Kenya: KNUT threatens a strike act over delays in salary increment

KBC: KNUT threatens a strike act over delays in salary increment

The Kenya National Union of Teachers (KNUT) has threatened to conduct a nationwide wide teachers’ strike over salary increments.

KNUT says this will only be averted if the government immediately reconstitutes a committee mandated with negotiating their terms and conditions of service.

Bulgarian teachers strike

showimage.jpegON STRIKE: Vassil Aprilov primary school in Sofia was among the first to join the teachers’ strike. The sign on the gates, ‘Stachka’ (strike), left no doubt about it. Photo: PETAR KOSTADINOV

The Sofia Echo: The Sofia Echo: BULGARIAN TEACHERS TO BLOCK SOFIA CITY CENTRE ON OCTOBER 11

A national meeting which will block the entire Sofia city centre for half a day is what the teachers’ unions have announced for October 11.

The strike committee has called on teachers, parents and students to assemble at 11.00 in front of the Council of Ministers and at 14.00 in front of Parliament, Za Grada said.
The Sofia Echo: Striking messages in Bulgaria

After a week and a half, Prime Minister Sergei Stanishev officially acknowledged the scale of the teachers’ strike, the teachers are demanding a 100 per cent salary increase. On October 3, Stanishev said that the country was faced with “a serious reality with the entire education sector going on strike”. Stanishev was speaking at a conference in Sofia entitled Second Decade of Growth: Risks and Opportunities, organised by Bulgarian newspaper Kapital and German newspaper Handelsblatt.

FOCUS Information Agency: Teachers in Bulgaria to build tent camp in front of the National Theatre

Sofia. The effective strike of the teachers in Bulgaria continues with protests and rallies in the entire state. The strike committee organized a tent camp starting at 14.00 in the park in front of Ivan Vazov National Theatre. There the protesters would collect signatures supporting their demands for higher salaries. Teachers’ protest will start at 16.30 at Nezavisimost Square in the capital. Trade Union’s demand is 100% gradually increasing of the salaries till June 2008. Minister of Education Daniel Valchev has offered a 30% hike – 10% in January 1 and July 1 and the rest 10% in two times next year, saying it did not have the funds for a bigger hike. According to Trade Union’s information more than 80 per cent of the schools and kindergartens went on strike.

The Sofia Echo: Teachers in Bulgaria: on their own

A Bulgarian village school headmaster has spoken to The Sofia Echo of his frustration at the handling of the national teachers’ strike.

Roman Bratoev, who heads the SS Cyril and Methodius school in Marchaevo outside Sofia, criticised the conduct of the Bulgarian Teachers’ Union (BTU), saying: “There is no co-ordination whatsoever among the schools about the strike.”

Zimbabwe teachers strike over pay

allAfrica.com:

Zimbabwe: Confusion As Some Teachers Stay Home Despite Deal With Government

Confusion surrounds the situation regarding teachers in the country after the Zimbabwe Teachers Association (ZIMTA) made a deal with the government last Thursday and ordered striking teachers back to work. As of Monday, some teachers from ZIMTA said they were not returning to their posts until the agreed Z$ 14 million for September was in their accounts.

Zimbabwe: Teachers’ Strike Shuts Down Schools

THOUSANDS of disgruntled teachers will tomorrow shun classrooms, signalling the beginning of one of the most potentially crippling strikes in the education sector since independence.

The industrial action, over poor pay and what the teachers describe as appalling working conditions could lead to the shutdown of all government, mission and council schools in the country.

Zimbabwe: Majongwe Threatened With Death As Police Urges Teachers to Strike

The leader of a combative teachers union, Raymond Majongwe, alleges that Zimbabwe’s feared secret police have threatened him with death for calling a teachers strike that has crippled the country’s education system.

newZimbabwe.com: Zimbabwe teachers strike over pay

ZIMBABWE’S largest teachers’ union called a crippling nationwide strike starting Monday this week demanding more pay.

Several schools up and down the country closed down on the first day of the strike as teachers heeded the strike call. In some schools which opened, teachers refused to conduct lessons.

The Zimbabwe Teachers Association (ZIMTA) said the withdrawal of labour was caused by “extreme poverty” suffered by teachers due to poor pay.

Colorado-Boulder Appeals Revival of Gender-Bias Lawsuit

The Chronicle News Blog: U. of Colorado-Boulder Appeals Revival of Gender-Bias Lawsuit

As expected, the University of Colorado at Boulder filed an appeal today of a court ruling that revived a federal gender-discrimination lawsuit against the university.

Last month a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit unanimously reversed a lower court’s 2005 decision dismissing a lawsuit filed by two women who say they were gang-raped at a football-recruiting party in 2001.

Colombian Death-Squad Leader Testifies About ‘Clean Up’ at University

The Chronicle News Blog: Colombian Death-Squad Leader Testifies About ‘Clean Up’ at University

Bogotá, Colombia — A much-feared leader of paramilitary death squads here gave new details this week about his reign of terror over a Colombian university. And a leader of a faculty union said later that the paramilitary groups’ sway over the university continues today.

The paramilitary leader, Salvatore Mancuso, who has turned himself in to the authorities as part of a peace deal with the government, testified in court that he had ordered his fighters to “clean up” the University of Córdoba, a public institution on Colombia’s Caribbean coast. The result was the killing of at least five professors, whom he listed by name, from 2000 to 2003. The testimony echoed statements he made in January about events at the university.

University Redresses Wardrobe Malfunction by Dropping Draconian Dress Code

The Chronicle News Blog: University Redresses Wardrobe Malfunction by Dropping Draconian Dress Code

Power of the press? After The Chronicle published an article this morning on Tri-State University’s proscriptive new faculty and staff dress code, professors at the Indiana university were told that they may now show up for work in scuffed shoes, wrinkled shirts, and, for those still possessing hair, Mohawks.

The dress code was intended to “elevate who we are as an institution,” said David Finley, the university’s vice president for academic affairs, not to alienate employees. He announced today that the October 1 policy had been rescinded while administrators review with faculty members what wardrobe best befits a Tri-State professor. —Paula Wasley

Antioch College’s students, faculty and staff passed a joint resolution of no confidence in Toni Murdock

Inside Higher Ed:

Antioch College’s students, faculty and staff passed a joint resolution of no confidence in Toni Murdock, the chancellor of Antioch University. A separate resolution was also passed calling for the college to be governed independently of the university. Many students and professors blame Murdock and the university board for the decision to suspend the college’s operations after the current academic year. The outcomes of the votes were announced in the middle of the night and Murdock could not be reached for a response. But she and board members have said that they are facing serious financial problems and are committed to the college. The texts of the two resolutions may be found on the Web site of the campus paper, The Record.

Pennsylvania: Professors at 14 state universities vote to accept contract

Inside Higher Ed: Pennsylvania Professors vote to accept contract

Professors at Pennsylvania’s 14 state-owned universities have voted to accept a four-year contract, their union announced Tuesday night. More than 77 percent of members of the Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculities participated in the contract vote, and of those voting, nearly 70 percent backed the contract. A tentative agreement on the contract came in July, as faculty members prepared to go out on strike.

Tufts offer of loan aid steers grads to nonprofits

Boston Globe: Tufts offer of loan aid steers grads to nonprofits

Tufts University is offering graduates an unusual deal: Take a job as a public school teacher or social worker, or work for any nonprofit, and the university will help pay off their college loans for years to come.

Texas: Jurors sift through evidence in trial of ousted president

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Houston Chronicle: Slade jurors sift through evidence

Jurors deliberating the fate of ousted TSU President Priscilla Slade start sifting today through boxes of evidence they requested on Monday, a task that could take days.

UK: Call for school/university partnerships

BBC: Call for more university links

Oxford aims to recruit 75% of undergraduates from state schools

Universities are being urged to forge ties with secondary schools in England, with the aim of widening the social range of students in higher education.

Bible Belt college head faces ‘luxury life’ claim

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Telegraph: Bible Belt college head faces ‘luxury life’ claim

The president of a Bible Belt university faces a string of allegations by former staff who claim that he and his family have squandered funds on a lavish lifestyle.

Richard Roberts, the son of Oral Roberts, one of America’s most prominent televangelists, says God has told him to fight a lawsuit brought by three former professors. They claim they, too, have divine guidance in their struggle for justice.

File-Sharing Students Fight Copyright Constraints

The New York Times: File-Sharing Students Fight Copyright Constraints

When Zachary McCune, a student at Brown, received an e-mail message from the university telling him he might have broken the law by downloading copyrighted songs, his eyes glazed over the warning and he quickly forgot about it. “I already knew what they’d say about file-sharing,” he said. “It’s become a campus cliché.”

Jena to NYC: Noose Found at Columbia

The New York Times: Noose Found at Columbia

A hangman’s noose was found attached to the office door of a black member of the faculty at Teachers College at Columbia University, according to a memo sent yesterday by the college’s president to students, teachers and staff members. The president, Susan Fuhrman, said the incident had been reported to the city police and was being investigated by the Hate Crimes Task Force. She wrote that she and the college “deplore this hateful act, which violates every Teachers College and societal norm.” Joe Levine, a spokesman for the college, declined to name the professor. Lee C. Bollinger, Columbia University’s president, said in a statement, “This is an assault on African-Americans and therefore it is an assault on every one of us.”

“Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week” – Expose & Defeat This

“Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week” – Expose & Defeat This
Reactionary Offensive
From The National Project to Defend Dissent and
Critical Thinking in Academia
www.defendcriticalthinking.org

David Horowitz has announced “Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week” (IFAW) for October 22-26, to take place on campuses around the country. Horowitz has enlisted
some of the most extreme, and dangerous, ideologues as spokespeople, and is working with Christian fundamentalists, military and veteran’s groups, and
the entire range of conservative and reactionary student organizations in an attempt to hold what he says will be the largest conservative university protest in US history.

This is a move to deepen the already serious chill in
academia by bringing together an aggressive social
base and unleashing it on what Horowitz calls the
“tenured left.” It seeks to unleash a pogromist and
hate-filled atmosphere against Muslim students, equate
dissent and critical thinking with treason, attack
Women’s Studies Departments, and build the US “will to
fight” more wars of aggression in the Middle East,
particularly against Iran. It hypocritically claims to
oppose the oppression of women and gays under Islamic
rule, while promoting Christian fundamentalists who
want to outlaw not only abortion but birth control as
well, and argue that homosexuality is a sin punishable
by death and women should not work outside the home.
IFAW cannot be allowed to go down unchallenged. It
needs to be thoroughly exposed, repudiated and
politically defeated. Go to www.terrorismawareness.org
for Horowitz’s plans and the list of schools targeted
– and visit www.defendcriticalthinking.org for
analysis and resources for combatting Horowitz and his
dangerous allies.

How DARE these people parade as anti-fascist?!
Anyone familiar with Horowitz and his allies can only
respond with outrage to their claim to be opponents of
fascism, intolerance and bigotry.
How dare David Horowitz, who says that Blacks should
be grateful for slavery and that Blacks owe a debt to
whites for ending slavery, talk about the “right of
all people to live in freedom and dignity”?!
How dare Ann Coulter, who said of Muslims, “We should
invade their countries, kill their leaders and convert
them to Christianity,” masquerade as an opponent of
“all forms of religious supremacism, violence and
intimidation”?!
How dare Rick Santorum, who equates homosexuality with
bestiality and openly advocates the revoking of
women’s right to abortion and birth control, parade as
a defender of the rights of women and gays?!

“Islamo-Fascism Awareness Week:” An Avalanche of Lies,
Distortions, Bigotry and Hate.
• Horowitz claims that IFAW will confront the “Big
Lie” that George Bush created the “war on terror:”
If Bush was just responding to 911, why did he target
and invade a country that had nothing to do with it?
Why did he lie about WMDs to justify that aggression
and why is he now threatening another country, Iran,
that also had nothing to do with 9/11? And for
decades, the US and Israel have destroyed secular
governments and forces in the Middle East and
elsewhere, while actively supporting Islamic
fundamentalist forces, as in Afghanistan. In Iran, the
US overthrow of the elected government of Iran in 1953
and the decades of support for the brutal regime of
the Shah contributed to the conditions which gave rise
to Islamic fundamentalist rule there.

• “A major theme of the Week will be the oppression of
women in Islam.”
The speakers for IFAW include some of the strongest
supporters of the Bush administration, whose policies
have been catastrophic for women, both here and
internationally. Horowitz’s speakers for IFAW include
biblical literalists like Frank Pastore who uphold the
execution of gays and the equation of abortion with
murder. It’s notable that the IFAW petition includes
the demand for “The equality of dignity of women and
men.” Not equality, but the “equality of dignity” – a
meaningless phrase which can be twisted to fit the
most patriarchal of viewpoints.

• IFAW will feature sit-ins “designed to protest the …
silence of Women’s Studies departments in the face of
… Islamic gynophobia:”
Women’s Studies Departments have hardly been “silent”
on the treatment of women (or gays and lesbians) under
Islamic fundamentalism. Horowitz’s problem with
Women’s Studies Departments is not their supposed
“silence” but the simple fact that they exist. His
website is full of rants directed against Women’s
Studies professors. Part of his overall agenda is the
elimination of Women’s Studies, along with Ethnic
Studies, Social Work, Social Justice, and other
programs which arose out of the struggles of the 60s
and 70s. And without Women’s Studies departments and
the feminist struggles which gave rise to them, people
like Horowitz would not even be giving hypocritical
lip-service to the oppression of women anywhere.

• Horowitz says that IFAW only targets
“Islamo-Fascists,” not “non-radical muslims:”
IFAW is an explicit attempt to demonize and isolate
Muslims in this country. Horowitz identifies the
Muslim Student Association as a front organization of
the Islamo-Fascist jihad intent on world domination,
and demands that they sign his petition or be branded
as “the enemy.” IFAW speakers like Gregory Davis say
that “Islam and its faithful adherents are trying to
undermine our secular governments with the ultimate
aim of replacing them with Sharia. Terrorism is a
means to this end as are Islamic proselytizing,
fund-raising, lobbying, education, etc.” Horowitz has
also said that “the Palestinians” (not some of them,
or just the radical ones, but all of them, including
those who are not Muslim) “are part of the
Islamo-fascist jihad against the West.”

• IFAW’s Petition demands “The right of all people to
live free from violence, intimidation, and coercion:”
This, from people who are clamoring for war against
Iran, who support Israel’s policies of military
occupation, targeted assassinations and collective
punishment; who support a government which is
responsible for the deaths hundreds of thousands of
Iraqi civilians, which has engaged in, advocated and
legalized torture, established a secret prison system,
engaged in widespread and illegal spying, and gutted
habeas corpus and other basic civil liberties?

• IFAW’s Petition supports “The freedom of the
individual conscience: to change religions or have no
religion at all.”
IFAW speakers include Christian fundamentalists who
believe that anyone who does not share their literal
interpretation of the Bible will go to hell. Rick
Santorum, one of the main speakers for IFAW, has said
in order to win against “Islamo-Fascism, “We must
educate, engage, evangelize and eradicate … We need to
do more, as I said, to spread these ideas throughout
your campuses.”

• And more, from Horowitz’s Frontpage.com
John Perazzo, who wrote “Why IFAW is Needed” for
Horowitz’s frontpage.com, also wrote “Black Racism and
‘The Jena Six.'” He called the Jena 6 a “pack of
thugs” and “raging predators,” and says the real
problem is “black racism, a disturbingly widespread
phenomenon in contemporary America” – while the
hanging of nooses from a “whites only” tree (in 2006!)
is simply “a dumb (non-violent) prank by a bunch of
teenage idiots.”

Some suggestions on what can be done.
• Call a meeting (immediately!), to discuss why IFAW
is so dangerous, and to make plans to oppose it.
Approach progressive political groups, feminist and
Women’s Studies Departments, GLBT groups, Muslim
student organizations and faculty. Reject the terms of
debate set by Horowitz: opposing IFAW does not mean
supporting terrorism or Islamic fundamentalism.
• Defend professors, Muslim student groups and Women’s
Studies Departments, which are under attack.
• Challenge organizers and speakers of IFAW at every
opportunity with facts and truth.
• Hold public forums by faculty and others.
• Saturate campuses with flyers and posters, exposing
Horowitz, IFAW and what it’s all about.
• Submit resolutions opposing IFAW to faculty and
student senates.
• Write op-eds, place ads, and give interviews to
campus and other media.
• Share material (flyers, graphics, posters, articles,
etc.) with others. Send them to the National Project
to Defend Dissent and Critical Thinking in Academia
(www.defendcriticalthinking.org). Share your
experience and plans, send us reports and updates on
your activities, discussions, and plans, so that
others around the country can learn from them.

____________________________________________________________________________________
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Update on FBI-College Relations

Inside Higher Ed: Update on FBI-College Relations

In the two years since the Federal Bureau of Investigation pulled together a panel of university presidents, the 20-person National Security Higher Education Advisory Board has discussed matters ranging from cyber threats to counterterrorism to the Virginia Tech shootings. In a briefing for reporters at FBI headquarters Wednesday, officials involved with the advisory board provided an update as to its activities — though not surprisingly given the subject, specific details were scarce.

Missouri: UM websites will track grievances against professors

St Louis Post-Dispatch: UM websites will track grievances against professors

Students at the University of Missouri’s four campuses soon will be able to lodge complaints on university websites about professors who they think have discriminated against them based on their viewpoints.

Domestic Partners Got Health Benefits at More Colleges This Year, Survey Finds

The Chronicle: Domestic Partners Got Health Benefits at More Colleges This Year, Survey Finds

More colleges are offering health-care benefits to employees’ domestic partners, whether of the same sex or the opposite sex, and more institutions are looking to cut costs by offering a new form of coverage, popularly known as “consumer-driven health-care plans.”

Academic Group Meets in Mount Vernon to Contemplate Remaking the Modern University

The Chronicle: Academic Group Meets in Mount Vernon to Contemplate Remaking the Modern University

To get a sense of what the American Council of Trustees and Alumni has in mind when it talks about reforming higher education, you could start with the venue of its latest meeting. Last Friday, the academic watchdog group convened its annual discussion on academic issues at the former home of George Washington, the Mount Vernon estate.

Few Conservatives but Many Centrists Found in American Academe

Inside Higher Ed: The Liberal (and Moderating) Professoriate

Faculty members identify as liberals and vote Democratic in far greater proportions than found in the American public at large. That finding by itself won’t shock many, but the national study released Saturday at a Harvard University symposium may be notable both for its methodology and other, more surprising findings.

The Chronicle: Few Conservatives but Many Centrists Found in American Academe
Conservatives are a small minority within the American professoriate, according to a major study whose results were released on Saturday. The study — which is arguably the best-designed survey of American faculty beliefs since the early 1970s — found that only 9.2 percent of college instructors are conservatives, and that only 20.4 percent voted for George W. Bush in 2004.

But at a symposium on Saturday at Harvard University, the study’s authors cast doubt on certain claims made by conservative critics of academe. They emphasized that American faculty members are not uniformly left-wing. On most issues, they said, college instructors’ views are better characterized as “centrist” or “center-left.” And there is evidence of a convergence toward moderation: Faculty members who are 35 or younger are less likely than their elders to be left-wing (and also less likely to be conservative).