New School Faculty Senate Votes No Confidence in President Bob Kerrey

The Chronicle News Blog: New School Faculty Senate Votes No Confidence in President Bob Kerrey

In a nearly unanimous vote this afternoon, senior faculty members at the New School approved a motion of no confidence in the institution’s president, Bob Kerrey. The university’s trustees, however, apparently were unmoved by that vote. The trustees also gathered today, at a regularly scheduled meeting, and the university released a statement afterward saying they had unanimously expressed confidence in Mr. Kerrey’s leadership.

The faculty vote took place at an emergency closed-door meeting of the Faculty Senate. According to a summary of the results — released by Jim Miller, a professor of political science who is a co-chair of the senate — 74 faculty members voted for the no-confidence resolution against Mr. Kerrey, two voted no, and one abstained. Faculty members also overwhelmingly voted no confidence in the leadership of the institution’s executive vice president, James Murtha.

Ohio: U of Akron trustee indicted

Akron Beacon Journal: UA trustee is indicted

Attorney Jack Morrison Jr. denies ethical violations in sale of son’s home

University of Akron Trustee Jack Morrison Jr. faces seven counts of allegedly violating Ohio’s ethics laws for his role in the purchase of his son’s home by the university.

Morrison, who is also chairman of the Summit County Board of Elections and a prominent local attorney, was indicted by a Summit County grand jury on the misdemeanors, authorities announced Wednesday.

The Best and the Brightest Have Led America Off a Cliff

AlterNet: The Best and the Brightest Have Led America Off a Cliff

By Chris Hedges, Truthdig. Posted December 9, 2008.

Don’t expect the so-called experts to fix it either. They can’t. They are loyal to the decaying political and financial systems that empowered them.

The multiple failures that beset the country, from our mismanaged economy to our shredded constitutional rights to our lack of universal health care to our imperial debacles in the Middle East, can be laid at the feet of our elite universities. Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Stanford, along with most other elite schools, do a poor job educating students to think. They focus instead, through the filter of standardized tests, enrichment activities, advanced-placement classes, high-priced tutors, swanky private schools and blind deference to all authority, on creating hordes of competent systems managers. The collapse of the country runs in a direct line from the manicured quadrangles and halls in places like Cambridge, Mass., Princeton, N.J., and New Haven, Conn., to the financial and political centers of power.

English Departments Are Increasingly Staffed by Full-Time Lecturers

The Chronicle News Blog: English Departments Are Increasingly Staffed by Full-Time Lecturers

A rising share of English courses at colleges are taught by full-time, nontenured lecturers who generally lack doctorates, according to a report released today by the Association of Departments of English and the Modern Language Association.

TA Strike Called Off at Cal State

Inside Higher Ed: TA Strike Called Off at Cal State

The union that represents 6,800 teaching assistants at the California State University System late Tuesday called off plans to strike today, agreeing instead to a mediation offer from Darrell Steinberg, president of state’s Senate. Just hours earlier, the union — a United Auto Workers unit — had pledged that a strike would start today, accusing the university system of not bargaining in good faith. The university says that a strike would have been illegal and that the union’s demands are too expensive during a state budget crisis.

Taking One (Percent) for the Team

Inside Higher Ed: Taking One (Percent) for the Team

At Brandeis University, faculty are considering whether to voluntarily forgo 1 percent of their salaries next year to prevent possible layoffs of support staff.

“It’s not painless for us, but it’s not a huge hit to take,” said William Flesch, the Faculty Senate chair and a professor of English literature.

Harvard freezes faculty salaries, cuts searchers

The Harvard Crimson: FAS Freezes All Faculty Salaries, Cuts Searches

In letter to department chairs, top FAS deans cite need for extensive cut-backs

A freeze on salary raises for all faculty and non-union staff members as well as a hold on the bulk of current searches for tenure-track and tenured faculty were among the cost-cutting measures announced in a letter circulated to department chairs in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences yesterday afternoon.

Brandeis profs asked to take pay cuts

The Justice: Profs could take pay cuts

The Faculty Senate proposed that Arts and Sciences faculty could volunteer to take a 1-percent salary cut in order to prevent two to three other staff layoffs that would have occurred as a result of the projected gaps in the University’s fiscal year 2009 operating budget.

“Some of us felt that given Brandeis’ traditional, historical commitment to social justice, those faculty members whose jobs were secure might want to take a little bit of the burden for balancing the budget off the backs of staff members whose jobs aren’t [secure],” Chair of the Faculty Senate Prof. William Flesch (ENG) wrote in an e-mail to the Justice.

Former SUNY Chancellor Is Chosen to Lead Kentucky’s Postsecondary Council

The Chronicle News Blog: Former SUNY Chancellor Is Chosen to Lead Kentucky’s Postsecondary Council

Robert L. King, who resigned in 2005 as chancellor of the State University of New York, has been named president of the Kentucky Council on Postsecondary Education, the state’s coordinating board for higher education.

Mr. King takes over for Richard A. Crofts, who has served as interim president since June, when Brad Cowgill resigned after a little more than eight months on the job. In fact, Mr. Cowgill had been appointed president after eight months as an interim leader, but he stepped down two weeks later amid a dispute over his hiring.

New School Faculty Members May Hold No-Confidence Vote in Bob Kerrey

The Chronicle News Blog: New School Faculty Members May Hold No-Confidence Vote in Bob Kerrey

Senior faculty members at the New School, extremely disturbed by the abrupt departure of the New York institution’s provost, will meet on Wednesday afternoon in a hastily called session of the Faculty Senate, and may hold a vote of no confidence in the president, Bob Kerrey, the former U.S. senator.

Rhode Island: Higher education retirees were offered lucrative incentives

Providence Journal: Higher education retirees were offered lucrative incentives

PROVIDENCE — Over the last 25 years, former Rhode Island College President John Nazarian donated hundreds of thousands of dollars — and three baby grand pianos — to the school where he spent his undergraduate years, his 54-year academic career and his adult life.

And when he retired in June at the age of 75, the college gave Nazarian something back: a $205,008 severance check.

Defining Adjunct Rights

Inside Higher Ed: Defining Adjunct Rights

The American Association of University Professors is best known for its statements on tenure and academic freedom. In recent years, however, the association has asserted that its principles apply to those off the tenure track, and it has adopted specific guidelines about the treatment of adjuncts.

Today, the association will for the first time cite those standards on adjuncts’ right to fair consideration for reappointment to issue a report finding an institution — North Idaho College — in violation of the AAUP standards. The case involves a long-term adjunct who was denied reappointment following the college’s clash with her husband and a controversy in which some of her comments offended conservative students. The AAUP says she was denied appropriate due process in ways that endanger academic freedom.

AAUP Takes Up Case of Part-Time Professor Let Go in Idaho

The Chronicle: AAUP Takes Up Case of Part-Time Professor Let Go in Idaho

A report by the American Association of University Professors on the case of a former adjunct instructor of English is based on the organization’s first investigation into alleged violations of its new rules regarding part-time professors.

Federal Judge Allows Lawsuit Over Scholar’s Visa Denial to Proceed

The Chronicle: Federal Judge Allows Lawsuit Over Scholar’s Visa Denial to Proceed

A federal court in Boston ruled that it has the power to review whether the Bush administration has a valid reason for denying a visa to Adam Habib, a South African political scientist.

Wisconsin: UW System faculty pay increase passes regents

Badger Herald: UW System faculty pay increase passes regents

The 2.5 percent increase for University of Wisconsin System faculty and academic staff for 2009-11 was approved by the Board of Regents Friday and will now move to the UW Department of Administration for approval.

California: Video and Forum on Puerto Rican Teachers Union

IndyBay.org: : Video and Forum on Puerto Rican Teachers Union

The California Peace and Freedom Party is co-sponsoring a special presentation and short video by Puerto Rican film maker Pedro Angel Rivera, who will speak about the struggle of the Puerto Rican teachers’ union (FMPR) to maintain its independence and its right to strike.

Pedro Angel Rivera is a labor film maker in Puerto Rico who won recognition with his films “Operation Bootstrap” and “Plena Is Song, Plena Is Work.” He is now producing labor videos for the FMPR and will screen a short video on the recent teachers’ struggle.

The FMPR teachers union recently defeated an attempt by the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) to replace them as the bargaining agent for Puerto Rican teachers. This raid followed the decertification of the union by the government of Puerto Rico for conducting an island-wide strike in February against attempts to undermine public education. The Peace and Freedom Party regards the FMPR’s successful resistance to this takeover attempt as an important victory for the working class as a whole.

December 7, 2008 700 PM
522 Valencia St. 3rd Fl (near 16th St.)
San Francisco, CA Donation Requested

UK: ‘Bullying’ nun to spark school strike

Liverpool Echo: ‘Bullying’ nun to spark school strike

TEACHERS will go on strike after claiming they are being bullied by the head of a city Catholic school.

An estimated 60 teachers, about two-thirds of teaching staff, at St Julie’s high in Woolton, are refusing to turn up to lessons on Tuesday.

Pennsylvania: Striking NW teachers draw ire from taxpayers, board members

Times Leader: Striking NW teachers draw ire from taxpayers, board members

As work stoppage over pay, insurance goes on, frustration grows for union, board, public.

UNION TWP. – Taxpayers and members of the Northwest Area School Board expressed their dismay with the ongoing teachers strike on Wednesday night. District solicitor Richard Galtman and Superintendent Nancy Tkatch aired their opinions about the negative effects the strike has on the district’s students.

Student Protests in Greece Convulse Universities

The Chronicle: Student Protests in Greece Convulse Universities

Several universities in Greece have been occupied by protesters as part of a wave of rioting and unrest that has swept the country in the wake of the police shooting of a 15-year-old boy in Athens on Saturday night, the Reuters news agency reported. “Most of the clashes have occurred in university cities and have involved students,” the BBC reported.

Utah: Students protest, say Ute nickname breeding racism

The Salt Lake Tribune: Students protest, say Ute nickname breeding racism

Shouting chants of “We want scholarships!” and “Pay the bill, Chris Hill!” the 14 students marched through the University of Utah campus Thursday to protest what they allege is the U.’s lackluster support of American Indian students while its athletic programs benefit from the Ute name.

Hill is the school’s athletic director.