Lust with Levi

Dear Levi B.,

I have a small problem. Okay – a big problem. I have a big, big crush on one of my professors. Obviously, I am a student. I have trouble paying attention in class, and I’m sometimes too nervous to talk in our
discussions. I know it sounds crazy, but I feel like we might be a good match. Help!
Signed,
Pining for Professor
Continue reading Lust with Levi

Tenure: Why it Matters

What is it?
Tenure is a contractual agreement between a particular faculty member and a school, college or university. After a probationary period and a series of reviews during which the faculty member demonstrates his or her value to the institution, that faculty member is offered a permanent position, or tenure. Exceptions usually apply in cases of financial exigency on the part of the college, or illegal or unprofessional behavior on the part of the faculty member. Continue reading Tenure: Why it Matters

McGregor Faculty Speak on Tenure

At McGregor, as in all other satellites of Antioch University, faculty are under limited-year contracts that do not entitle them to the protection and rights that tenured faculty benefit from. “No tenure adds to a sense of contingency,” remarked Professor Joe Cronin, “you could be let go for any reason any year.… Next year if there isn’t enough money, my job might not be there.”

Professor Jim Malarkey joined McGregor at its creation and has been working at Antioch for 22 years. Yet he too does not benefit from contractual employment security. He does not feel like the lack of tenure has been impairing his academic freedom, even when teaching such controversial subjects as Middle Eastern studies. “I’m more afraid of Homeland Security than of Antioch University Administration,” he commented, “they care about revenue.” Professor Susanne Fest corroborated this view, recounting “I have been very free to teach my courses…. I have never experienced any interference in terms of my teaching and my research.”

Involvement of faculty in governance is another issue, however. “Faculty governance to date is negligible, not to say nonexistent” said Fest, whereas Cronin remarked, “Many important decisions are made from top-down, often in ways that do not include faculty.” Malarkey pointed out the ideological contradiction between the institution’s values and its practices. “Douglas McGregor was famous for his theory of participatory management. If we’re naming ourselves after McGregor, there’s a lot of changes to be made about the way we govern ourselves,” he declared. “I think that’s a serious problem; not enough attention is given to sustain that legacy.”

“Whether I get a multi-year contract after this article on it is a real question. So watch what happens next year.”

The uncertainty generated by the lack of tenure can go as far as limit professors’ liberty to speak out. “We are a very cautious faculty,” commented Fest, “because we don’t want to jeopardize our jobs.… So far I’ve got the multi-year contract that I’ve applied for. Whether I get a multi-year contract after this article appears with my name on it is a real question. So watch what happens next year.”

McGregor President Barbara Danley declared that Vice Chancellor for University Academic Affairs Laurien Alexandre was looking into the possibility of a multiple year contract for faculty university-wide. She stated that it was not in her power to decide on implementing tenure at McGregor as the decision is made “across the university.”

“If we had tenure at McGregor, we would have a very different faculty,” predicted Fest, who emphasized the difference of cultures between the college and adult campuses. She mentioned “certain obligations that come with [tenure]” like the production of scholar work. She told of her own experience as a non-first career academic. “Competing against students in their late twenties or early thirties who had gone through high powered university programs would have been impossible,” she said, and added that many McGregor faculty were in similar positions.

“The trend in history is more contingent faculty, and I don’t like this trend,” said Cronin. The subject of tenure reaches far beyond the border of the Antioch University system, and can be envisioned as a political issue. “Higher education right now is in a period of time where corporatization is pushing in every direction,” declared Malarkey, raising the “question of the extent to which the University needs to be corporatized.”

They too were once young

Eric Miller–Professor of Cooperative Education

Where were you when you were 20?
I was here at Antioch.
What were you studying?
I was a psychology major. When I entered I was into education, but I switched.
Who was president of Antioch when you were here?
Bill Berenbaum
What was the student’s opinion of him?
The students generally hated him. That was kind of the birth of the university system in 1977 when I was 20. The university system was created under Bill Berenbaum. The writing on the wall that we saw was that Bill was a New Yorker, so he wasn’t here. He would come in once a month for a few days. A lot of the campus policies were ignored back then.  He had a manager which was very similar to Andrzej’s current position. He was the main operating manager while the president was away. Students and faculty were not very fond of this arrangement. People complained about it a lot, it was a big issue in AdCil.
What was going on politically in the United States?
It was the Carter years. There was a lot going on in Central America, especially with the war in El Savador. Things were also starting to heat up in Nicaragua and Panama as well. The issues that I mostly paid attention to were going on in Central America. Carter, even though he has a good boy image now being a retired president who was involved with peace issues, was supporting the School of the Americas which trained South and Central American militants here in America. That school is still some what going today.
Were there any books that influenced you at the time?
The thing about being in college [was] you don’t really get to choose the books you read. Just remember I was 20 at the time but I was really into the Carlos Castaneda series. I was really all over the place with my reading.
What sort of music were you into?

Well the late 70’s were not the best for music. Punk and New Age were just coming into the scene. Disco was still around, but the good stuff from the late 60’s and early 70’s was not really happening anymore. I always liked jazz and especially the jazz fusion going on at the time.

College faculty pass vote of no confidence against Chancelor Toni Murdock

Toni MurdockFor the second time of her administrative career, Antioch University Chancellor Tullise “Toni” Murdock has received a vote of no confidence. The resolution was unanimously passed by the 26 faculty members present at Tuesday’s faculty meeting.

The decision was a result of the events of Friday August 31st, when the news broke unexpectedly that Steve Lawry was stepping down immediately from Antioch’s presidency. Issues surrounding the Offices of Development and Alumni Relations were also raised after staff was sent home for a ‘long weekend’ and their offices’ locks changed. The announcement raised numerous questions within the community as the reasons surrounding Lawry’s sudden departure were unclear; in July he had announced his resignation as of January 2008. Moreover, the news that Lawry was under a gag order which prevented him from commenting on the situation raised further suspicion about the real reasons behind his “resignation.” Continue reading College faculty pass vote of no confidence against Chancelor Toni Murdock