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Panel Handout: Mica: Negotiating A First Contingent Faculty Contract At An Art School Oct 2016

Panel Handout: Mica: Negotiating A First Contingent Faculty Contract At An Art School

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Panel: Negotiating Over Job Security For Contingent Faculty - The Three Legged Stool, Judi Burgess Oct 2016

Panel: Negotiating Over Job Security For Contingent Faculty - The Three Legged Stool, Judi Burgess

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Negotiating Over Job Security For Contingent Faculty: The Cfa Experience, Jonathan Karpf Oct 2016

Negotiating Over Job Security For Contingent Faculty: The Cfa Experience, Jonathan Karpf

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Part-Time Faculty: Semantics And The Meaning Of Contingent Teaching, Margaret E. Winters Feb 2016

Part-Time Faculty: Semantics And The Meaning Of Contingent Teaching, Margaret E. Winters

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

The variety of titles for non-tenure-track, part-time, contingent faculty and their semantic meanings are explored. The terms are not random when looked at collectively, but rather form a pattern which is indicative of contemporary post-secondary academic employment and culture. More specifically, these titles reflect several characteristics of the faculty who bear them: among others, the fact that they are not in full-time employment, the fact that their contracts are for shorter periods of time than those of tenure-track faculty, and the fact that their contracts reflect an expectation of impermanence in employment. Also expressed in the titles are more nuanced …


Handout: University Of Hawai'i Faculty Contract, Richard Westbury Nettell Sep 2014

Handout: University Of Hawai'i Faculty Contract, Richard Westbury Nettell

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Countering Contingency?, Richard Westbury Nettell Sep 2014

Countering Contingency?, Richard Westbury Nettell

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

The University of Hawai‘i Professional Assembly (UHPA) represents higher education faculty across the state, in a system that includes one major research university, two four-year colleges, and six community colleges. Qualification to be a member of the bargaining unit (and receive full health benefits) is 50% employment. Furthermore, the term “faculty” includes not only instructional faculty (including lecturers, who are by definition temporary, and instructors, who are longer-term but non-tenure-track), but also researchers, librarians, counselors, and others who come under the general designation of specialist. This basically means everyone working in the state’s higher education system is part of the …


Protecting Academic Freedom For Faculty Working On Contingent Contracts: Contract Language For Full-­‐Time Faculty At Wright State University, Rudy Fichtenbaum Sep 2014

Protecting Academic Freedom For Faculty Working On Contingent Contracts: Contract Language For Full-­‐Time Faculty At Wright State University, Rudy Fichtenbaum

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Collective Bargaining Results Regarding Contingent Faculty, Rudy Fichtenbaum Sep 2014

Collective Bargaining Results Regarding Contingent Faculty, Rudy Fichtenbaum

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Contingent Faculty In Higher Education, Ken Hawkinson Sep 2014

Contingent Faculty In Higher Education, Ken Hawkinson

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


The Effect Of Part-Time Faculty On Student Degree Or Certificate Completion In Two-Year Community Colleges, Hongwei Yu Sep 2014

The Effect Of Part-Time Faculty On Student Degree Or Certificate Completion In Two-Year Community Colleges, Hongwei Yu

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


The Delphi Project On The Changing Faculty And Student Success, Daniel Maxey Sep 2014

The Delphi Project On The Changing Faculty And Student Success, Daniel Maxey

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


The California State University Bottleneck Courses Survey Report, Michelle Kiss Sep 2014

The California State University Bottleneck Courses Survey Report, Michelle Kiss

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Bargaining Quality In Part-Time Faculty Working Conditions: Beyond Just-In-Time Employment And Just-At-Will Non-Renewal, Gary Rhoades Feb 2013

Bargaining Quality In Part-Time Faculty Working Conditions: Beyond Just-In-Time Employment And Just-At-Will Non-Renewal, Gary Rhoades

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

Two aspects of part-time faculty members’ working conditions that are problematic for educational quality are examined in this article—“just-in-time” employment and “just-at-will” non-renewal. With an eye to enhancing student learning conditions, the article explores feasible strategies that are found in the collective bargaining agreements of units for part-time only bargaining units. Collective bargaining provides a reasonable framework for rethinking, redefining, and renegotiating the working conditions of faculty working in part-time positions to improve student learning outcomes and educational quality.


Contingent Faculty Rights At Vancouver Community College, Brenda Appleton Dec 2012

Contingent Faculty Rights At Vancouver Community College, Brenda Appleton

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Contingent Faculty: Issues At The Table, Holly Lawrence Dec 2012

Contingent Faculty: Issues At The Table, Holly Lawrence

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


The Plight Of The Adjunct: The Activist's Survival Guide, Matt Williams Nov 2012

The Plight Of The Adjunct: The Activist's Survival Guide, Matt Williams

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


The Culture Of Amiability And The Maintenance Of The Adcom System, Alan Trevithick Nov 2012

The Culture Of Amiability And The Maintenance Of The Adcom System, Alan Trevithick

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


De-Marginalizing Contingent Faculty: Salaries At Suny-New Paltz, Peter D. G. Brown Nov 2012

De-Marginalizing Contingent Faculty: Salaries At Suny-New Paltz, Peter D. G. Brown

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Reorganizing Higher Education In The U.S. And Canada: The Erosion Of Tenure And The Unionization Of Contingent Faculty, David Dobbie, Ian Robinson Nov 2012

Reorganizing Higher Education In The U.S. And Canada: The Erosion Of Tenure And The Unionization Of Contingent Faculty, David Dobbie, Ian Robinson

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Adjunct Faculty Contract Clauses, Roberta Elins Nov 2012

Adjunct Faculty Contract Clauses, Roberta Elins

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


New Models Of Contingent Faculty Inclusion, Frank Cosco Nov 2012

New Models Of Contingent Faculty Inclusion, Frank Cosco

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Collective Bargaining Landscape For Contingent Faculty - The Csu Perspective, Margaret Merryfield Oct 2012

Collective Bargaining Landscape For Contingent Faculty - The Csu Perspective, Margaret Merryfield

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

No abstract provided.


Contingent Faculty Bargaining: Separate But Equal?, Marcia Newfield May 2012

Contingent Faculty Bargaining: Separate But Equal?, Marcia Newfield

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

In the 34 years since the PSC formed part-timers have gone from footnote to frontispiece, and our journey has been internal as well as external. What are our services worth? Why are they devalued? What does it mean when we are so fragmented? Why do people in our own departments, whom we have passed in hallways for years, not treat us as colleagues? What does it mean about the profession we’re part of that we're not part of its governance? What does it mean that our passion for our subjects has landed us in a situation where we hardly have …


“The One Best Bargaining Unit?”, Joe Berry May 2012

“The One Best Bargaining Unit?”, Joe Berry

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

In the Chicago area, and Illinois generally, there is not a single bargaining unit that includes both full-time tenure- track (FTTT) and all other contingent faculty of any institution. There are two units that include the FTTT and a large portion, varying by workload, of the contingents. All of the rest of the bargaining units in Illinois are either contingent-only units or FTTT-only, with a few of the contingent units also including academic professionals. Even recent efforts by some local existing FTTT unions to organize the contingents on their campuses have proposed separate units, with only some offering common membership …


It’S All About The Work All The Time: Commonality Of Interests In A Common Bargaining Unit, Elizabeth Hoffman May 2012

It’S All About The Work All The Time: Commonality Of Interests In A Common Bargaining Unit, Elizabeth Hoffman

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

Lecturers, who are more than half of the 23,000 faculty in the CSU, are committed to their work but are not deluded as to their actual status in the system. Despite some success in encouraging the use of the professional term “Lecturer,” there are plenty of labels—the temps, the adjuncts, the part-time people—to remind contingent faculty of their lack of status. Perhaps the saddest but most accurate label for contingent faculty comes from the term used by academic union leaders in Mexico. Joe Berry used this term—in English, the “precarious” faculty—in a speech he made last January to a large …


Faculty Specialists/Contingent Faculty At Western Michigan University: A Personal Retrospective, Gary Mathews May 2012

Faculty Specialists/Contingent Faculty At Western Michigan University: A Personal Retrospective, Gary Mathews

Journal of Collective Bargaining in the Academy

In the Spring semester, 2005 I took a sabbatical for the second time in my twenty-nine years as a professor at Western Michigan University (WMU). The dictionary defines a sabbatical as “release from normal teaching duties granted to a professor, as for study or travel.” When faculty, friends and relatives ask me what I did on my sabbatical, I first tell them that I spent the month of January in Aruba; basking in the sun, snorkeling, and playing poker. Everyone seems to like and understand that answer. Then I say that I am writing a brief history of the Faculty …