NCTE - The National Council of Teachers of English - A Professional Association of Educators in English Studies, Literacy and Language Arts
Search:
About NCTE Membership Professional Development Publications Programs Related Groups
 
The National Council of Teachers of English
- All Positions by Category
-    Assessment & Testing
-     Censorship & Intellectual Freedom
-     Class Size & Workload
-     Computers in Education
-     Curriculum
-     Diversity
-     Government in Education
-     Grammar
-     Instruction
-     Interdisciplinary
-     Language
-     Library
-     Literacy
-     Literature
-     Media Literacy
-     Multicultural Literature
-     NCTE Organizational Concerns
-     Professional Concerns
-     Professional Development
-     Publishers
-     Reading
-     Rights and Roles in Education
-     Standards
-     Teacher Certification & Preparation
-     Teaching Materials
-     Working Conditions
-     Writing
- All Positions by Level
- All Positions by Date
- Call for Resolutions
NCTE

- Parents & Students
- Press & Policymakers
Login to My NCTE Page
Shop the NCTE Catalog
 Working Conditions
Home > About NCTE > Overview > Our Positions > Positions by Category > Working Conditions > Article:107574
 

On Affirming Labor Equity for Adjunct Teachers and Graduate Employees

 

1997

NCTE Annual Business Meeting in Detroit, Michigan

 

Background

The increasing reliance on graduate students and adjunct faculty threatens to compromise the integrity of academic programs. The quality of teaching is not at issue. However, inadequate working conditions interfere with the ability of these teachers to give students a high quality education.

          The law is an important instrument in shaping staffing patterns in higher education, both through funding initiatives (such as California's 1988 act A.B. 1725, which provides incentives for community colleges to move toward a staffing pattern of 75 percent full-time instructors) and labor-equity decisions (such as recent decisions at the state and federal level determining the right of graduate employees at both public and private universities to collective bargaining).

          These developments have prompted NCTE to join other organizations, among them the Modern Language Association (MLA), American Historical Association (AHA), and American Association of University Professors (AAUP), to examine how the increasing reliance on graduate students and non-tenure-track faculty affects higher education. Be it therefore

Resolution

Resolved, that the National Council of Teachers of English reaffirm and extend its commitment to improving the status of part-time faculty; and

          that NCTE join other disciplinary and higher-education groups in encouraging legislative and policy bodies to adopt and fund initiatives that provide for labor equity in graduate employee and adjunct work.


 
 
 
Copyright © 1998- National Council of Teachers of English. All rights reserved in all media.
1111 W. Kenyon Road, Urbana, Illinois 61801-1096 Phone: 217-328-3870 or 877-369-6283
Read our Privacy Policy Statement and Links Policy. Use of this site signifies your agreement to the Terms of Use.
Educator Resources:  Elementary  |  Middle  |  Secondary  |  College  |  Parents/Students  |  Press/Policymakers  |  Job Announcements