|
Here's
an exciting career opportunity you won't see in the classified ads. For the
first six to 10 years, it pays less than $20,000 and demands superhuman levels
of commitment in a Dickensian environment. Forget about marriage, a mortgage, or
even Thanksgiving dinners, as the focus of your entire life narrows to the
production, to exacting specifications, of a 300-page document less than a dozen
people will read. Then it's time for advancement: Apply to 50 far-flung,
undesirable locations, with a 30 to 40 percent chance of being offered any
position at all. You may end up living 100 miles from your spouse and commuting
to three different work locations a week. You may end up $50,000 in debt, with
no health insurance, feeding your kids with food stamps. If you are the luckiest
out of every five entrants, you may win the profession's ultimate prize: A
comfortable middle-class job, for the rest of your life, with summers off.
Welcome to the world of the humanities Ph.D.
student, 2004, where promises mean little and revolt is in the air. In the past
week, Columbia's graduate teaching assistants went on strike and temporary, or
adjunct, faculty at New York University narrowly avoided one. Columbia's
Graduate Student Employees United seeks recognition, over the administration's
appeals, of a two-year-old vote that would make it the second officially
recognized union at a private university. NYU's adjuncts, who won their union in
2002, reached an eleventh-hour agreement for health care and office space, among
other amenities.
Grad students have always resigned
themselves to relative poverty in anticipation of a cushy, tenured payoff. But
in the past decade, the rules of the game have changed. Budget pressures have
spurred universities' increasing dependence on so-called "casual
labor," which damages both the working conditions of graduate students and
their job prospects. Over half of the classroom time at major universities is
now logged by non-tenure-track teachers, both graduate teaching
assistants—known as TAs—and adjuncts. At community colleges, part-timers
make up 60 percent of the faculties.
Average teaching loads for grad students
have increased, while benefits are often cut off after five years. Humanities
TAs are paid stipends ranging from less than $10,000 at a public school like
SUNY-Buffalo to $18,000 at unionized NYU. Adjuncts, more and more likely to be
recent post-docs who couldn't find a better position, earn less than $3,000 a
course—usually without benefits, and far less than the $60,000 yearly national
average for full-time professors. Meanwhile, the debt burden has grown: The
average holder of a graduate degree spends 13.5 percent of his or her income
paying back loans (eight percent is considered manageable). Fifty-three percent
of those holding master's degrees, 63 percent of those holding doctorates, and
69 percent of those holding professional degrees are over $30,000 in debt. If
they end up as "marginal employees," the academic freedom and security
of tenure is replaced by a constant anxiety and alienation.
But the Internet means no isolated community
has to stay that way. A new group of tortured, funny, largely anonymous websites
are providing an outlet for academics who feel like they're getting spanked by
their alma mater. They have names like Invisible Adjunct, (a)musings of a grad
student, Beyond Academe, and Barely Tenured, and they address the emotional just
as much as the practical consequences of competing in, and losing, the academic
job-market lottery.
Founded in February 2003, Invisible Adjunct
quickly became one of the most popular such blogs. Dozens of regular posters
followed discussion threads like "The Old Boy Network" and "Is
Tenure a Cartel?" Invisible Adjunct's author—call her IA—is a New
Yorker in her late thirties with a Ph.D. in British history, an adjunct for the
past two years. "I've spent all these years and I've failed," says IA,
who entered graduate school in 1993 and received her Ph.D. in 1999. "You
agree to do this five-to-seven-year low-paid apprenticeship because you're
joining this guild. And if you end up as an adjunct you think, wow, I'm really
getting screwed over."
The also pseudonymous Thomas H. Benton was a
frequent contributor to Invisible Adjunct's blog and has penned a series of
cautionary columns for the Chronicle of Higher Education. He is even more
blunt than IA. "The premise of graduate education in the humanities is a
lie: Students are not apprentices preparing for a life of scholarship and
teaching," he says. "They are a cheap source of labor and status for
institutions and faculty and, after they earn their degrees, most join the
reserve army of the academic underemployed." Benton, a professor at a small
liberal arts college, warns his students about trying to follow in his
footsteps. "My experience as a working-class kid who finally earned an Ivy
League Ph.D. is that higher education is not about social mobility or personal
enrichment; it is one trap among many for people who are uninitiated into the
way power and influence operate in this culture."
|