Category Archives: Uncategorized

Panel Says Not to Fire Idaho State Faculty Member

Inside Higher Ed: Panel Says Not to Fire Idaho State Faculty Member

Idaho State University lacks sufficient evidence to justify the termination of a tenured professor charged with a pattern of abusive and disruptive behavior, a faculty panel ruled Friday. Habib Sadid, an engineering professor who has been at Idaho State for more than 20 years, was suspended and barred from campus in August. Sadid has challenged administrators publicly, and in 2005 he organized a no-confidence vote in the university’s former president, who later resigned amid protests about his compensation. The panel ruled 4:1 in favor of Sadid, and the lone vote against him came from a faculty member appointed to the panel by the university’s provost. In its ruling, the panel said due process had not been followed and they found “the absence of requried documentation disturbing.” The panel added, “After years of satisfactory evaluations, the short interval to termination without the opportunity for remediation was troubling to the majority, particularly in light of the fact that the recommendation to terminate was based on a claimed long-term pattern of behavior.” The panel’s findings are advisory, and the university’s president is still authorized to terminate Sadid, according to university rules.

Richard H. Herman resigns as chancellor of Urbana-Champaign campus

Richard H. Herman resigns as chancellor of Urbana-Champaign campus

Richard H. Herman resigns as chancellor of Urbana-Champaign campus
Herman will join U of I faculty, assist in I-STEM initiative

URBANA, Ill. — University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Chancellor Richard H. Herman will resign his campus leadership position effective Oct. 26, and will join the University faculty, where he will continue to work with the campus’s Illinois Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (I-STEM) Initiative.

AAUP Investigation at San Francisco Art Institute

AAUP Investigation at San Francisco Art Institute

The AAUP’s general secretary has authorized an investigation into issues of academic freedom, tenure, and due process posed by the release of numerous tenured professors on grounds of financial exigency at the art institute.

The members of an investigating committee are faculty members who have had no previous involvement in the case. The committee will visit the institution where the event(s) under investigation occurred, meet with the principal parties, and prepare a report for submission to the AAUP’s national Committee A on Academic Freedom and Tenure. The investigating committee’s draft report will recount the facts of the case, and sets forth conclusions as to whether the actions of the administration were in procedural and substantive compliance with the principles and standards supported by the Associatio

Kenya: Teachers’ 13-year patience runs out

Daily Nation: Teachers’ 13-year patience runs out

6,000 tutors threaten to strike over promotions
More than 6,000 teachers have threatened to go on strike over a 13-year wait for promotion.

The A level teachers with P1 qualifications accused the government of giving preferential treatment to their untrained colleagues who, they said, earned twice their salaries and allowances.

Schwarzenegger Vetoes Limits on Administrators’ Pay

Inside Higher Ed: Schwarzenegger Vetoes Limits on Administrators’ Pay

California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger on Sunday vetoed a bill that would have barred most salary increases and bonuses for executives at the University of California and California State University systems in bad budget years, such as this one. In his veto message, the governor criticized the measure as too broad and intrusive. “A blanket prohibition limiting the flexibility for the UC and CSU to compete, both nationally and internationally, in attracting and retaining high level personnel does a disservice to those students seeking the kind of quality education that our higher education segments offer. The regents and the trustees should be prudent in managing their systems, given the difficult fiscal crisis we face as a state, but it is unnecessary for the state to micromanage their operations.” The veto drew a sharp response from Sen. Leland Yee, sponsor of the bill and a leading legislative voice for closer oversight of the university systems. Yee noted that well compensated executives have continued to receive bonuses and raises even as the university systems face unprecedented budget cuts. “It is deeply disappointing that the governor wants to ensure top executives live high on the hog while students suffer,” Yee said. “The governor’s veto is a slap in the face to all UC and CSU students and the system’s low wage workers. His veto protects the UC and CSU administration’s egregious executive

U of Maryland: History, But No Smoking Gun

Inside Higher Ed: History, But No Smoking Gun

COLLEGE PARK, Md. – Undergraduates here announced on Friday the findings of their year-long study to uncover the University of Maryland’s slavery ties, discovering no evidence that slaves built or worked at the institution, even though many of its founders were themselves slaveholders.

Morehouse College employee fired for anti-gay e-mail

Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Morehouse employee fired for e-mail

Morehouse College has fired a woman and reprimanded another for discriminatory comments made via their work e-mail accounts.

The fired woman worked as an administrative assistant in the president’s office, according to reports. After receiving an e-mail forward that included wedding photos of a gay couple, she forwarded the e-mail to others and made comments that were considered discriminatory.

Grades: Inquiry needed at Marshall U

Charleston Gazette: The Charleston Gazette — Grades: Inquiry needed

After West Virginia University’s 2008 calamity over a bogus degree given to Gov. Manchin’s daughter — which toppled a WVU president and several high administrators — you’d think that state-owned institutions would be leery of showing favoritism to children of important politicians.

Tenure Restored at Kentucky Community Colleges

Inside Higher Ed: Tenure Restored at Kentucky Community Colleges

The board of the Kentucky Community and Technical College System on Friday restored the tenure system for new faculty members — a system that the board had eliminated in March. The board acted two days after the state’s attorney general issued an advisory statement finding that the board had exceeded its authority. Although the board issued a statement saying that it disagreed with the attorney general, it said that it was best for the system to move beyond the tenure issue.

Idaho State U asks chair of physics department to resign

The Olympian: ISU asks chair of physics department to resign

BOISE, Idaho – The new chair of the Idaho State University physics department was asked to resign his post after allowing an Ecuadorian professor without proper visa papers to teach in the classroom, a school spokesman said.

When in doubt, sue

Inside Higher Ed: ‘The Trials of Academe’

When in doubt, sue. That philosophy has become an expected part of American society and (to the frustration of many in higher education) academe as well. A new book — The Trials of Academe: The New Era of Campus Litigation (Harvard University Press) — combines humor and history to examine the impact (most of it negative) of academic disputes landing in court. Amy Gajda, the author, is assistant professor of journalism and law at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She responded via e-mail to questions about her book.

North Carolina Community Colleges to Resume Enrolling Illegal Immigrants

The Chronicle: North Carolina Community Colleges to Resume Enrolling Illegal Immigrants

Undocumented immigrants can begin enrolling again next year at North Carolina’s 58 community colleges after the State Board of Community Colleges today reversed a ban on illegal immigrants on those campuses.

Soliarity with U of California faculty

To the UC Faculty:

We at the Rouge Forum applaud, admire, and support your efforts to respond to tuition hikes, enrollment cuts, layoffs, furloughs, and increased class sizes, which are indeed, complicit with the privatization of public education.

The Rouge Forum is a group of 4500 educators, students, and parents seeking a democratic society. We are concerned with questions like: How can we teach against racism, nationalism and sexism in an increasingly authoritarian and undemocratic society? How can we gain enough real power to keep our ideals AND teach? Whose interests do schools serve in a society that is ever more unequal? We want to learn about equality, democracy and social justice as we simultaneously struggle to bring those into practice. (http://www.rougeforum.org/, http://www.therougeforum.blogspot.com/, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rouge_Forum).

In the German Ideology, Marx submits, “The class which has the means of material production at its disposal has control at the same time over the means of mental production, so that thereby, generally speaking, the ideas of those who lack the means of mental production are subject to it. The ruling ideas are nothing more than the ideal of the dominant material relationships, the dominant material relationships grasped as ideas.”

The connection and simultaneous control of this material and mental production comes into ever-sharper relief anytime we are confronted by our corporate media. The level of discourse is less than satisfying. And, frankly, frightening. Pick the issue: health care, immigration, worker’s rights, war, education. While all of the issues are truly critical, the last is particularly problematic since control of schools is a final domino to fall in the imperial quest to completely (re)fashion our reality. Remove critical thinking, make children compete against each other for perceived scarce resources (standardized tests), use the results to reify hierarchies based on social constructions like race and gender and class status, make teachers compete against one another for perceived scarce resources (merit pay), boil dissent down to participation in (mostly) corrupt unions, excuse and/or cover-up the school to military and prison pipelines, monitor and make impotent our schools of education through if-it-wasn’t-so-sinister-it-would-be-comical accrediting bodies like NCATE, and regulate truth. This has been the agenda. And, it has already buried itself deep into our educational psyche.

Your willingness to confront this reality on September 24 is an illustration of the work we will all have to do to protect public education toward the creation of a more whole and healthy society. Where Rouge Forum members are affiliated with the UC system, we have encouraged them to join you. Where Rouge Forum members are unaffiliated with the UC system, we have encouraged them to take part in campus wide discussions relative to the status of higher education, academic freedom, and the importance of public education.

We stand in solidarity with you and offer the graphic, created by Rouge Forum member, Bryan Reinholdt, an elementary performing arts teacher in Louisville, Ky.

Sincerely,

the Rouge Forum Steering Committee

Walkout September 24 in solidarity with U of California faculty

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UW-Whitewater cannot collect from ex-dean

State Journal: Judge: UW-Whitewater cannot collect from ex-dean

The University of Wisconsin-Whitewater cannot sue a former dean accused of misusing school money because it waited too long and failed to prove any purchases were for his personal benefit, a judge has ruled.

U.S. District Judge J.P. Stadtmueller last week threw out the university’s countersuit against former College of Letters and Sciences Dean Howard Ross. The judge ordered a trial on Ross’ claims that he was singled out by a racist auditor and later demoted because he is black.

Montgomery College Trustees Oust Its President

Inside Higher Ed: Montgomery College Trustees Oust Its President

The Board of Trustees at Montgomery College voted late Thursday to end the presidency of Brian K. Johnson, amid faculty discontent over his alleged misspending and reports that he faces prison time in Arizona for non-payment of child support. The faculty at the two-year institution in Washington’s Maryland suburbs voted no confidence in Johnson last week, citing evidence they’d accumulated that he had spent tens of thousands of dollars on questionable expenses. And Thursday, The Washington Times reported that police officers in Arizona have a warrant out for his arrest that would land him in jail if he returned to the state. In a statement, the chairman of the college’s board said it had decided not to renew Johnson’s contract and had placed him on administrative leave immediately. Johnson came to Montgomery College from the Community College of Allegheny County just two years ago.

Israel Bars Some Foreign Academics Who Teach in the West Bank

The Chronicle: Israel Bars Some Foreign Academics Who Teach in the West Bank

Israel has clamped down on the movement of foreign academics teaching at Palestinian universities in the West Bank, barring some from entering the region altogether or stamping “Palestinian Authority only” in the passports of others, preventing them from entering Israel.

An English-language instructor from Ireland who taught for several years at the Arab American University, in Jenin, was refused entry on August 23 when she returned to the West Bank to take up a new

University of Miami to investigate police misconduct allegations

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A UM police officer points a gun at Jordan Chusid, a junior political science major who had just transferred from the University of Central Florida. Chusid said he was talking on his cellphone and walking to the parking lot after a Spanish class.

Miami Herald: University of Miami to investigate police misconduct allegations

University of Miami officials opened an investigation into the actions of campus police officers who questioned a UM student at gunpoint over a stolen motorcycle that turned out to be a case of mistaken identity.

Colorado higher-ed director Skaggs resigns

Denver Post: Colorado higher-ed director Skaggs resigns

The official, often at odds with state college presidents, cites a dispute with Gov. Bill Ritter.

Citing a dispute with Gov. Bill Ritter about “a matter which . . . we could not agree,” higher-education chief David Skaggs announced his resignation Friday afternoon.

Neither the governor’s office nor the Department of Higher Education would elaborate on the disagreement. Skaggs had been at the helm of the department for 2 1/2 years.

Germany: 100 professors suspected of Ph.D. bribes

AP: Germany: 100 professors suspected of Ph.D. bribes

BERLIN — German prosecutors are investigating about 100 professors across the country on suspicion they took bribes to help students get their doctoral degrees, authorities said Saturday.

The investigation is focused on the Institute for Scientific Consulting, based in Bergisch Gladbach, just east of Cologne, which allegedly acted as the intermediary between students and the professors, said Cologne prosecutor’s spokesman Guenther Feld.