The Single Biggest Threat…Bill Scheuerman's Own Members…
Call me nosy, but since there has been all this fuss over New York State's Higher Education Commission Preliminary Report, I thought I'd read it. Well, to be truthful, I entered the search term "part-time faculty" and jumped from entry to entry. I got a dozen matches for the search term, only three of which were related to part-time faculty.
Here's what the Commission had to say about the part-time faculty who teach on the 80+ campuses throughout the state (the bolding is mine, not the Commission's):
- The decline in share of national research and development is but one of many troubling indicators noted by the Commission. From a backlog of critical maintenance to the dramatic rise in the percentage of classes taught by adjunct, part-time faculty, all of our higher education institutions—public and private—are in need of strategic investment.
- For example, campuses have hired more part-time, less expensive adjunct faculty. Failure to invest in a strong base of full-time faculty poses the single greatest threat to academic quality.
- Indeed, New York State's public colleges and universities continue to fall further behind peer institutions in the amount of operating revenue per student full-time equivalent (FTE) and, as a result, must search for cost-saving alternatives such as hiring more part-time, less expensive adjunct faculty in lieu of full-time faculty. Regardless of the benchmark one chooses, the proportion of full-time faculty or any number of student-faculty ratios, the story is the same: SUNY and CUNY need many more full-time faculty.