Author Archives: E Wayne Ross

Surge in Adjunct Activism Is Spurred by Bad Economy and Hungry Unions

The Chronicle: Surge in Adjunct Activism Is Spurred by Bad Economy and Hungry Unions

Institutions like Western Michigan University, Montana State University, and Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art are home to new adjunct unions. In Massachusetts a group of part-time faculty members sued the state on behalf of adjuncts who don’t get health insurance at community colleges. And the part-timers’ union at Rhode Island College has ratified the first contract for adjunct faculty members in the state.

Whistle-Blower Case Against U. of Phoenix Is Settled

Inside Higher Ed: $78.5M Settles U. of Phoenix Case

The owner of the University of Phoenix has agreed to pay $67.5 million to the federal government and another $11 million in legal fees to two former admissions officials who six years ago accused the higher education company of illegally paying its recruiters based on how many students they enrolled.

The Apollo Group’s announcement appears to bring to an end a long-running legal fight that at points seemed poised to cost the country’s largest postsecondary education provider hundreds of millions if not billions of dollars — but ultimately cost it much less.

The Chronicle: Whistle-Blower Case Against U. of Phoenix Is Settled

The parent company of the University of Phoenix said on Monday that it would pay $67-million to the U.S. government, plus $11-million in lawyers’ fees, to settle a 2003 “whistle-blower” lawsuit by two former student recruiters, who accused the company of obtaining federal student aid under false pretenses. The company, Apollo Group Inc., noted that the settlement, first discussed in October, includes no admission of wrongdoing.

AAUP President Says Group’s Former Chief Weighed Courting Hugo Chávez for Funds

The Chronicle: AAUP President Says Group’s Former Chief Weighed Courting Hugo Chávez for Funds

A former top official of the American Association of University Professors considered asking Venezuela’s president, Hugo Chávez, to finance the purchase of a new headquarters for the organization, the AAUP’s current president, Cary Nelson, says in a new book scheduled for release early next year.

But the former AAUP administrator that Mr. Nelson says offered up the idea — Roger Bowen, who served as general secretary of the organization from July 2004 through June 2007 — today called the account in Mr. Nelson’s book “fanciful” and asserted he has no recollection of suggesting the group ask Mr. Chávez for money.

Critics swoosh down on UW Provost Phyllis Wise over Nike role

Seattle Times: Critics swoosh down on UW Provost Phyllis Wise over Nike role

University of Washington Provost Phyllis Wise is facing growing criticism from students, faculty and lawmakers for taking a seat on the corporate board of Nike, which has a contract with the UW worth at least $35 million.

University of Washington Provost Phyllis Wise is facing growing criticism from students, faculty and lawmakers for taking a seat on the corporate board of Nike, which last year signed a contract with the UW worth a minimum $35 million to the university.

Pittsburgh unis say ‘no’ to city on $5 million

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette: Schools say ‘no’ to city on $5 million
Mayor says he’ll ask Council to OK tax on tuition

Pittsburgh’s universities told Mayor Luke Ravenstahl yesterday they won’t agree to his call for them to contribute $5 million to city coffers to avoid a tax on tuition paid by students.

Read more: http://www.post-gazette.com/pg/09346/1020439-53.stm#ixzz0ZoifXXJt

Australia: Plan to link uni funds to targets

The Australian: Plan to link uni funds to targets

UNIVERSITY students could be made to sit a generic skills test to assess what value has been added by their tutors as part of Education Minister Julia Gillard’s plans to link university funding to performance targets from 2012.

Other performance indicators floated in a discussion paper released yesterday include reducing first-year drop-out rates, improving performance in student-satisfaction surveys, and increasing the number of poor and disadvantaged students at universities.

Utah: Regents OK details of USU-CEU unification

Herald Journal: Regents OK details of USU-CEU unification

SALT LAKE CITY — The Utah Board of Regents unanimously supported the details of a merger between Utah State University and the College of Eastern Utah on Friday — a move that will increase educational opportunities but won’t save the state money.

Open Access Encyclopedias

Inside Higher Ed: Open Access Encyclopedias

Can an information source that is free also be reliable? Or does the price of content always reflect its value?

In higher education, this debate usually takes place in the context of academic publishing, where open access journals have emerged to challenge their pricey print predecessors. This mirrors a wider trend in media, where lean, Web-based, free-content outlets

8 Arrested After Protesters Attack Berkeley Chancellor’s House

The Chronicle: 8 Arrested After Protesters Attack Berkeley Chancellor’s House

Protesters at the University of California at Berkeley smashed windows and threw torches at the home of the chancellor, Robert J. Birgeneau, late on Friday night, marking a violent turn for student protests that have roiled campuses around the state.

A group of 40 to 75 protesters stormed the grounds of Mr. Birgeneau’s house on the campus at about 11 p.m., yelling “No justice, no peace,” police officials said

‘We’ll Work for Free,’ Say Retired Professors, but Colleges Struggle With How to Use Them

The Chronicle: ‘We’ll Work for Free,’ Say Retired Professors, but Colleges Struggle With How to Use Them

At the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, some retired professors wanted to do their part to help the university weather budget cuts that would have reduced the number of instructors in classrooms, among other things. Early this year, they offered to come back and teach, write grants, and do other work—free of charge.

Rouge Forum News #15

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The latest issue of the Rouge Forum News is available here as a pdf.

Adam Renner, editor of the Rouge Forum News, previews the issue below:

FROM THE EDITOR

In its more than decade of existence, the Rouge Forum has attempted to contribute to the conversation on social justice within national organizations, in union halls, in K-12 schools, in colleges/universities, at work places, and in community organizations. It has attempted to bring a reasoned analysis to contemporary issues using an historical lens, a sense of the total, and, often, pedagogical strategies. It has produced an appreciable amount of scholarship among its members—sometimes award winning scholarship—and has among its membership winners of academic freedom awards.

Undoubtedly, the Rouge Forum has become a relevant voice for social justice, particularly related to education. We hope to amplify that voice and continue to develop its relevance in the days to come. Recent events, tethered to their historical predecessors, indicate there is little time to dither.

One of the best things about the Rouge Forum, particularly those who have been able to take part in conferences and joint actions, is the sense of community. My partner and I remarked a few years ago at the conference in Detroit that we felt like we were home. We were among comrades who, while we didn’t agree on everything, seemed to have a congruent idea that things need to change and a relatively common idea of what that might look like. We could at least outline the picture.

Times together, such as these, assure us we are not crazy—that another world is not only necessary, but possible. Our work is continuing to figure out how we support one another, how we can have a voice in our particular locations, and how we craft and apply a vision of what is more just, more human, and right. Community. Voice. Vision. Connect reason to power, as Rich would say. Go.

And in that go-ing, we need sustenance for the journey—sustenance in the form of community and consciousness (ever-deepening, ever-evolving), but also hope. The hope I/we suggest is not naïve hope. It is hope grounded in struggle, connected to others. It is hope that is participatory. It becomes the essence of who we are. It is a politics of prefiguration that suggests if we want democracy and we want justice, then our actions, to the extent possible, will need to bear these out. It is to understand the journey/struggle not as precise, but as punctuations of imperfections, of hypocrisies that bring us back to the start, such that we can begin again.

This idea of the politics of prefiguration is espoused by a thoughtful theorist on hope: Rebecca Solnit. Her text, Hope in the Dark, pushed me to find hope in the struggle—in fact, catapulting me into that struggle. Solnit has enlivened that sense again in her recent essay in TomDispatch entitled Learning how to Count to 350. Re-citing a history of action in the streets and reasons to hope (in the face of all the reasons to despair), Solnit suggests, “To survive the coming era, we need to re-imagine what constitutes wealth and well-being and what constitutes poverty.” Considering the dismal performance of communism in the 20th century (often more totalitarian and capitalist than liberatory) and the fact that global capitalism was brought to its knees last year, she suggests we’ve got work to do to (re)imagine the world.

And, we—that is, people of conscience—must occupy that void. Else, something else will. The steel-toed rhythm can be heard goose-stepping just inside the ear’s horizon. I submit we’ll need to step into that space sooner than later.

I’ll see you at the barricades.

We’ll have to resist what is more than likely coming next—find a voice, speak truth to power, take to the streets, take over a building. Escalate. Extending Rich’s metaphor from earlier work, we lambs look good to the wolves who regroup in the penthouses of their nearby woods (whose fuel is nearly spent) and in the corporate board rooms overlooking ever-drying creeks (more parts pollution than potable). They’re finished buying what we have, as how much more cheaply can our labor power be had? Now, they plan to just take it.

And, they will use a god to convince you they are right. They will call on him, attempting to scheme us into doing the same (a little deposit of flesh now, and your children’s flesh, for an eternity of made-up bed time stories, “Now I Iay me down to sleep….”).

I’ll keep my soul, whatever is left of it, thank you very much.

I’m looking, instead, for what Solnit calls a moment of creation—moments for which democracy, social justice, creativity, freedom, take one step forward.

Solnit is good at flipping the script, looking at the underside of the paper and seeing the scribbling of possibility. What she submits is an alternative read to the corporate media prophets (or is that profits?). We would do well to listen. Hers is not a naïve re-rendering or postmodern apologetics. My take is that Solnit’s proposition is grounded in the real. The alteration takes into account the work that is being done, often diminished by our popular discourse and corporate media. This alternative understanding helps us realize that others are struggling, voices are shouting, a history of resistance leads us to this moment of possibility.

Revolutionary praxis remains our guide: the simultaneity and dialectic of self change and the changing of society.

We should understand what it’s going to take for that moment of creation. Those moments: when we realize the politics of divide and conquer have gotten the best of us (color/class/gender/sexuality-coded inequalities); when we realize that we that we are killing others (bought and paid for bombs with our signature on them), killing babies, mothers, difference with our own babies barely able to know differently in capital’s schools (the militarization of schools); when we realize that our knowledge has been regulated by corporate interests to keep us docile and ignorant (high-stakes testing) in order to prepare us for jobs we will more than likely hate (alienation) so we will seek pleasure in (fetishize) commodities, that is, things, and our social relations will be mediated by reality TV and video games.

Try Wendell Berry’s recent poem on for size at your upcoming holiday celebration to bring the above into sharp relief. You may not be invited back (which may or may not be a bad thing…)

When we recognize these issues as material reality, a moment will emerge. A moment (consciousness grounded in the real) that must lead to another moment (courage to change) in which we will need to figure out how to live differently (protest, resistance, occupation, freedom schools, sustainable living, new solidarities). Moments in which we own our labor power: the free development of each creates the conditions for the free development of all, since we will all recognize our interdependence and the strength of our difference.

More than likely, these moments will blur–because the barricades will not only be in the streets, but they will be in our work places, in our schools, in our churches, in our homes, in our community centers. Consciousness will merge with courage will merge with consciousness will merge with a more materialist understanding of reality, which will lead to how we can re-imagine wealth, well-being and poverty in the coming era.

We must. The wolves are hungry.

But, the lambs are plentiful. And, we will realize that we far outnumber the wolves when conscious because we will see and do differently.

When we see differently, we won’t be divided so easily. When we see differently, we won’t abide by mystical explanations of injustice; we will see it for what it is. When we see differently, we’ll stop looking at the deadness of the center and instead explore the possibility at the periphery. When we see differently we won’t believe the mythology of national holidays intended to white-wash history and to, more importantly, mark the beginning of a new holiday season of debt and guilt built by the capitalists. Just look on the rez. How did Thanksgiving work out for those who welcomed the newcomers? Can we call it what it is, please: a celebration of genocide. And, we are still killing them (see the December, 2009, Harper’s Magazine article about life on the modern reservation). Christmas could use an RF News issue all its own…

When we see differently, we will note the possibility of solidarity born in moments of creation where we understand richness as fullness (of life and community), in the bread broken amidst laughter AND tears, in the totality discovered, in one more sunrise.

The Rouge Forum seeks this fullness.

Struggle. We must. Eyes open. Spirit fully engaged. Hands ready for the work.

See you at the barricades…

…On the way to the barricades, might I recommend a choral reading of this quarter’s Rouge Forum News? Our 15th issue has another exciting line-up of essays, which are broken up by other provocative reading: poems by Gina Stiens and Colin Ross, Rouge Forum broadsides, an editorial from Paul Moore, and art from Bryan Reinholdt. I’d recommend making posters of it. And T-shirts.

We have two featured essays in this issue, one from Wayne Ross, which takes up the issue of patriotism, the other, a timely piece from Mary Barrett, Maria Hornung, Amber Kelly, and Katy Sutton, which looks at the possibility of medicine as a human right.
In our section on war and militarism, Travis Barrett reports on three aspects of institutionalized oppression, and what we might do about it, and Matt Archibald analyzes zero-tolerance, neoliberal ideology, and the growing militarism of our society.

In our schooling and curriculum section, Rich Gibson sets us straight on the way to analyze/critique the current takeover of US schooling by the elite; Nancye McCrary, Doug Selwyn, and I chronicle various approaches we’ve taken at our universities to promote democracy; and Delana Hill applies Paulo Freire and dialogical action directly to her classroom.

As always, we look forward to your feedback, either directly (arenner@bellarmine.edu) or at our blog: www.therougeforum.blogspot.com.

Adam Renner
Louisville, KY

IRAN: French academic in court

World University News: IRAN: French academic in court

A report by France 24 said that Clotilde Reiss, a 24-year-old French academic, appeared before an Iranian Revolutionary Court for a second time on 17 November to face charges of “collecting information and provoking rioters” in the turbulent aftermath of the presidential elections in June.

Reiss was arrested at an airport in Tehran on 1 July, having allegedly taken pictures of the protests that followed the election on her mobile phone and emailed them to friends. She initially appeared in court on 6 August, as part of a televised mass trial of those accused of fomenting unrest.

She was granted bail and released from Insein Prison on 16 August in the care of the French Embassy in Tehran, on the condition that she remained there to await a verdict. No decision was reached at the latest court session and French officials say they do not rule out the prospect of Reiss having to return to court in the near future.

At the time of her detention, Reiss was coming to the end of a six month research and teaching post at a university in Isfahan, central Iran.

Hundreds of Venezuelan Students Protest Fatal Shooting

Fox News: Hundreds of Venezuelan Students Protest Fatal Shooting

CARACAS, Venezuela — Hundreds of university students held protests in Venezuela on Wednesday to condemn the fatal shooting of an undergraduate during a demonstration earlier this week.

Iran steps up its crackdown on student protester

Washington Post: Iran steps up its crackdown on student protesters
MILITIAMEN STORM COLLEGE
‘From now on, we will show no mercy’

TEHRAN — Iran intensified its crackdown on demonstrators Tuesday as thousands of pro-government militiamen stormed the grounds of the country’s most prominent university and assaulted students who had gathered in protest.

Protesters damage Calif. university leader’s home

AP: Protesters damage Calif. university leader’s home

BERKELEY, Calif. — Eight people were under arrest Saturday after protesters broke windows, lights and planters outside the home of the chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley.

University spokesman Dan Mogulof said 40 to 70 protesters also threw incendiary devices at police cars and the home of Chancellor Robert Birgeneau about 11 p.m. Friday. There were no fires or injuries.

The protest at the chancellor’s home came late the same day that police arrested 66 protesters at a campus classroom building that was partially taken over for four days.

Arrests End Building Takeover at San Francisco State

San Francisco Chronicle: Police break up building takeover at S.F. State

(12-10) 13:28 PST SAN FRANCISCO — Police arrested 25 protesters early Thursday at San Francisco State University, a day after students barricaded themselves inside the business school to protest fee hikes and budget cuts at California’s public universities.

Campus police in riot gear, joined by officers from throughout the California State University police system and San Francisco police, entered the business administration building at 3:15 a.m., said university spokeswoman Ellen Griffin.

Some of the officers broke windows to get inside because protesters had blocked doors, authorities said.

Police arrested 12 protesters inside the building on suspicion of trespassing, a misdemeanor, Griffin said. There may have been more people who slipped away, she said.

SF State Protest Ends, ‘Open University’ Continues At Cal

KTVU.com: SF State Protest Ends, ‘Open University’ Continues At Cal

SAN FRANCISCO — The occupation of a San Francisco State University building ended early Thursday morning with dozens of arrests, but a different kind of protest is continuing through Friday at the University of California at Berkeley.
Both protests were sparked by recent budget cuts to the UC and CSU systems.

Pedagogy a poor second in promotions

Times Higher Education: Pedagogy a poor second in promotions

Study finds ‘hypocritical’ sector fails to practise what it preaches. Rebecca Attwood reports

Universities stand accused of hypocrisy this week over their claims to value teaching, after a major study of promotions policy and practice found that many are still failing to reward academics for leadership in pedagogy.

Research by the Higher Education Academy and the University of Leicester’s “Genie” Centre for Excellence in Teaching and Learning examines the promotion policies of 104 UK universities.

Ottawa Is First Canadian University in Open Access Group

Inside Higher Ed: Ottawa Is First Canadian University in Open Access Group

The University of Ottawa has become the first Canadian institution to join the Compact for Open Access Publishing Equity, in which five leading American universities in September pledged to develop systems to pay open access journals for the articles they publish by the institutions’ scholars. Ottawa has also pledged to make its scholarly publications available online at no charge, to create a fund to support the creation of digital educational materials organized as courses and available to everyone online at no charge, and to support the University of Ottawa Press in publishining a collection of open access books.

Vassar students sing, start hunger strike, for laid-off workers

Poughkeepsie Journal: Students sing, start hunger strike, for laid-off workers
Vassar College groups call for reinstatement

Two student groups launched protest actions today at Vassar College, aimed at getting the school to reverse planned job cuts that have or will hit 13 support workers.

One group, headlining itself as “Hungry for Justice at Vassar College,” began a hunger strike. Three students stopped eating at 11:59 p.m. Tuesday, said a spokeswoman for the group, Sarah Cohen, a junior from Long Island, who said she would join them tomorrow.