Jennie Shanker committed to teaching two classes in
sculpture at a Philadelphia college for the spring 2012 semester. She turned down
other teaching offers to keep that commitment.
One week before the semester began, the college abruptly
canceled one of the classes because it was one student shy of its enrollment
target.
"That was half my income," said Shanker, who earns
$3,000 to $5,000 per three-credit course.
Such is the plight of an adjunct professor.
Adjuncts work without benefits or job security, often for
little pay and with no stable career path, though providing a substantial
portion of the higher education workforce.
One of the nation's largest teachers' unions is out to
change that.
The American Federation of Teachers has quietly begun an
effort to organize into one union the 15,000 or so adjunct professors who work
at 43 public and private colleges within a 30-mile radius of Philadelphia. The
goal is to form a bargaining unit that will negotiate contracts for the
adjuncts and help them get health care and other benefits.
Shanker, daughter of the late Al Shanker, a legendary union
leader who headed the AFT for 23 years, was one of the first to join the group
- United Academics of Philadelphia.
"I honestly think if schools don't start treating
adjuncts better, it's going to hurt these institutions," said Shanker, an
adjunct for 16 years, mostly at Temple University's Tyler School of Art,
University of the Arts, and Moore College of Art & Design.
The effort underway in Philadelphia is part of a national
trend by unions to organize adjuncts in large cities, including Boston and Los
Angeles, where the Service Employees International Union has taken the charge.
"Adjuncts are contingent workers who are exploited in
lots of different ways," said Randi Weingarten, president of the AFT,
which represents 200,000 employees in higher education nationally, 65,000 of
them adjuncts. "This creates a way for them to have some power."
The AFT hopes to form bargaining units at some colleges by
the 2014-15 academic year.
Adjuncts already belong to unions at Rutgers, Community
College of Philadelphia, Bucks and Montgomery Community Colleges, and the 14
universities in the Pennsylvania State System of Higher Education.
AFT represents all but the state system school adjuncts, who
are part of the Association of Pennsylvania State College and University
Faculties.
At Rutgers, an AFT spokesman said, the unionized adjuncts
won yearlong job contracts, higher pay, and the option to buy in to health
care. Adjuncts at Philadelphia's community college earn seniority and the
college contributes toward their health-care premiums based on that seniority,
the spokesman said.Nationally, adjuncts represented by unions earn more money
on average than those who aren't, according to a study by the Coalition on the
Academic Workforce. Adjuncts who are represented earn median pay of $3,100 per
course, compared with $2,475 for those who are not.
In Philadelphia, the union plans an aggressive push for
members in the spring. If enough professors join, the union will petition for
collective-bargaining rights to represent the group and seek to negotiate
contracts, college by college. Thirty percent of eligible adjuncts must sign up
to hold an election. To become a bargaining unit, more than 50 percent of the
voters must approve.
At Temple, the adjunct faculty has tried to organize over
the years, most recently in 2010. Temple employs more than 1,600 adjuncts, not
far behind its full-time teaching force of 2,052.
"It was just a failure to engage enough people. It's
hard work to track people down, find out who they are," said Art Hochner,
president of Temple's faculty union. "The university doesn't give you a
helping hand."
Hochner was heartened to hear of the new effort by adjuncts.
"The working conditions are poor and the pay is
low," he said. "They don't get much say in anything. The students are
being shortchanged, and the faculty are being shortchanged."
Sharon Boyle, Temple's associate vice president for human
resources, said in a statement Temple "values and respects" its
adjuncts as "a vital part of the university's mission to provide our
students with a quality education. . . . We have taken steps in recent years to
acknowledge the value of continuing employment of adjuncts by offering valuable
benefits such as health care."
Hochner, however, contended that the health care is too
costly to be worth it.
Ryan Eckes, an adjunct for eight years who taught four
courses this semester at Temple and the city's community college, said adjuncts
get no say in the direction of their academic department and no place to share
ideas and help one another find jobs.
"No one has our backs," said Eckes, 34, of South
Philadelphia, who teaches English composition. "The main thing is that you
don't know where you'll be working next semester."
The title adjunct means "supplementary rather than an
essential part."
"Even though we're half the workforce, we're not
considered essential," said Eckes, who got his master's at Temple and has
sought a full-time position.
Some adjuncts teach on the side while maintaining a career
in law, business, or another area. But many also try to make it their primary
source of income, often teaching at multiple colleges simultaneously.
Shanker has tried to get a full-time job and for six years
was on one-year contracts. She's taught as many as seven classes a semester -
"it was a lot of running around" - this semester, she's teaching only
one.
"It's feast or famine," said Shanker, who has two
master's degrees, one from the Yale School of Art and the other from the
University of the Arts.
She does carpentry and art consulting on the side to make
ends meet.
Looking back on her father's work, she said she understood
firsthand the importance of a union.
"I wish he were here," Shanker, 49, of Fishtown,
said of her father, who died in 1997. "These are unfair labor practices. I
could be teaching and I could be on unemployment at the same time."
Source: Philly.com
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