be built upon the labor of the least empowered but most numerous faculty among us: the adjuncts, contingent professors, newly minted Ph.D.s.

We know the crisis. For starters, most of us can barely afford to live!

We want to be public intellectuals.

Let us move forward figuring it out together in this our agora and rise along together.

All political perspectives will be welcome. All methodologies, qualitative and quantitative. Disciplinary, inter-disciplinary and anti-disciplinary. The only requirement is that we are share a political and labor commitment to improving our collective economic and intellectual position in society while still delivering great teaching and great peer-reviewed research to the public. But let the peer reviewers and the MOOC providers begin to be us.

We can figure out how to monetize it later.

The adjunct rebellion starts now.