Ontario to Allow Unionization of College Part Timers

The Ontario government said it would seek legislation that would give part-time workers at colleges in the Canadian province the right to bargain collectively. The government had been under pressure from the National Union of Public and General Employees to allow 16,000 workers at the province’s 24 colleges — which are equivalent to technical and community colleges — to unionize.

U. of Dubuque Settles With Professor Who Sued Over Ban on Public Criticism

Telegraph Herald: U. of Dubuque Settles With Professor Who Sued Over Ban on Public Criticism

The fight is finally over. Nearly two years after the launch of a legal battle between the University of Dubuque and former faculty member Paul Jeffries, a decision has been finalized. University President Jeffrey Bullock released a statement saying Jeffries agreed to the university’s offer of $50,000 and both parties agreed on a legal resolution. The court finalized the matter Tuesday. Jeffries sued the university in fall of 2005, stating he had been unfairly terminated after being granted tenure. The former professor had been appointed to lead the Wendt Charac…[viewing 572 of 2412 characters]

One Harassment Lawsuit Involving an Oregon Administrator Is Settled; Another Is Pending

The Chronicle: OOne Harassment Lawsuit Involving an Oregon Administrator Is Settled; Another Is Pending

One of two sexual-harassment lawsuits filed last year against an administrator at Eastern Oregon University, the university itself, and the Oregon State Board of Higher Education has been dismissed.

A state court filing dated August 20 settles the lawsuit brought by a university staff employee who said that Robert L. Davis, director of undergraduate studies at Eastern Oregon, had raped her during a trip to Atlanta to attend an educational seminar.

Southern Illinois President Faces Allegations He Plagiarized His Dissertation

The Chronicle: Southern Illinois President Faces Allegations He Plagiarized His Dissertation

The president of Southern Illinois University, Glenn Poshard, is being forced to defend his 1984 dissertation against accusations that it contains numerous examples of plagiarism and improper citation.

The student newspaper at the university’s Carbondale campus, the Daily Egyptian, did a detailed examination of his dissertation and presented its findings to Mr. Poshard this week. He told the newspaper that he was very busy when the dissertation was completed. “This is not an excuse, and I would never offer it up as an excuse, but at that point in my life, I had a family,” he was quoted as saying. “I worked two jobs. I was running for the Illinois State Senate. I was trying to get my dissertation finished.”

Southern U. President Settles Whistle-Blower Suit Over Alleged Misconduct by Board Chairman

The Chronicle: Southern U. President Settles Whistle-Blower Suit Over Alleged Misconduct by Board Chairman

The Southern University system’s president, Ralph Slaughter, has agreed to drop a whistle-blower lawsuit against the system’s Board of Supervisors as part of a settlement, announced on Wednesday, that could include a $200,000 annual supplement to his salary for two years.

New book explores rise of academic capitalism

Inside Higher Ed: ‘New Players, Different Game’
Authors of new book explore the rise of for-profit higher education and its implications for other sectors of academe

At the beginning of their new book on for-profit higher education, William G. Tierney and Guilbert C. Hentschke talk about the academic division between “lumpers” and “splitters,” the former focused on examining different entities or phenomena as variations on a theme and the latter focused on classifying entities or phenomena as truly distinct. In New Players, Different Game: Understanding the Rise of For-Profit Colleges and Universities, just published by Johns Hopkins University Press, Tierney and Hentschke consider the ways for-profit colleges are part of or distinct from the rest of higher education. Tierney and Hentschke are professors at the Rossier School of Education at the University of Southern California, where Tierney is also director of the Center for Higher Education Policy Analysis. They responded to questions via e-mail about their new book.

Colorado State Approves Online University

The Coloradoan: CSU launches online university

Colorado State University is launching a $12 million online university that will help students who don’t have the time or money to get a traditional on-campus four-year education.

Called CSU-Colorado, and approved by the CSU Board of Governors on Friday, the online university will serve Coloradans and out-of-state students.

The board was asked to approve $4.5 million from the system’s budget for the new online university, with a business plan calling for a total $12 million investment, with the virtual doors open by next year. CSU is partnering with the Colorado Com-munity College System to create CSU-Colorado.

Antipiracy laws, four years later

The Chronicle News Blog: Antipiracy Lawsuits, Four Years Later

Next month will mark the fourth anniversary of the Recording Industry Association of America’s legal campaign against music piracy, an effort that has seen plenty of college students slapped with thousand-dollar lawsuits. The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a group that has opposed the industry group in court and in public debate, is commemorating the occasion with a caustic report on that lengthy campaign.

“RIAA v. the People: Four Years Later” offers a detailed recap of the recording industry’s lawsuits, which now total nearly 30,000, according to the group’s calculations. The report also profiles the industry’s shifting legal tactics, which have familiarized campus technologists with John Doe subpoenas and pre-litigation notices.

Pennsylvania: State System faculty still could strike at 14 schools

Patriot-News: State System faculty still could strike at 14 schools

Chad Bolt thought concerns about a faculty strike at the 14 state-owned universities were behind him.

After all, the faculty union and the managers of the State System of Higher Education reached a tentative agreement on July 2. Pat Heilman, union president, said at a news conference the next day that the pact meant four years of labor peace for entering freshmen.

Serbia: Teachers announce warning strike

B92 News Society Education: Teachers announce warning strike

BELGRADE — The Serbian Union of Education Workers has said it would hold a one-day warning strike on September 5.

Union representatives say the one-day warning strike aims at reminding the government of the three wage demands of education workers that, in their words, must be met.

Israel: Labor court forbids teachers to strike on September 1st

Ynet News: Labor court forbids teachers to strike on September 1st

Teacher’s Association threatens to keep schools closed come September in protest over Finance Ministry’s foot-dragging in pay negotiations but Labor Court blocks strike after Education Ministry files urgent petition. Court orders sides to hold intensive negotiations, says it will reconvene on matter during first week of September

Illinois: Harlem enters 2nd week

Rockford Register Star: Parents want timeline for latest Harlem strike

As the Harlem School District teachers strike eats away at the second week of school, the teachers union worked Sunday to win over the hearts and minds of disgruntled parents and students.

The intensifying situation at DePaul

From Criticalxthinking list:

DePaul is shaping up to be a central battleground in
the struggle to defend dissent and critical thinking
in academia. Not only has Dr. Norman Finkelstein
unjustly been denied tenure (along with Dr. Mehrene
Larudee), the university has cancelled his classes,
locked him out his office, placed him on academic
leave and is even threatening to arrest him if he
comes on campus.

Finkelstein has said that regardless, he will come on
campus and teach his classes. In an interview with
Inside Higher Ed
(http://www.insidehighered.com/news/2007/08/27/depaul),
he said, “If the university attempts to impede my
movements I intend to engage in nonviolent civil
disobedience and go to jail. If incarcerated I intend
to go on a protracted hunger strike until DePaul comes
to its senses. It is regrettable that I have been
driven to such drastic actions to defend basic
principles of academic freedom and my contractual
rights, upon which DePaul has been riding roughshod
for so long.” You can read a lot more on the situation
at Finkelstein’s website:
http://normanfinkelstein.com.

We would like to highlight two things. The first is an
article from DePaul Philosophy professor Bill Martin,
“Urgent Need to Right Wrongs at DePaul University.”
Martin powerfully conveys the damage already done by
the DePaul administration and the urgent need to
reverse the decisions. As he notes, “The cost for not
standing up will be enormous: DePaul will be destroyed
as a place deserving of respect in the intellectual
and academic worlds, and, if this happens, academic
freedom will be under attack everywhere.” You can read
the article on our website (which, incidentally, has
been completely redone):
http://defendcriticalthinking.org/

The second is the ongoing resistance and organization
of students at DePaul. They have formed the DePaul
Academic Freedom Committee. They are planning a
protest and press conference for the first day of
class – Wednesday September 5th. This is the day that
the students that would be in Professor Finkelstein’s
class would have gone to his classes (which start at
8:30am). They have also organized an exciting
conference on October 12. Called “In Defense of
Academic Freedom,” It will feature Akeel Bilgrami,
Noam Chomsky, Tony Judt, John Mearsheimer, Neve
Gordon, with host Tariq Ali. It will take place at
Rockefeller Chapel at the University of Chicago. You
can read more about the conference and their
activities at: http://www.academicfreedomchicago.org/

The DePaul AFC is asking that people send an email
letting the DePaul administration know what you think
of their actions. Here are some of their emails:

– DePaul University President, Rev. Dennis H.
Holtschneider, C.M. – president@depaul.edu
– DePaul Provost, Dr. Helmut Epp – hepp@depaul.edu
– DePaul Dean of the College of Liberal Arts and
Sciences, Dr. Charles Suchar – csuchar@depaul.edu

Please cc emails to DAFC, Dr. Finkelstein and the
National Project: info@academicfreedomchicago.org,
normangf@hotmail.com, criticalxthinking@yahoo.com

Iran forces lecturers to disclose all foreign trips

The Guardian: Iran forces lecturers to disclose all foreign trips

University lecturers in Iran are to be forced to tell security authorities of all foreign trips in advance in a move aimed at preventing them from being recruited as western spies.

Ohio win for partner benefits

Inside Higher Ed: Ohio win for partner benefits

An Ohio appeals court has rejected a suit challenging Miami University’s policy of offering domestic partner benefits to employees. The decision, which upheld a lower court’s ruling, was not based on whether such benefits are legal or conflict with the state’s ban on gay marriage, as the suit charged. Rather, the appeals court upheld a lower court’s ruling that under Ohio law, the conservative lawmaker who sued lacked the standing to do so — either as a taxpayer or as a tuition-paying parent. The court ruled that taxpayers do not have a general right to challenge any decision by a public entity. As for the tuition-paying parent argument, the court noted that tuition funds are not used to pay for the benefits, and that any parent who disagrees with a university’s policies is free to stop paying tuition. The decision and briefs are available on the Web site of Lambda Legal, a gay-rights organization that fought to defend the benefits.

Bomb Threats and Random Stabbing Open Academic Year on 3 Campuses

The Chronicle News Blog: Bomb Threats and Random Stabbing Open Academic Year on 3 Campuses

The opening of the academic year greeted students on at least three campuses yesterday with scary episodes not likely to endear the universities to their parents.

Kentucky Governor and Attorney General Clash Over Appointees to University Boards

Courier-Journal: Kentucky Governor and Attorney General Clash Over Appointees to University Boards

Attorney General Greg Stumbo has sent a letter to Gov. Ernie Fletcher, warning him that recent appointments to the boards of trustees at the University of Kentucky and the University of Louisville violate state law.

The Professor’s Ten Commandments, Thanks to Notorious B.I.G.

Inside Higher Ed: The Professor’s Ten Commandments, Thanks to Notorious B.I.G.

By Phil Ford

We’re staring down the barrel of another academic year. Time for a refresher course in professional deportment — by which I mean “The Ten Crack Commandments,” by The Notorious B.I.G. All you professors starting out at new institutions (like me) will be getting orientation sessions to show you the academic ropes — procedures on academic misconduct, FERPA guidelines, sexual harassment policies, etc., but you can save some time and just listen to hiphop. “The Ten Crack Commandments” only looks like it’s about drug dealing. All hustles obey the same logic, so heed Biggie’s words.

Search for Consensus in California

Inside Higher Ed: Search for Consensus in California

The contentious debate surrounding the regulation of for-profit colleges continues churning in California, where Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s administration put forward a five-year legislative proposal Friday to counter a Democratic leader’s stopgap solution. With only three weeks remaining in the legislative session, the parties in the discussion — the institutions, consumer advocates and their respective political backers — are as diametrically opposed as ever. And time to regulate the 400,000-student sector – essentially left unregulated when an earlier law expired this summer – is quickly running out.

German Universities See Sharp Drop in Number of Professors

The Chronicle New Blog: German Universities See Sharp Drop in Number of Professors

New data from Germany’s federal statistics office indicate that the number of professors at German universities declined sharply from 1995 to 2000. The German Association of University Professors and Lecturers analyzed the government figures and found that 663 faculty openings in the fields of linguistics and cultural studies had been left vacant during the 10-year period, representing a decline in the number of professors in those fields of 11.6 percent. Moreover, 1,451 faculty posts had been eliminated outright.