Tanzania says planned civil service strike illegal

Reuters: Tanzania says planned civil service strike illegal

DAR ES SALAAM (Reuters) – Tanzania said on Friday that a strike by civil servants planned for later this month over delays in salary payments was illegal as there was no dispute in the first place.

The Trade Union Congress of Tanzania (TUCTA) has called a three-day strike by government workers from August 25 over what it says are delays paying wages arising from an average 24 percent pay rise that was backdated to January.

“That strike is illegal, and if it happens, we will take the necessary action against those who participate in it,” Hawa Abdulrahman Ghasia, Minister for Public Service Management in the President’s office, told a news conference.

Australia: Federation lashes out at Govt over pay spat

ABC: Teachers Federation lashes out at Govt over pay spat

Public school and TAFE teachers planning to strike next month say there has been a breakdown in communication with the New South Wales Government.

Up to 70,000 teachers are expected to participate in the stop work action on September 2 and vote on a future course of industrial action.

Australia: Victorian TAFE teachers to strike

Green Left: Victorian TAFE teachers to strike

Victorian TAFE teachers voted on July 18 to take 24-hour strike action on August 20 in support of better pay and conditions after negotiations with the Victorian TAFE Association stalled.

The association wants separate agreements with each TAFE institution, which the Australian Education Union has rejected. The AEU wants a single agreement across the sector and served its log of claims, including a 10% annual pay rise for each of the three years during the life of the agreement, to the TAFE Association last August. The demands include a pay claim of $75 per hour and job security improvements for casual teachers.

Nigeria: NUT has mortgaged its future –Makinde, COEASU president

The Punch: NUT has mortgaged its future –Makinde, COEASU president

A week ago, the Colleges of Education Academic Staff Union declared a strike. In this interview, the National President of the union, Mr. Remi Makinde, tells OLUSOLA FABIYI that the education sector in Nigeria is headed for a disaster.

YOUR union is on strike, why strikes all the time? Is there no other way to settle a dispute?

New Jersey: ‘Atmosphere of fear and intimidation’ at HCCC

Secaucus Reporter: ‘Atmosphere of fear and intimidation’

‘Atmosphere of fear and intimidation’

HCCC discusses its poor grade for integrity

Roger Jones, spokesperson for Hudson County Community College, told members of the County Freeholder Board at their meeting on Tuesday that it is next to impossible to evaluate the validity of charges made regarding a recent report issued by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education.

The Middle States Commission gave HCCC a warning that the institution failed to comply with one of 14 accreditation standards it needs to meet. The college failed to comply with the Integrity category, which covers areas including conflicts of interest, ethical standards, and policies regarding support for academic and intellectual freedom. According to the recently released report, “The team interviewed a number of employees who felt intimidated by Human Resources and recalled a number of instances when they were publicly berated by the vice president for Human Resources [John Shinnick].”

Ontario: University of Sudbury profs in legal strike position

NorthernLife.ca: University of Sudbury profs in legal strike position

You could hear a pin drop on the campus of the University of Sudbury on Friday morning. But at midnight on Thursday, the faculty and university were in a legal position to strike/lockout after talks broke down yesterday.

Ontario: Huntington, faculty reach deal

Sudbury Star: Huntington, faculty reach deal

Huntington University and its 20 full-and part-time faculty have hammered out a three-year tentative contract.

The 20 faculty members are part of the Laurentian University Faculty Association. Details of the agreement are not being released, but it is known is that the deal would be retroactive to last month.

Information is not available concerning when a union ratification vote will be held.

New York: Catholic faculty without contract

Poughkeepsie Journal: Catholic faculty without contract

The Lay Faculty Association, a union representing 500 teachers at 10 high schools between Poughkeepsie and Staten Island, including Our Lady of Lourdes High School, will ignore a contract deadline set for today, despite losing proposed raises and benefits.

California: Faculty union pickets College of Marin opening

Marin Independent Journal: Faculty union pickets College of Marin opening

Having overcome their greatest challenge – saving the school’s accreditation from the brink of elimination – College of Marin administrators are now turning their attention toward mending the rift with members of the faculty union.

At Friday’s convocation, President Frances White took the stage at the college’s Fine Arts Center accompanied by her guest of honor: a framed copy of the school’s accreditation.

“Currently there are 21 community colleges on ‘warning’ status and three on probation,” White said. “Accreditation is at the core of all of our standards. I am very thankful that our accreditation was reaffirmed, and thankful for all of the people who were responsible.”

California: Whistle-blowers accuse CSU over contracts

San Francisco Chronicle: Whistle-blowers accuse CSU over contracts

Three former senior employees in the California State University labor relations office say they were forced out of their jobs after questioning the way Chancellor Charles Reed hired and paid a high-profile labor consulting firm, which so far has received more than $2 million, a Chronicle review of documents shows.

North Carolina State U undermines academic freedom of film scholar

For the Naitonal Project to Defend Dissent and Critical Thinking in Academia
Defendcriticalthinking.info

TAKE ACTION AGAINST YET ANOTHER ATTACK ON ACADEMIC FREEDOM

As you know, since 9/11, the right has ramped up its attack on academics
who dare to dissent from the U.S. occupation of Iraq and its policy in
the Middle East more generally. Neo-McCarthyite groups like the American
Council of Trustees and Alumni, Students for Academic Freedom and the
David Project have published lists of “disloyal” faculty and scurrilous
reports on allegedly “anti-American” courses dealing with U.S.
imperialism, Islam and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. Respected
scholars who study and write about such subjects -such as Norman
Finkelstein– have been denied tenure solely on the basis of their
politics. Others, like Ward Churchill, have had tenure summarily stripped from them.
In similar instances, applications for tenure have been seriously
threatened (Nadia Abu El-Haj: Joseph Massad) and books and their publishers have
been targeted for censorship (i.e. Joel Kovel’s book “Overcoming Zionism” and
University of Michigan Press). Now, the assault on academic freedom has
effected yet another critical scholar: Terri Ginsberg, a Ph.D. in Cinema Studies
from NYU and an authority on Israeli and Palestinian film.

Last fall, Terri was hired to a one year, non-tenure track position in
Film Studies at North Carolina State University (with the possibility of
renewal). As part of her teaching responsibilities, she offered advanced
courses on film and media treatment of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, and on
the political aesthetics of Holocaust film (the subject of her recent book) ; she was
also charged with helping to program a Middle Eastern film series.

Unfortunately, as Terri details in a grievance she filed with the NCSU
Faculty in March 2008, the director of the film studies program and the
director of the Middle East studies program at NCSU made a number of
administrative decisions in the course of the past year that flagrantly violated
Terri’s academic freedom.

To begin with, they limited her involvement in the film series which she
had been hired to curate, and criticized the introduction she gave at a screening of
the Palestinian film “Ticket to Jerusalem” as biased and overly political.
Moreover, the director of the film studies program refused to purchase
many of the materials Terri had requested for her Palestine/Israel film and
media course and submitted her evaluation of Terri’s teaching prematurely. All of
this culminated in her contract not being renewed for the upcoming academic year.

The grievance Terri filed with the NCSU Faculty alleged violations of
her First Amendment and equal opportunity rights under the University Code. Despite a
recommendation from the NCSU Faculty Chair that her case be given a full hearing, NCSU
Chancellor James L. Oblinger summarily dismissed her petition on the grounds that it was filed “too late” and that Terri was no longer a university employee. To make matters
worse, the AAUP– who had been helping Terri with her case– informed her in
the wake of Oblinger’s decision that they would no longer provide her with
assistance. (For more information about the facts of Terri’s case, read the following article:
http://media.www.technicianonline.com/media/storage/paper848/news/2008/07/17/News/Professor.Claims.Unprotected.Speech-3391733.shtml)

In response to this outrage, people from around the world have been
inundating NCSU with letters demanding that the Chancellor and the Board
of Trustees allow Terri’s grievance to go forward. An online petition
has been started that requests that NCSU consider Terri’s case and asks
the AAUP to give her the support she deserves.

Please take a few minutes to help Terri in this fight. First, add your
name to the petition of support drafted by Academics for Justice (AcademicsForJustice.org):
http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/Protect-Academic-Freedom

Second, send e-mails and make phone calls to D. McQueen Campbell, chair of the NSCU Board of Trustees, andD. McQueen Campbell, Chair NCSU Board of Trustees
tele: 919-515-2195
fax: 919-831-3545
trustees@ncsu.edu

Dr. Larry A. Nielsen, NCSU Provost &
Executive Vice Chancellor
larry_nielsen@ncsu.edu
tele: 919-515-2195
fax: 919-515-5921

ETS loses contract after failure to deliver SATs test results on time

The Times (London): ETS loses contract after failure to deliver SATs test results on time
Joanna Sugdenhttp://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/education/article4538892.ece

The company responsible for failing to deliver millions of school exam results on time this summer has been sacked.

Teachers leaders said that the decision, which comes after a summer of delays in test results, was inevitable and called on the Government to scrap national tests for next year in an overhaul of the entire system.

ETS Europe had a five-year £156 million contract to carry out marking of the national tests for 11 to 14-year-olds, but today it was dissolved.

U. of Georgia Abruptly Halts Some Research Leaves for Faculty Members

The Chronicle: U. of Georgia Abruptly Halts Some Research Leaves for Faculty Members

Citing looming state budget cuts, administrators at the University of Georgia have canceled faculty research leaves for this coming academic year, just days before the semester is to begin.

Fired Arizona State Professor Sues, Alleging Discrimination

The Chronicle: Fired Arizona State Professor Sues, Alleging Discrimination

A tenured Arizona State University associate professor fired in September 2007 by the university’s president, Michael M. Crow, for allegedly plagiarizing course syllabi has filed a lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Phoenix claiming that her dismissal was discriminatory and racist.

Theresa Cameron was the only tenured female African-American professor at Arizona State’s School of Planning in the College of Design, where she taught for ten years. She received tenure in 2000.

If One Professor Gropes, Does Everyone Need Training?

Inside Higher Ed: If One Professor Gropes, Does Everyone Need Training?

That what Arthur H. Miller is accused of doing would constitute sexual harassment is, one would hope, obvious to anyone who works in higher education. The political science professor at the University of Iowa was arrested last week on bribery charges arising out of accusations by female students that he told them he would give them higher grades if they let him fondle their breasts. In one case, he is alleged to have grabbed and sucked on a student’s breast and then sent her an e-mail telling her that she had earned an A+.

Miller hasn’t commented on the accusations, although his wife has said he is innocent. Miller is on paid leave, pending a university investigation, but another move by the university raises the question of what sort of educational programs are necessary for a university to prevent harassment. Sally Mason, Iowa’s president, announced on Tuesday that she plans to extend the university’s sexual harassment training — currently required only for those with supervisory roles — to all professors and other employees.

U. of California Provost Heads to United Arab Emirates

The Chronicle News Blog: U. of California Provost Heads to United Arab Emirates

Wyatt R. (Rory) Hume, provost and executive vice president for academic and health affairs for the University of California system, has been hired as provost of United Arab Emirates University, the system has announced.

Vermont: Woodbury College likely to be sold

Burlington Free Press: Woodbury College likely to be sold

The 8-acre campus of Woodbury College in Montpelier will likely be sold and some of its employees face an uncertain future in the wake of a merger announced Thursday between the central Vermont institution and Burlington’s Champlain College.

A Professor Is in the Hot Seat After Mooning Debate Judges

The Chronicle: A Professor Is in the Hot Seat After Mooning Debate Judges

A debate coach for Fort Hays State University, in Kansas, is under review by the institution after he swore at officials and mooned judges at a tournament earlier this year, in an incident that was recorded and uploaded to YouTube.

The coach, William Shanahan III, a professor of communication, got into a shouting match with a judge—and at one point briefly dropped his pants—during the national tournament of the Cross Examination Debate Association, which was held in Kansas this spring. A video recording of the incident was posted to YouTube last week, drawing thousands of views, attention from the national news media, and calls to the university from alumni and others demanding that it fire the professor for his behavior.

Inside Higher Ed: A Debate Performance Laid Bare

It’s a performance that gives new meaning to the word “cross-examination.”

An argument between two debate coaches escalates into a war of words, each showering the other with a string of obscenities before an audience of seemingly unfazed students. Before long, one coach has mooned the other, and the video — posted to YouTube — continues recording the spectacle of two communication professors stomping their feet, flailing their arms and shouting at the top of their lungs.

All U. of Iowa Professors Told to Undergo Training to Avoid Sexual Harassment

The Chronicle News Blog: All U. of Iowa Professors Told to Undergo Training to Avoid Sexual Harassment

The University of Iowa ordered all professors and staff members today to undergo training in how to avoid sexual harassment after a political-science professor at the university was charged with asking four female students for sexual favors in return for better grades.

Florida: More college students using food stamps

Miami Herald: More college students using food stamps

In a down economy, some Florida college students have found a new form of financial aid: food stamps.

The number of Sunshine State students receiving stamps was up 44 percent in July compared to the same time in 2007.

That’s about twice the rate of increase for food-stamp recipients in the population as a whole.