Showing posts with label fired. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fired. Show all posts

Saturday, November 6, 2010

A big week for the FLXIV

Last week the university received a letter from the AAUP (American Association of University Professors) urging the administration to reconsider our non-reappointments and extend our contracts until the end of the academic year.

On Tuesday the Faculty Senate voted unanimously for a resolution that urges the administration to reinstate the foreign language instructors until other options to absorb budget cuts have been explored with full faculty representation.

On Wednesday members of the FLXIV met with the Advocate.  The resulting article is here.  Please register to use the site and leave a comment (preferably in a foreign language!)

On Wednesday the Russian instructor was interviewed by Channel 2 about her offer to teach Russian one more semester for free.

On Friday one of the German instructors was interviewed by Channel 33 about the AAUP letter and Faculty Senate vote.

On Saturday the Board of Supervisors will consider a petition to step in and undo the damage that has been done.

You can read more about the FLXIV and see links to the above stories here.  Please leave a comment!

Saturday, October 23, 2010

State of Affairs

This semester had so much potential.  Knowing that my time at LSU was limited, I was going to spend this semester teaching my three classes and the rest of my time in the library working on publications.  It was a beautiful plan - if only it had been put into practice!

When 13 of my colleagues and I were fired on August 27, I figured "well, that's life." But the more I spoke with my colleagues, the more we couldn't understand why this was happening to us and why the administration thought it was acceptable What has consumed nearly every waking moment for the past two months is summarized at www.flxiv.blogspot.com.

I have been fighting this battle since May.  You can see some of my previous attempts to avert the disaster which has come to pass here and here and here.  At this point, we have exhausted all of our options.  And unless there is a deus ex machina, I will be officially unemployed in 89 days.

The worst part is that my marketable skills are limited to experience I obtained over 15 years ago as a legal and medical secretary.  So I enrolled in the H&R Block tax course.  The class meets 9 hours a week and has consumed the rest of my free time.  If I pass the class, I should have a job from January to April.  After that is anybody's guess.

I am spending the next 36 hours working on my CV so I can apply for jobs in the U.S. - jobs that won't officially begin until Fall 2011, but deadlines for which begin in November.  All that energy I channeled into the Foreign Language Fourteen is now shifted to salvaging my academic career.  The research component will have to wait until after my tax course, which ends November 23.

Not my normally cheery post, but there's really not much to be cheery about, my friends. I'll leave you with a quote that pretty much sums up the situation:

"A degree in classics teaches you how to live
without the job it keeps you from getting." 

Sunday, August 29, 2010

recuperate regroup & recoup

On Thursday the Chair of my department sent an email to me and 13 of my colleagues inviting us to a meeting with the Dean on Friday.  We knew it was bad news because not all instructors in the department of Foreign Languages and Literatures were on the cc: list.  The Dean waltzed in and said "There's no good way to tell you what I have to tell you, so I'm just going to be brutal.  The University has decided to enforce the letters you received in January.  In other words, as of January 2011 you no longer have a job at LSU."

While this was expected, it was heartbreaking to see all the people, most of whom have spent their entire professional career teaching Louisiana's students, grasp the implications of this blunt announcement.  The usual questions were asked aloud:  "What will happen to the students?" "Are we eligible for unemployment?" "What were the criteria for retaining some of the instructors?"  But there were individual questions that were left unasked:  "How will I make my house payments?" "How will I feed my five children and send them to college?" "How will my chronic health issues be treated without insurance?"

Most of us are in the same boat:  we were hired to teach.  We were not expected to do research and publish to keep our jobs. We taught onerous course loads and some of us taught a new class practically every semester. Our "research" was done to present the material for our students but it was never published.  This means each one of us will enter the job search without the basic credentials that separate the candidates into Pile A and Pile B.  I've been through this before:  No one will even look at my application and I will receive a form rejection letter.  This despite the fact that I can teach Latin and Greek and Classical Studies and German and I have experience in residential colleges, academic advising and study abroad.

I'm taking this weekend off to recuperate (I've been sick for a week) and regroup.  Monday morning will find me recouping my losses.  Words of encouragement strongly desired!

Monday, August 23, 2010

150 days

Today is the start of Fall Semester 2010, exactly 150 days before January 21, 2011 which marks the end of my contract with LSU.  Here's what we know about the situation:

*  We were told nearly 400 instructors received pink slips back in January 2010.  If they are all released, it would be nearly a third of the faculty. (Later we learned that only 238 letters of non-reappointment had been sent).
*  An email, carefully calculated to arrive on the day when most of the faculty and students had officially begun their summer vacation, announced that the University was seeking to eliminate several programs, including degrees in Latin and German.
*  On July 16, the Board of Supervisors met to discuss the proposed program cuts.  The motion was evidently tabled but there has been no official report of that meeting.

So where does this leave me (and the other 300 instructors in the same boat)?  We can only assume that we have no job as of January 21, 2011 and must plan accordingly.  In other words, there are exactly 150 days for me to figure out what I want to be when I grow up.  I've got many irons in the fire, including writing academic articles and applying for teaching certification in Austria, along with non-academic writing projects, ideas for self-incorporating and Plan B.

I do not mourn the loss of my job.  I see it as an opportunity to spread my wings, both professionally and individually.  But it galls me that the humanities-based education on which the modern university was founded has been devalued to such an extent that these courses, which foster cultural communication and understanding, are the first on the chopping block.  I feel like someone has told me that everything I've studied since I was 13 years old was just a waste of time -- and I'm too young to be put out to pasture!!

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

post tenebras spero lucem


"These are difficult and heart-wrenching decisions, but they are decisions that must be made in light of the current fiscal crisis. Academic programs recommended for closure include ... the Bachelor of Arts in German and Latin and the reduction of language options for a savings of approximately $1.5 million at full implementation." - Chancellor Mike Martin, Louisiana State University, 24 May 2010