Advertisement

News, Views and Careers for All of Higher Education

Nicholls State Faulted on Treatment of Long-Term Adjunct

After 12 years of work, you are entitled to more than one day of notice that you no longer have a job, even without tenure. That is among the conclusions of a report by an investigative committee of the American Association of University Professors

The AAUP found that Nicholls State University, in Louisiana, violated the due process rights and academic freedom of Maureen Watson when it terminated her in that way last year. Watson had been working as a non-tenure-track lecturer in mathematics, earning exemplary reviews until her dismissal.

The association found several problems with how she was treated. On the issue of due process, the association noted that its guidelines call on colleges to treat all faculty members either as probationary or as having the due process rights that come with tenure or other forms of long-term employment. Watson was “well beyond” the point where she was entitled to real due process, the AAUP committee found.

Because Nicholls State didn’t provide a clear reason for its decision, the AAUP evaluated evidence suggesting that reasons given to Watson weren’t true and that other, inappropriate issues may have been at play. Watson said she was initially told that her job was being eliminated both because of tight budgets and the concern that the mathematics department was using too many of its alumni, like Watson, to teach. But the AAUP found subsequent hiring took place in the department, and that alumni were hired after Watson started there.

Some evidence, which the AAUP said the university did not refute, suggests that Watson was punished because of clashes she had with administrators who were concerned that she was failing too many students. While no evidence was presented that Watson was failing students inappropriately, she spoke in defense of standards when officials raised questions about high failure rates in some departments and indicated that they were looking at the rates of individual faculty members.

“The Nicholls administration’s efforts to reduce failing grades seem to have been detrimental to the climate for academic freedom by causing faculty members in affected departments to believe that they did not have the right to assign grades based on their own knowledge and judgment,” said the AAUP report. “Ms. Watson exercised her own academic freedom by grading as she saw fit, despite the administration’s pressure for a reduction in failing grades. Her dismissal, if the investigating committee’s conclusion on the matter stands unrebutted by the administration, was therefore in violation of her academic freedom. The investigating committee commends her determination to grade according to her best professional assessment of the merits of student performance.”

The report concluded: “No plausible reason for the administration’s dismissal of Ms. Watson can be ascertained other than its displeasure with her having assigned a large percentage of failing grades to her students in college algebra. Dismissing her for that reason, assuming the reason remains unrebutted, violated her academic freedom. Her insistence on grading in accordance with her best professional judgment of a student’s academic performance warranted not dismissal but commendation.”

Nicholls State did not respond to messages seeking comment. The AAUP provides advance copies of its reports to the universities discussed, and Nicholls State rejected the underlying premises of the association, but didn’t offer different versions of the facts. The AAUP report said that administrations “reiterated that under Nicholls State and University of Louisiana system policies, full-time faculty members who are neither tenured nor probationary for tenure, regardless of how many years they have served, are not entitled to advance notice of non-retention, reasons for non-retention, or opportunity for appeal.”

Scott Jaschik

Got something to say?


Want it on paper? Print this page.
Know someone who’d be interested? Forward this story.
Want to stay informed? Sign up for free daily news e-mail.

Advertisement

Comments

Here we go again...

Hats off to Maureen Watson for doing the right thing! At least she leaves with her integrity intact. The same cannot be said for those who dismissed her!

Steven D. Aird, at 7:05 am EST on November 13, 2008

Adjuncts are treated as sub human

Administrators know that you don’t have to feed them much, but you can work them to the bone...and bonus, see below”

“...Watson was punished because of clashes she had with administrators who were concerned that she was failing too many students.”

The ultimate budget and retention tool;treat the instructor as if they just don’t matter. Ironic given that the professors are the folks that allegedly are the most important to the college.

And business types say that academia does not do what they do and have much to learn about “state of the art” business practices. They should be proud. I would say that they have learned too well.

dundermifflin, at 8:35 am EST on November 13, 2008

If You Want to Keep Teaching as an Adjunct...

You better be cognizant of how many students fail your course. If your failure rate is too high, you’re simply going to have to dummy down the course. It doesn’t matter that you set your standards high, if too many students fail the college may lose business. Well, you know what administrators do when enrollment goes down...whatever they can to bring enrollment up. If that means firing a teacher with ethics and a belief that students should learn college level material, well..that’s just a small price to pay for making sure classes are full. So if you want to keep your job your mantra should be “Dummy Down So the Admins Don’t Frown.”

Steve S., at 9:40 am EST on November 13, 2008

Similar Experience

I found myself more than once in a similar situation where deans basically insisted I pass or raise the grades of students above my evaluations— and I am a pretty easy grader! Of course, I did not “last” at either institution. If deans want to change grades let them put their initials by that grade! For me, all of this provies the need for national exams in various basic subjects including math, all types of history, all languages, all sciences. The fragmented system of higher education in the end serves none.... Obviously, various lab skills cannot be tested with pen and paper but a heck of a lot can be tested. The advantage of this is that we would be more or less on a single page instead of across the map in terms of what was considered basic education.

Anna Lee, at 11:00 am EST on November 13, 2008

Adjuncts of the world unite?

Aren’t conditions ripe for adjunct unions?

Ken D., at 11:25 am EST on November 13, 2008

Isn’t it eerie. . .

How the “standards” in public (K-12) education percolate upward?

It’s like the rising of the water table — except that it’s now the “sewage” table.

Sweep it all under the carpet — let’s just MoveOn.

DFS, at 6:05 pm EST on November 14, 2008

Advertisement

 Jobs Related to Nicholls State Faulted on Treatment of Long-Term Adjunct

or search for jobs directly.

Associate Dean of Admissions & Student Services
Confidential

Unique opportunity with top Health and Science Medical Center in the Southwest see job

Master of Public Health Program Director
Walden University

Walden University is focused exclusively on providing a superior university experience for adult professionals through the ... see job

Part-Time Program Administrator, Achieving the Dream
Lone Star College System

Located just north of Houston, Texas, our five campuses serve 1,400 square miles. Our student enrollment is nearly 50,000 in ... see job

Nursing Program Administrator/Assistant Dean School of Health Professions
Community College of Baltimore County

Job Responsibilities: The Nursing Program Administrator (NPA)/Assistant Dean of the School of Health ... see job

Assistant Provost for Lifelong Learning
Florida Atlantic University

Florida Atlantic University seeks an experienced professional to assume leadership of its non-credit enrichment programs for ... see job

Department Administrator IV
Weill Medical College of Cornell University

Founded in 1898, and affiliated with what is now New York-Presbyterian Hospital since 1927, Weill Cornell Medical College ... see job

Associate Dean
Western Michigan University

Western Michigan University (WMU), a leading public comprehensive research institution of higher learning in one of the ... see job

Associate Dean
Western Carolina University

Western Carolina University’s Hunter Library invites applications and nominations for the position of Associate Dean of ... see job

Associate Academic Dean II
DeVry University

As one of the largest degree-granting higher education systems in North America, DeVry University provides high-quality, ... see job

Professor/Dept Head Computer Science and Engineering
Mississippi State University

Professor/Department Head Computer Science and Engineering Mississippi State University see job