8/10/2020
[P]rudence suggests that our campus will be better off if we maintain our current practice of remote learning and focus all of our attention in the coming months on ensuring that we provide the highest quality and most engaging remote experience possible when classes begin for the fall semester.
- Preliminary Fall UMass Boston Planning Report
Dear Colleagues,
At the end of the Spring semester, after doing the heavy lifting of transitioning to a remote modality, over 300 of our colleagues were issued non-reappointment notices. Not only does this represent an attack on our most vulnerable faculty (Associate Lecturers and those without continuing appointments), but it also subverts the Fall Planning Report’s promise to “provide the highest quality and most engaging remote experience possible when classes begin for the fall semester.” If UMass Boston is serious about academic continuity, the Administration must reverse these massive faculty non-reappointments.
To better understand the scope and impact of the cuts, as well as to monitor a very dynamic situation, the NTT caucus of the Faculty Staff Union formed a course enrollment research team to examine data from WISER. Here is what we found:
The Administration’s stated reason for delaying the rehiring of NTT faculty is fear of “summer melt” - jargon for the loss of some students who accept admission to a university and even pay a deposit, but do not actually end up matriculating. Indeed, COVID-19 has caused unprecedented disruption: the June unemployment rate in Massachusetts climbed to 17.4 percent, the highest in the nation. This, combined with the cancellation of the Federal Pandemic Unemployment Compensation, may put higher education out of reach for some students. However, preliminary reports show that Fall enrollment at UMass Boston is stronger than expected.
So what about the students who are matriculating? And what about our returning students, the majority of whom are students of color, are coming from communities with low per-student K-12 funding, and are now being disproportionately impacted by coronavirus? How can we provide them with the “highest quality and most engaging remote experience possible” when faculty are not given enough time to convert their courses to a remote format, which requires technological and pedagogical retooling to maintain quality, accessibility and academic integrity? How can we best educate and mentor our students as individuals when course caps are being raised behind the scenes as a cost-cutting measure?
Multiple taskforces, training workshops, webinars, surveys, and listening sessions have been running all summer. Yet such well-intentioned resources are of no value to non-reappointed or recently reappointed faculty. While the Administration expects the latest and greatest in digital pedagogy, last-minute rehires will find it a challenge to make sure their students even get their books in time.
If faculty working conditions are student learning conditions, then none of this bodes well for the Fall semester. UMass Boston’s high-minded talk about ensuring “academic continuity” is only possible when faculty are given job security.
Here are three things you can do to pressure administration to rehire our NTT colleagues and do more than pay lip service to the promises made in the Fall Planning Report:
This is our union!
In Solidarity,
Course Enrollment Research Team, NTT Caucus
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