Dispatches From Community Meeting

This week in 113 there was a multi-media presentation that didn’t suck. Some kids whined about missing lunch so now they have to go to class at 8:45 a.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. In the spirit of hygiene, Beth gave away soap to Eleanor Holmes-Norton fans and the kid who guessed that the pool is named after somebody named Poole. And of course Pulse blew up like a Blow-Pop.
Charms Community Meeting take one, action: a bunch of fruit flavored kids smoking on the outside, bubbly personalities on the inside, fabulous! Continue reading Dispatches From Community Meeting

“I’m taking one day at a time”

The announcement by the Antioch University Board of Trustees to suspend the operations of Antioch College in 2008 has had resounding consequences across the entire college campus.  Staff reductions have created tension as the workloads of former staff members are distributed among those who endure, students find limited access to resources, and rumors about the closing or persisting float back and forth across campus.
During the three months following the announcement of suspensions, the staff of the school has been whittled down to a bare minimum.  Many areas of the Antioch College infrastructure have experienced staff cuts.  Offices such as the admissions office were the most obvious choices for staff reductions, but other areas of the college have been impacted as well.  Employees in the Academic Support Center, Physical Plant, Olive Kettering Library, and development office have also been fired.
The fact lingering in the minds of all of the college’s faculty and staff is that, under the current board decision, all are facing an uncertain future in terms of employment.  According to the U.S. Department of Education, the number of faculty jobs in higher education has increased by over 50% between 1981 and 2001, while the number of full time positions has actually decreased by 9% of the total positions.
Reactions among staff to the pending closure, and the effect it may have upon their career is largely cautious.
“It’s so up and down, I don’t know what to tell you,” said Carolene Minter of the Financial Aid Office at Antioch.  “I wish I had a concrete answer.”
Many staff members are unwilling to make solid plans for the future.  “Some things you control, and some things you can’t.  I’m taking one day at a time,” conceded Marcia Brim, college custodian and steward for the Local 767 of the United Electrical, Radio, and Machine workers of America (UE 767).  “[Antioch] has educated me in a way no other place could,” the 37-year employee added.
Some staff members are entitled to severance packages upon the termination of their employment, especially those who are represented by labor unions.  Severance packages often include additional payment after termination, payment for unused sick days or vacation days, and insurance possibilities.
Staff without severance packages may find it increasingly appealing to search out new employment, as there is no economic benefit to remaining at an institution with an uncertain future.  Former Interim Director of Admissions Jennifer Rhyner has taken this approach.  Rhyner recently left the Antioch College admissions office to pursue a new position in the Financial Aid department of Carthage College in Kenosha, Wisconsin.  “I really enjoyed working with her for the last couple of years,” said Angie Glukhov, Director of Admissions for Antioch College.
Conversely, former Admissions Counselor Brad Choate was fired three months ago and has had little success in finding a new job.  Choate, an alumnus from 2005, joined the admissions team after discovering his love of academia while on co-op.  “I had made the decision that I wanted to continue to work in higher education.  I haven’t had much luck pursuing that end, though,” Choate said.  After applying for some ten vacancies in varying positions, he was turned down each time.
“I only wanted to work at small liberal arts schools with similar values to Antioch’s,” Choate mentioned.  Certainly, such institutions are a dying breed in a world of increasingly market-driven institutions of higher education. “I think my experience with Antioch was a bonus rather than a detractor,” he said.

Lynda Sirk new head of Development and Alumni Relations

Lynda Sirk, former head of communications and Public relations for Antioch College was appointed the new head of Development and Alumni affairs, according to a press statement released by the University yesterday.

Sirk’s appointment was announced after much commotion on campus on Friday when the staff of both the Development Office and Alumni Relations office, including then head of Development Risa Grimes, were locked out of their office on Friday afternoon. “We were told to leave and we don’t have access to our first class accounts anymore, that’s all I can tell right now,” said Aimee Maruyama, head of Alumni Relations for the college in a phone interview Yesterday. Several officers had an automated out of office reply on their email boxes saying their office was closed for a long weekend and they would not be responding to their email until Tuesday. Continue reading Lynda Sirk new head of Development and Alumni Relations

Letter from Jean Gregorek in response to Ralph Keyes

Jean Gregorek, Associate Professor of Literature, responds to Ralph Keyes’s “Present at the Demise” published in the Chronicle of Higher Education

Web Editors Note – Accessing Ralph’s letter at the Chronicle of Higher Education website requires a login but Ralph also recently posted this article here : ilfpost.org/?p=230 and this is the link provided above.

The comment thread on this article at the Chronicle is here: chronicle.com/forums/index.php/topic,39968.0.html

I would like to respond to Ralph Keyes’s essay “Present at the Demise,” which offers his observations on what has led the Antioch University Board of Trustees to announce the closing of Antioch College. I have been teaching literature full time at Antioch College since 1994. While Mr Keyes makes some comments that strike me as valid, on the whole my experience here has been quite different. Continue reading Letter from Jean Gregorek in response to Ralph Keyes

“We have walked in your shoes”

Kim-Jenna Jurriaans

“We have walked in your shoes,” reads the beginning of a letter sent by twenty-seven former trustees and chairs to current members of the Board that oversees Antioch College and sealed its fate during a meeting in June. The group of various vintages joined hands in an attempt to reach out to the current board offering their institutional knowledge and professional perspective to assure the future existence of the 155 year-old Ohio College.

Continue reading “We have walked in your shoes”