Lesko Blog

  • Times are tough for everyone, and I have spent the past 18 years writing about the issues that impact the nation’s 700,000 faculty off of the tenure-track. When I began in 1992, there were 300,000 part-time faculty. Today, the Department of Education estimates that there are between 400,000 and 500,000 college faculty who hold temporary appointments. The remaining faculty off of the tenure-track are those who hold full-time temporary appointments, such as lectureships, visiting appointments and fixed-term teaching jobs.

    Just as the nature of the individual teaching part-time has changed since the late-70s (when 25 percent of faculty were part-time and the majority of those part-time faculty were professionals hired to teach specific courses), the Adjunct Advocate magazine has changed, as well. The publication was in print from 1992-2006. It was then that I decided to make the Adjunct Advocate an electronic publication with an accompanying PDF version. As technology evolved, and it became clear that downloading a PDF no longer appealed to most subscribers, I decided that Adjunct Advocate would exist as an e-zine, online only. Many larger publications followed Adjunct Advocate online, including the Christian Science Monitor and the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.

    What I was left puzzling out was the relationship between Adjunct Advocate and the magazine’s web page, AdjunctNation.com. As you know, AdjunctNation is not simply a companion site the Adjunct Advocate. It was never meant to be. It was designed to be a place for non-tenured faculty to come to use a variety of resources, such as the message boards, syllabus vault, and of course read the editorial content. Over the past six months, we have been working on the most effective way to leverage the almost 1,000 articles from the archived issues of Adjunct Advocate that readers can find online at AdjunctNation.com, and the idea of blogging combined with an e-zine. Blogs are instantaneous. Andrew Sullivan, who blogs on popular culture for The Atlantic, updates his blog multiple times each day.

    It seemed to me that there should be some way to combine the immediacy of a blog and the aspect of an online magazine. What I came up with and what we launched in November 2009 was the AdjunctNation.com E-Zine. When you visit the E-Zine page you will find a new icon that announces there is current content posted to the site. Some of the content will change over the course of a given month (like a blog) and be moved into our archive, where you can find it using the same article identifiers we have been using for 18 years. You’ll be able to search through features, news, reviews, interviews, profiles, etc…just as you always have, and we’ll be able to freshen content much more frequently!

    We’ve gone from a bimonthly online publication to an E-Zine that offers current content much more frequently than ever before. We’re not modeling InsideHigherEd.com and its daily news updates, but rather still focusing completely on faculty off the tenure-track on more in-depth analysis and reporting. Another change you’ll be seeing is that we are adding more bloggers to the site. At the moment, there are four blogs, you can expect that number of double over the course of the next few weeks. Visitors should look for new content daily on AdjunctNation.com.

    The other main concern I have always had was how to price the Adjunct Advocate so that a subscription was within reach of everyone who wanted one. Over the years, we have given away many subscriptions free of charge to part-time faculty who found themselves unable to pay. In 1992, a subscription was priced at $18 per year. That eventually rose to $35 per year for the print edition. Today, almost 20 years later, the new AdjunctNation.com Site Pass is priced at $20 per year, and includes access to all of the articles in the archive, as well as access to current content for one year. I am pleased most by the ability offer so much to our non-tenured faculty readers for a relatively modest sum. As always, if you find yourself unable to pay, but want to have a Site Pass, email me directly (pdl@adjunctadvocate.com).

    We are also in the process of revamping the e-newsletters. Both will be renamed as email alerts, but content of each will stay the same. Finally, have a look at the JOB-LIST. It is the largest collection of jobs for non-tenured faculty anywhere online. I am delighted at the changes, and at the opportunity to serve the population of faculty off the tenure-track in ways that are absolutely unique and, at the same time, familiar to those who have seen the development of the web site and AdjunctNation.com E-Zine. Adjunct Advocate/AdjunctNation.com has, once again, reinvented what it means to serve up information and resources to the majority of our nation’s college faculty, the ones who teach off the tenure-track. Going forward, we will work together to make AdjunctNation.com and the E-Zine a first stop online for tens of thousands of part-time, adjunct, full-time temporary and visiting college faculty.

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  • 25 Dec 2009 /  on blogging

    On the front page of the AdjunctNation.com site, there is a feature called The Daily Excuse. AdjunctNation.com Family members can log in and leave their best student excuses. Those excuses rotate on the front page. I thought it might be fund to post a longer list of the excuses that have been submitted. The names beside the excuses are of the individual who submitted the excuse.  Enjoy the list, and to submit your own student excuses, click here to log in to your account, and then add your classic to the list. You may submit as many as you like, but only the best of the best get chosen. If yours does, it will rotate along with the rest of the daily excuses submitted.

    I didn’t turn in my paper because my flash drive went through the washing machine. Hannah Sigur

    I can’t read cursive. Carrie Finn

    I cannot take the final exam on that date 4 months from now. My grandmother’s funeral will be on that day. Jim Harnish

    I didn’t know that the final draft of my essay was supposed to be typed. Deborah Cunningham

    I had a car accident and had to wait for the insurance adjuster. Hannah Sigur

    I won’t be in class today, as they are wheeling me into the E.R. right now, and I was wondering if I could turn it in next week(Sounds of T.V., videogame, talking, laughing in the background). Mark Witsaman

    My printer ran out of ink. Melissa Estelle

    My grandmother’s uncle’s mother-in-law died and we had to go to the funeral in Calcutta last night.  Sharon Martin

    My dog ate my computer. Rebecca Lindsay

    The dog ate my jump drive. Debby Bloom

    My car got towed and my homework was in the front seat. Joan Conrad

    I know you said we were supposed to follow your directions, but I didn’t think you meant me. Joan Conrad

    The roof of my house fell in. I cannot make it to class. Kathy Brooks

    My dog ate my laptop power cord. Stephen D Kempisty

    My house burned down. Stephen D Kempisty

    Thursday is the Warriors home playoff game and I REALLY want to go. The game is at 7:30. I can come and turn in my paper and then go, but I don’t want to hurt my grade. What do you suggest? Judy Juanita

    The “Electronic Dog” (read: computer) ate my homework. I allow one per student per semester; in Week 15, students auction off their unused excuses. Kate McIntire

    My assignment was in the back seat of my car which was confiscated when my cousin used it trying to solicit a prostitute. Carmen Pascaretti

    I was up all night with our new baby. Ronald Lucas

    My cat caught fire. Allan Zwierzko

    I never seen a cow before. I just relocated from Queens. I had to pull over. Sorry I’m so late for class. Liz Burke

    I’m going to be sick tomorrow. Yolanda Williams

    I think I’m going to be sick tomorrow. Yolanda Williams

    “My grandmother/grandfather died and I had to leave town unexpectedly” - I know; it’s not so unusual - except when A THIRD of the class uses this excuse; the sheer numbers make me wonder if our country is in the throes of a pandemic! Brian Cushing

    After two weeks of absence in a four week summer course the student arrives and says: I had car trouble. Thomas Cochran

    Sorry, I’m dead right now, can I turn it in next week? Jade Winters

    I have to go, my cat is on fire. Jade Winters

    I cannot make class today, I have to go to clinic, and if so, get an abortion. (I actually received this one via email from a student who had missed MANY classes in a row.) Jade Winters

    A squirrel ate the spark plug wires on my car. Nannette Crane

    My assignments are late because I am deceased with a death in the family. Tony Leisner

    I don’t do summers. (I got this one from a student who had missed several summer semester classes.) Laura Redic

    I’m having eye problems…can’t see coming to work! Roger Hayes

    I intended to do it correctly, but I didn’t. Ollie Foulk Library-Sub 1

    Unfortunately the desired due date didn’t clearly connect with my calendar. Amanda Harrison

    The Internet wasn’t working. Kirsti Dyer

    I think I remember that I forgot something that I really needed to complete that task for you. Sorry! Amanda Harrison

    I didn’t know where the assignment was supposed to turned in. Yolanda Williams

    I didn’t read the syllabus. Virginia Wood

    I’m sorry I missed class, but my canary had a miscarriage. Nancy Holmes

    My flash drive got sick from a cyber virus and vomited my homework into randomized bytes of data onto my hard drive causing my computer to crash. Robert Berlin

    I don’t know what happened on my Exam! Deborah Thompson

    I had the house sprayed and it dissolved my homework. Donna Reatz

    I missed class because I got my feet stuck in the microwave. I was trying to get the cat out at the time. Jennifer Henschel

    I resized my screen and THAT part of the Syllabus didn’t show. Vincent Cornish

    It’s not my fault. You didn’t remind me. Kathy Brooks

    My brother was stabbed in a bar fight. Donald Duvall

    Actual conversation with student: Me: Where is your exam? Student: Oh, I didn’t take it. Me: What do you mean you didn’t take it? Student: I mean I took it, just not physically. I took it mentally! Me: Mentally? Student: Yup. Emm C

    From same student: 1. Didn’t know when classes started. 2. Got lost on way to campus. 3. Hurt knee, may need mri. 4. Child sick and need to give 4 nebulizer treatments only during classtime. 5. Car accident. 6. Grandfather passed away. Emm C

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  • 26 Feb 2009 /  on blogging

    Just a quick entry to let folks know that I am blogging about part-time faculty at The Chronicle of Higher Education. Click here to read my February 26, 2009 entry. I’m very excited to have an opportunity to blog about part-time faculty there, as some of the entries I read on the site written by tenure-line faculty about part-time faculty issues are maddeningly inaccurate. For my first entry, I talked about pay parity and part-time faculty.

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