Friday, January 24, 2014

More of This, Please!










Point Park University students have formed a Student Solidarity Organization to demand fair labor practices. Point Park was one of the three colleges that I taught part-time for, and while I had a great relationship with my department chair (I still count him as a friend), I received the lowest pay there - and since it was downtown Pittsburgh, I often had to pay outrageous parking rates, adding insult to injury.

It was the only school where I frequently had students who had no full-time faculty members teaching them in any given semester. There was no office space, not even the usual tiny room with one computer to serve a dozen adjuncts. And this is a private university with full-time tuition ranging from about $25,00 - $32,000 per year. Just tuition - not room and board, not any of the dozen fees that colleges add.

On the plus side, the students were bright and interesting - with majors ranging from musical theater to mortuary science/business, and it was the only school that offered undergraudate tuition benefits for adjuncts and their dependents. Sadly, I could not avail myself of that.

Student activism is crucial to changing the system. If administrations are going to insist on considering students customers, they will have to give the customers the product that they claim to be selling them: a quality education. And students, parents, and other key players are going to have to step up and demand that they do. Congratulations, Point Park students - this is a great start!

2 comments:

  1. I'm not an adjunct any longer but our school cheers the increased enrollment by stuffing more students into already overloaded classes, putting the classes in rooms without enough desks for those students, and paying faculty the same--even though there is 50% more work to do. There is much promotion of treating the students well, of course, but hiring a couple more faculty in our department would make it all better for everyone. Ironically, they will not hire any adjuncts to handle the overload.

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  2. There are many ways to abuse faculty!

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