Author Archives: E Wayne Ross

U Florida professor, wife charged with fraud

Gainesville Sun: UF professor, wife charged with fraud

A University of Florida nuclear engineering professor and his wife were arrested Friday in Gainesville on charges they fraudulently obtained $3.7 million in government contracts and diverted money into personal bank accounts to buy cars and homes.

Samim Anghaie, 60, and his wife, Sousan Anghaie, 55, are accused of submitting false information, including research taken from UF students without their knowledge, in contract proposals to NASA, the U.S. Air Force and the U.S. Navy. They are alleged to have diverted hundreds of thousands of dollars earned from those contracts into their bank accounts and the accounts of their sons.

Female professors lose appeals on tenure at DePaul

Chicago Tribune: Female professors lose appeals on tenure at DePaul
The women say the system flawed

While dust-ups over professors denied tenure are normally part of the ivory tower’s spring-term rhythms, this year the sit-ins and picketing at DePaul University have continued into the fall.

Students and faculty have marched in support of Melissa Bradshaw, a professor of women’s and gender studies who didn’t get tenure — higher education’s equivalent of a lifetime job guarantee.

Idaho State U professor fired despite faculty vote

The Olympian: ISU professor fired despite faculty vote

POCATELLO, Idaho – An Idaho State University engineering professor who was suspended in August says he has been fired, despite backing from a faculty appeals board.

The Idaho State Journal reports Habib Sadid confirmed Friday that university president Arthur Vailas had terminated his employment.

In a statement, Vailas said his decision was in the best interests of the institution.

When Is a Suspension Not a Suspension?

Inside Higher Ed: When Is a Suspension Not a Suspension?

Officials at Southwestern College, a community college outside San Diego, moved Friday to explain why three faculty members have been barred from teaching or stepping foot on the campus for more than a week, but the answers aren’t quelling faculty anger.

The college has been facing scrutiny over its action against four professors (one of whom was soon permitted to resume teaching) the day after a student-organized campus protest against budget cuts, and about how the administration has responded to them. While the college didn’t explain why it barred the professors — including the president of the faculty union — from the campus, officials denied that the move had anything to do with the protest.

Board Feud at Maricopa Community Colleges Spins Out of Control

The Chronicle: Board Feud at Maricopa Community Colleges Spins Out of Control

The governing board of Maricopa Community Colleges wants to ensure that taxpayers’ dollars are well spent in tight times, and its members don’t care if they have to micromanage to do so. Board members say their day-to-day management decisions preserve fiscal accountability, but some professors and college leaders fear that the board’s eccentric and assertive leadership could damage the system’s reputation.

Nebraska: Metro CC sues five other colleges

The Omaha World: Metro will sue other com. colleges

Metropolitan Community College will sue Nebraska’s five other community colleges, trying to wrest away millions of state aid dollars that Metro leaders say rightfully belong to their school. The planned lawsuit, authorized Tuesday night by Metro’s board, will be filed in Lancaster County Court “in the very near future,” Metro laywer Bob Canella said.

University of Central Missouri president’s ouster raises questions

Missourian: University of Central Missouri president’s ouster raises questions

WARRENSBURG — By most measures, Aaron Podolefsky’s nearly five-year tenure as president of the University of Central Missouri has been a success.

Enrollment is up, and so is the school’s graduation rate. Podolefsky steered the school through a name change and successfully lobbied for more state and federal money.

Ontario Begins Crackdown on Rogue Colleges

The Chronicle: Ontario Begins Crackdown on Rogue Colleges

Ontario is getting tough on illegal private colleges and other fly-by-night operations that rip off students. The Canadian provincial government, in a news release issued this week, said such colleges would face fines of up to a quarter of a million Canadian dollars “for taking advantage of students.”

Pakistan Police Tell Universities to Tighten Security or Be Shut Down

Daily Times: Educational institutions told to arrange security or shut down

RAWALPINDI: Rawalpindi Commissioner Zahid Saeed on Tuesday told educational institutions to make strict security arrangements in and around their premises failing which they would be closed down.

He urged heads of educational institutions and public departments to immediately submit applications for arms licences to District

Whither art: vanity is killing social sciences and the humanities

Times Higher Education: Whither art: vanity is killing social sciences and the humanities

Conference hears that scholarly narcissism is leading disciplines to ruin. Matthew Reisz writes

“Academic narcissism” and a focus on self-promotion over scholarly substance are being blamed for bringing the humanities and the social sciences to the brink.

At a conference on the future of the disciplines held in Brussels last week, scholars warned that they were on a self-destructive course.

One of those to sound the alarm was Sasa Bozic, associate professor of sociology at the University of Zadar, Croatia, who accused his peers of displaying narcissistic traits.

AAUP report: The Collapsing Faculty Infrastructure

Inside Higher Ed: Seeking Tenure ‘Conversion’

In discussions about the use and abuse of adjunct faculty members, “conversion” is a controversial topic. Typically it refers to a decision by a college or university to convert some number of adjunct positions into a number (typically a smaller number) of tenure-track positions. The idea of conversion has been key to the reform proposals of national faculty groups.

AAUP: Conversion of Appointments to the Tenure Track (2009)

This report was prepared by a subcommittee of the Committee on Contingent Faculty and the Profession and has been approved by the parent committee for publication for comment.

I. The Collapsing Faculty Infrastructure
The past four decades have seen a failure of the social contract in faculty employment. In 1940 the joint Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure characterized the tenure system as a “means to certain ends,” specifically, “(1) freedom of teaching and research and of extramural activities and (2) a sufficient degree of economic security to make the profession attractive to men and women of ability. Freedom and economic security, hence tenure, are indispensable to the success of an institution in fulfilling its obligations to its students and to society.”

The tenure system was designed to secure reasonable compensation and to protect academic freedom through continuous employment. Financial and intellectual security enabled the faculty to carry out the public trust in teaching and research, and it provided a system of professional peer scrutiny in hiring,

U. of Phoenix Expects to Spend Up to $80.5-Million in Settling Whistle-Blower Cas

The Chronicle: U. of Phoenix Expects to Spend Up to $80.5-Million in Settling Whistle-Blower Case

The parent company of the University of Phoenix expects to spend no more than $80.5-million to settle a contentious six-year-old whistle-blower lawsuit filed by two former admissions counselors, the company announced on Tuesday.

Is your “fiscal crisis” real?

howtheuniversityworks.com: Is your “fiscal crisis” real?

Is your administration using “the economy” as an excuse to extort more work for less pay from an already over-burdened faculty?

Buying Howard Bunsis a plane ticket to your campus might be the best investment you can make right now.

Washington: State system exploits part-time professors

News Tribune: VIEWPOINT: State system exploits part-time professors

In its November issue, Money magazine asks: “Do college professors have great jobs, or what?”

It answered with a resounding “Yes!”

The magazine ranks college teaching as the third best job in America in its November issue. It also ranks college teaching as the third least stressful job in America, with nearly 60 percent of professors surveyed saying their job is low stress.

California’s Crisis of Higher Education

IndyMeida: California’s Crisis of Higher Education

On October 21, 2009 – hundreds of students at Fresno State walked out of their classrooms and held a rally at the university’s Peace Garden to protest the massive cuts to higher education and the California State University system. Students voiced their concerns with the unprecedented tuition increases, canceled classes, furloughed faculty and staff, and reduced enrollment opportunities. They then took their message to the sidewalks and streets of the campus calling out to students, faculty, and staff to take a stand and join the walk out. Many did. By the time the march reached Shaw and Cedar Avenues, all four street corners were overflowing with students speaking out on behalf of themselves and the future of higher education in the state. “I hope that this walkout will increase community awareness that the budget cuts to the CSU are delaying our graduations, forcing would-be students out, and creating a precedent that “its ok” to cut education when really funding education gives back in more ways than one,” explained Whitney Thompson, a women’s studies major at Fresno State and a spokesperson for Students for Quality Education, the organization spearheading the event. At the end of the march, the students presented Dr. Welty with a list of demands, which Welty indicated he would address at a later meeting.

Judge sets Feb. 1 trial for former U of L dean: Robert Felner faces fraud, tax evasion, money laundering charges

Courier-Journal: Judge sets Feb. 1 trial for former U of L dean
Felner faces fraud, tax evasion,money laundering charges

A trial date has been set for former University of Louisville education dean Robert Felner, who was indicted last year on 10 counts of mail fraud, money-laundering conspiracy and income tax evasion.

The trial is scheduled to begin Feb. 1, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Bryan Calhoun said it will take about three weeks.

Felner’s colleague, Thomas Schroeder of Port Byron, Ill., who is charged with conspiracy to commit money laundering, mail fraud and conspiracy to defraud the Internal Revenue Service, will be tried at the same time

Nova Scotia Community College have voted in favour of a new three-year contract

Chronicle Herald: College faculty, staff OK contract

Faculty and staff at the Nova Scotia Community College have voted in favour of a new three-year contract.

Eighty-one per cent of faculty voted on the deal, with 85 per cent of those voting in favour. Eighty-seven per cent of support workers voted on the deal with 97 per cent voting in favour, Nova Scotia Teachers Union president Alexis Allen said Friday night.

U West Florida faculty, admin talks reach impasse

PNJ.com: UWF faculty, admin talks reach impasse

The University of West Florida’s faculty union, under the United Faculty of Florida, went to impasse in contract negotiations on Friday with the UWF administration for the first time in the school’s history.

After many months of attempted bargaining, the two parties could not reach a consensus on whether anonymous student comments should be added to faculty evaluations.

University of Louisville Foundation makes secret $1.9 million payment to U of L president

Herald-Leader: Ramsey’s $1.9 million

University of Louisville officials should provide a better explanation of the $1.9 million paid to President James R. Ramsey in 2007.

The payment might never have come to light if Herald-Leader reporter Ryan Alessi hadn’t stumbled across it while reviewing IRS filings by the University of Louisville Foundation.

New York: Broome Community College faculty votes “no confidence” in trustees

Press & Sun-Bulletin: BCC faculty votes “no confidence” in trustees

The faculty at Broome Community College has cast a vote of no confidence in the college’s board of trustees, the president of the faculty association said. The votes, which were counted today, were overwhelming in support of the no confidence resolution, said Greta Wingate, president of the association.