Mercury,
January/February 1998 Table of Contents
(c)
1998 Astronomical Society of the Pacific
Please
don't print my name, the astronomy instructor implored me. He is
one of the many community-college instructors who must cobble together
a succession of temporary teaching jobs at different institutions.
Each semester they wait for those phone calls, never knowing whether
enough places will hire them. Being so dependent on the whim of
college administrators, it is not surprising that the instructor
watches whom he tells what.
"I
drift with the seasons," he said. "The phone rings, the
dean says, 'I've got a slot, can you fill it?'" For such instructors,
academic freedom is no longer a concept. They have no right to a
hearing over arbitrary hiring or firing. At one school, the rule
was that if part-timers taught every consecutive semester for five
years, they had to be given semi-permanent status. Strangely enough,
whenever the fifth year rolled around, the college just couldn't
find the money to rehire them.
Although
research universities are pulling similar tricks [see "The
Withering of Academic Freedom," p. 24], the deterioration of
academic working conditions is most advanced in community colleges.
Yet it has been neglected by the astronomical community. As physicist
Phil Kaldon wrote in the Young Scientists' Network mailing list,
"Community colleges are big business in this country, but they
are often invisible to the academic research community."
Two-fifths
of all college instructors are now part-timers - twice the fraction
in 1970. It is no secret why. They are cheaper and, for the accountants,
risk-free. Part-timers usually get about $2,000 per course per semester
- two-fifths of what full-timers get for the same work, according
to the American Federation of Teachers. Full-timers also involve
all sorts of bothersome commitments. You have to give them a steady
salary, offices, health and retirement benefits, some measure of
job security, and opportunities to interact with other faculty and
improve their teaching. In short, you have to treat full-time faculty
like professionals, rather than like migrant workers.
For
part-timers who have day jobs and teach for fun or pocket money,
none of this much matters. But for those who temp for a living,
it is hell. And as colleges shift their payrolls to part-timers,
ever more instructors are falling into that category. In a survey
of part-timers by the Faculty Association of California Community
Colleges three years ago, 47 percent of respondents said they had
jobs at more than one college. Eighty percent said they would prefer
a full-time position - indicating they take part-time jobs only
out of necessity.
"Colleges
prefer to hire part-timers because it's cheaper for them,"
explained Darryl Stanford, a part-timer and chair of the astronomy
department at City College of San Francisco. "As such, to make
a decent living, part-timers have to teach at many different places."
Stanford
himself is one of these "freeway flyers." In his '88 Chevy
Nova hatchback - filled with Sky & Telescope back issues, unopened
McDonald's ketchups, and, for those precious free moments, bongo
drums - he shuttles among City College, San Francisco State University,
and Cañada College in Redwood City to the south. He teaches
a total of eight classes and 420 students. It's his easiest schedule
in years.
With
that sort of workload - two and a half times the maximum recommended
by the American Association of University Professors - freeway flyers
must cut corners. Homework assignments and essay exams are out.
So are individual attention, curricular innovation, professional
development, and broader contributions to campus life.
But
even our anonymous source hesitated to blame administrators for
all this. Administrators may lack vision, but what they ultimately
need is money. With community colleges on drip-feed from state legislators,
administrators are in perpetual crisis management, simply trying
to keep the EKG beeping for another fiscal year. "They're all
just clinging for survival," he said. "Anything there's
no money in, they don't do."
The
amazing thing is that astronomers are still fighting for the few
open slots at community colleges. It is a tribute to their dedication
to teaching. But you have to wonder how instructors will maintain
their standards, let alone take advantage of advances in technology
and pedagogy, if expectations and resources remain so mismatched.
Good
Bye, Mercury
With
this issue, I must say good-bye to Mercury. I've enjoyed my 3 1/2
years at the ASP and the intellectual, not to say logistical, challenge
of putting out an entire magazine single-handedly. The best part
has been my interaction with Mercury's authors and readers - dedicated,
thoughtful people whom I never cease to learn from. But it is time
for new challenges at Scientific American. Jay White, our "Guest
Observer" columnist and an accomplished astronomer and writer,
will take over as interim Mercury editor. I could not be leaving
the magazine in more capable hands.
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