Missouri: Dissident faculty concerned about grievance revisions

Columbia Tribune: Dissident faculty concerned about grievance revisions

The University of Missouri chapter of the American Association of University Professors focused the bulk of a meeting yesterday on how to dissuade fellow faculty members from voting to approve a modified grievance policy.

Manitoba: Striking Brandon University faculty against premier’s idea of binding arbitration

Canadian Press: Striking Brandon University faculty against premier’s idea of binding arbitration

BRANDON, Man. – Brandon University’s faculty association is saying no to Premier Gary Doer’s suggestion of sending a labour dispute with the school to binding arbitration.

The strike and lockout over money and other issues has kept about 3,200 students out of classes since Sept. 29.

Bruce Forrest, a spokesman for the association, says they still believe the two sides can reach a settlement at the bargaining table.

Manitoba: University talks fail

CJOB: University talks fail

Negotiations Friday between Brandon University and the Brandon University Faculty Association (BUFA) have failed to resolve the dispute between the two sides. No further talks are planned.

The Faculty Association rejected a proposal that would have seen a salary, increment and benefit increase to their members of 22.3% over three years. The salary portion of this proposed increase was 3% in each year of a three-year agreement, or over 9% over the life of the agreement.
Earlier the Faculty Association rejected proposed amendments to the teaching workload of professors from 18 credit hours per year to 15 credit hours.

Brandon University officials believe they have a fair and equitable financial proposal before the Faculty Association. They say it exceeds the packages accepted at other universities in Manitoba.

Zimbabwe’s Universities Stay Shuttered as Crisis Deepens

The Chronicle: Zimbabwe’s Universities Stay Shuttered as Crisis Deepens

Zimbabwe’s higher-education system has shut down completely, and universities are likely to remain closed until next year, as a deal struck last month to end the country’s political crisis is in danger of unraveling, according to students, faculty members, and news reports. The University of Zimbabwe, the country’s top university, has been closed since the end of the 2007-8 academic year, in July.

Elite students depend on public welfare for family medical care

Mercury News: Elite students depend on public welfare for family medical care

Deciding on grad school? In addition to taking on six-figure loans, late nights and ramen dinners, would-be students now must add in another challenge: family health insurance.

Increasingly, universities are dropping family health insurance programs, saying soaring costs make them a money-losing option. That’s forcing more families onto government programs like Medi-Cal or Healthy Families while moms and dads earn their law degrees or doctorates.

Call to Arms for Adjuncts … From an Administrator

Inside Higher Ed: Call to Arms for Adjuncts … From an Administrator

It’s not unheard of, at faculty gatherings, to hear colleges’ treatment of adjuncts compared to the way Wal-Mart treats its workers. On Monday, such a comparison was made at a most unlikely place: the annual meeting of the College and University Professional Association for Human Resources.

“Wal-Mart is a more honest employer of part-time employees than are most colleges and universities,” said A.G. Monaco, senior human resources official at the University of Akron, and yet academics are “the ones screaming about how bad Wal-Mart is.” Academics “have to stop lying” about the way non-tenure-track professors are treated, he said.

Washington: WSU provost to return as professor — at $245,000 per year

Seattle Times: WSU provost to return as professor — at $245,000 per year

Steven Hoch will not return to Washington State University as provost — but he will return to Pullman as perhaps one of the nation’s best-paid history professors.

Hoch has been at the center of mystery and controversy for two weeks at WSU’s Pullman campus. On Sept. 23, after just seven weeks as provost, he sent his staff a 3 a.m. e-mail announcing he was taking an open-ended leave. He returned to Lexington, Ky., on full pay.

Professor in Columbia noose sandal sues over firing for plagiarism

Daily News: Professor in Columbia noose sandal sues over firing for plagiarism

A former Columbia University psychology professor who found a noose dangling from her door and was later fired for plagiarism Friday sued the school, charging that she was unjustly ousted.

Madonna Constantine, who had been one of two black tenured professors at Teachers College, is seeking to undo her June firing on charges of academic plagiarism. Her dismissal came months after she found the racist symbol last fall at her office.

New York: Teachers Sue Over Right to Politic

The New York Times: Teachers Sue Over Right to Politic

The New York City teachers’ union filed a federal lawsuit on Friday claiming that a policy banning political pins and signs in schools violates teachers’ First Amendment rights by blocking them from political expression.

Teachers ordered back to work in Michigan district

The Detroit News: Teachers ordered back to work

Judge tells Wayne-Westland officials not to discipline strikers; classes scheduled to resume this morning.

WESTLAND — Wayne-Westland students are scheduled to return to class this morning following a judge’s ruling Thursday ordering teachers back to work after a four-day strike.

It was unclear whether the ruling by Wayne County Circuit Judge Kathleen Macdonald, who also ordered the district not to discipline teachers for the strike, would restore peace in the 13,300-student district. With no contract, teachers continued to picket outside some schools Thursday afternoon after the ruling, and later angry parents demonstrated outside district headquarters in support of the teachers.

Washington: Administrators duke it out in the hallway?

Seattle Times: Questions linger after WSU Provost Steven Hoch leaves

Washington State University Provost Steven Hoch left abruptly on paid leave two weeks ago, leaving students and facultywondering what happened. Sources say a power struggle and physical altercation preceded the departure.

At 3:13 in the morning — just seven weeks into his new job as provost of Washington State University — Steven Hoch dashed off an e-mail to his inner circle:

“Dear All, I have requested personal leave as Provost and Executive Vice President. President Floyd has approved my request. We have not established any expressed ending date for this leave. I should like you all to know how much I enjoy working with you. Cordially, Steve.”

President of Southwestern Oregon Community College Resigns Hastily

The Chronicle News Blog: President of Southwestern Oregon Community College Resigns Hastily

Judith M.L. Hansen, president of Southwestern Oregon Community College, resigned on Wednesday, effective immediately. The leader of the college’s governing board described Ms. Hansen’s abrupt departure as the result of a mutual agreement with the board, according to The World newspaper of Coos Bay.

Kentucky: Felner Investigation Spreads Across the Country

PageOneKentucky.com: Felner Investigation Spreads Across the Country

WHAS11’s Adam Walser just reported (at 5:30) that the Felner investigation has spread.

Federal agents have been in contact with the New York State Middle School Association and the Atlanta Public School System in connection with research studies that Robert Felner conducted there.

Atlanta Public Schools refused to provide documents to Walser because of the ongoing investigation.

California: Colleges’ gay clubs clash with officials over name

San Diego Union Tribune: Colleges’ gay clubs clash with officials over name

SAN DIEGO – Members of gay and lesbian clubs at two San Diego community colleges say campus administrators have violated their free speech rights by repeatedly blocking attempts to advertise their shared acronym: FAGS.

Jason Frye, president of the clubs on both campuses, said San Diego City College administrators took down the club’s posters and instructed members to stop passing out fliers with the acronym. At San Diego Mesa College, Frye said, the club was told during Rush Week to remove a poster from its booth.

Frye stands by the use of the acronym for the club, whose full name is The Fellowship of Associated Gay Students & Straight Allies.

Alabama: AUM’s Faculty Senate censures leaders

Montgomery Advertiser: AUM’s Faculty Senate censures leaders

The administration at Auburn Montgomery has been censured by the school’s Faculty Senate over the hiring of Mehmet Sahinoglu as professor/director of the new Informatics Institute.

AUM Chancellor John Veres and Vice Chancellor for Academic and Student Affairs Janet Warren both apologized to the faculty for how the hire was handled.

Illinois: Button controversy continues

Inside Higher Ed: Button controversy continues

The dispute over political buttons is not over at the University of Illinois. A memo from the university’s ethics office last month suggested that professors were barred by state regulations from wearing political buttons, among other activities. Responding to furious faculty members, who said their rights had been trampled, President B. Joseph White said that they could wear buttons. But White’s clarification said that professors could wear buttons only “provided that employees at that time are neither on duty nor in the workplace of the university.” On Wednesday, a committee of the Urbana-Champaign chapter of the American Association of University Professors wrote to White arguing that such limits were inappropriate and might be unconstitutional. The letter cited Supreme Court rulings on the free speech rights of public school employees and questioned what harm would come from a faculty member wearing a button to a departmental meeting or around campus.

New President and Faculty Tangle at U. of the District of Columbia

The Chronicle: New President and Faculty Tangle at U. of the District of Columbia

Just a month after becoming president of the University of the District of Columbia, Allen L. Sessoms is locked in a battle with the institution’s faculty senate, which he wants to shut down and replace with a new forum of students and faculty and staff members.

Ontario: Post-doc fellows at UWO unionize

London Free Press: Post-doc fellows at UWO unionize

Fed up with what they say are poor working conditions, post-doctoral fellows at the University of Western Ontario have unionized.

About 250 post-doctoral fellows joined the Public Service Alliance of Canada when the Ontario Labour Relations Board certified their application on Sept. 30.

The new union is the second of its kind in Canada.

California: Faculty votes disapproval of professor

Contra Costa Times: Faculty votes disapproval of professor

CSULB: Academic Senate distances itself from Kevin MacDonald’s controversial works.

LONG BEACH – The Cal State Long Beach Academic Senate has voted to disassociate itself from the writings of a controversial psychology professor who has been accused of having anti-Semitic and white ethnocentric views.

“While the Academic Senate defends Dr. Kevin MacDonald’s academic freedom and freedom of speech, as it does for all faculty, it firmly and unequivocally disassociates itself from the anti-Semitic and white ethnocentric views he has expressed,” according to the resolution Thursday.

Rutgers U. Weighs Complaints of Bias Against Women

The Chronicle: Rutgers U. Weighs Complaints of Bias Against Women

Female faculty members and graduate students in the university’s political-science department feel unfairly compensated and shut out of leadership posts, says an internal university report obtained by The Chronicle.