Why Is My Professor Working at Two Other Universities? Awareness of Adjunct Labor among College Students

BY JASON PHILLIPS Most students do not understand the hierarchy of educators in academia. What they tend to imagine when they talk about professors are tenured, full-time professors. In reality, colleges and universities are predominantly staffed by contingent and adjunct faculty members. According to a 2018 report from the AAUP, “at all US institutions combined,…

A CLASS Exercise to Start the Semester!

BY JOSEPH G. RAMSEY Welcome back to school, faculty—and grad student teachers, too! Wondering how much your teaching labor is subsidizing the rest of your university (in other words: your basic rate of exploitation)? Try this fun back-to-school activity! Locate your school’s per course student tuition rate. (At my public university, in-state tuition per 3…

How We Got Here: California Edition

BY HANK REICHMAN “The University of California could not function without the labor of lecturers.  In a given year, UC employs more than 6,000 of these educators, who are hired on short-term contracts and lack the stability of tenure.  All told, they teach roughly a third of courses offered across the system.  Since 2011, the…

Diversity in a Precarious World

BY LOUIS HOWARD PORTER Why are we diversifying a profession that exploits a majority of its professionals?  What are the consequences of diversifying a profession where many are either forced to leave it, or take jobs as contingent labor making poverty-level wages?  Is the consequence of such diversification really “social justice”?  Or is it exploitation…

The Kiddie Table of Academia

BY DARREN JOHNSON Originally published October 16, 2021; reprinted with permission of Campus News. It’s holiday time, and for those unfamiliar with large American family gatherings this time of year, let me tell you about the kiddie table. Most people who host big dinners in their homes have a big dining room table, usually something…