“Those who can, do.
Those who can’t, teach.”
The above saying has been on my mind often lately. My mother used to mutter it when I was a kid,
for reasons unknown to me. I have grown
to realize she was echoing a sentiment held by our society and perhaps the root
of the predicament that many of my colleagues and I find ourselves in.
I never aspired to be a teacher. Sure, I eagerly assumed the role of teacher
when playing School with other children when I was little. Throughout primary and most of secondary
school I did very well, especially in English-related classes. My favorite book as a young girl was Jane Eyre, and her time in the
schoolroom was always one of the most romantic parts for me. I was also fascinated by my teachers. Some inspired me in ways I will never forget
(shout-out to Mr. Reed!). So, without
knowing it then, I was classic teacher-material. But what I really wanted to be was a writer.
In college, I concentrated on English. My thinking was that, all the great writers
before me had a broad understanding of the works that came before them, and I
needed that, too. I took every
literature and creative writing class available. I wrote poetry, was published, and won
awards. All the while, though, my
foreign-born father pressed me to major in something more “substantial.” At the time I thought I was compromising by
double-majoring in English and Communication.
In my last two years I studied for classes like Introduction to Literary
Theory as well as Media and Mass Communication.
From term to term I got the highest marks, but had very little direction
as to a potential profession. I
graduated summa cum laude with
absolutely no idea what to do next.
For a year I worked retail and hung out with my friends who
still lived in town. As chance would
have it, I met someone from Europe and decided to try and move there. During my undergraduate years I had read an
academic novel by David Lodge entitled Small
World. It’s a brilliant book about
English professors traveling the globe, mingling and attending conferences. It made an indelible impression on me, so I
determined that my best plan of action would be to apply to graduate schools
and become an English professor myself.
One of the most exciting days of my life was receiving an acceptance
from a prestigious school in the Netherlands to study English Literature. I even won the full tuition waiver to attend
school at no cost, like a European citizen.
For a year and a half, I buried my nose in books and wrote papers, while
making international friendships and traveling the continent. I never imagined my life would take such a marvelous
path.
I received my M.A. with high marks. One of my professors was also an editor for
an academic publishing company, and offered to include a version of my master’s
thesis in his latest collection. Now I
could say I was a legitimate scholar! I
was considering universities for my doctoral studies. My future seemed promising before me.
For personal reasons, I returned to the United States. The return was more than my physical
location; I kind of reverted back to my old lifestyle. I started hostessing in a restaurant where
many of my friends, and Bruce, worked.
We’d all hang out together after hours, content to live from day to day. But I yearned for more, and one night
attended a poetry reading at the community college where I got my Associate
degree. Afterwards I ran into one of my
old professors, who was the chair of the department, and he offered to hire me
as a part-time instructor. In my naïve
eyes, I had become a ‘professor,’ and at such a young age! I had never heard the term adjunct back then.
I was surprised by my first college paycheck. I made more in tips at the restaurant! I applied to be an instructor at my other
alma mater, where I received my Bachelor’s, and was hired. For a while I was teaching at two schools,
hostessing at two restaurants, tutoring at a writing lab, and tutoring as a
Literacy Volunteer. I also started
dating Bruce. How 24 hours in a day
seems to be so much more when we are young!
Bruce and I both moved to Chicago, a dream I had had since
childhood. I knew I could never support
myself as a part-time instructor in the city, so I quit teaching and got a
well-paying job in the hospitality industry.
For five years, we lived the urban life, in the same neighborhood as
some of our best friends. It was the 9-5
with partying on the weekends. Then
Bruce and I got engaged, married, and desired to start a family. We moved back to the suburbs.
After so much time away from instructing, I worried that I
wouldn’t be able to get back in the game.
I applied for a nearby for-profit college. They called me in for an interview and asked
me to prepare a lesson to give the dean, the department chair, and some of the
faculty. It was nerve-wracking, but I
did well enough for them to offer me a job.
I remember it was summer, and I got back in my warm, stuffy car, whipped
out my cell phone and sent a mass text to my loved ones: “I’m a professor
again!” It wasn’t until later that I
learned about the controversies surrounding for-profit schools and that an
adjunct is not the same as a professor.
I didn’t make as much as I did at the hotel, but I was usually
given enough classes to eke out a living and contribute towards our paying
debts and household expenses. Bruce had
a new job, too, that was commission-based, and the unpredictable nature of both
our jobs meant that some months we struggled.
I got a job teaching at another school for additional income. Then I got pregnant.
As I’ve chronicled in this blog, having a child
ultimately meant a loss of pay during maternity leave. When I returned to work, a there was a
drastic reduction in the availability of classes I could teach. I teach far less now that I can only work
nights and weekends. Yes, I chose to
stay home with my child. But it’s more
complicated than that – even if I chose to keep my availability open so that I
could teach more, I still wouldn’t get paid enough to afford daycare. If I arranged some type of family sitter,
like my semi-retired father-in-law, my changing schedule from term to term
could pose conflicts with his own agenda.
If I want to stay working in my profession, staying at home with Emmie
was really the only option.
Being an adjunct means this:
You probably have an advanced degree in your field, a Master’s or a PhD. You are considered an expert in your subject
area who can share that expertise with others.
You did not necessarily get a degree in education. You were hired as a part-time instructor
based on your curriculum vitae, your body of academic and professional achievements. The department chair or dean offers you a
class or two for the following term. You
most likely won’t get offered more than two because schools now have a
restriction on the number of classes an adjunct can teach, which one of my schools
blamed on the Affordable Care Act in an email memo that was sent out. You act as a per-contract worker, so you have
no idea how many classes you will get from one semester to another, or if you
will get any at all. There’s no
guarantee that you will work. With any
luck, if you do get offered a class, it will be weeks in advance so that you
have time to prepare a syllabus and lessons plans. It doesn’t always work out that way, though,
and many times I’ve created a syllabus the night before, pouring over an
unfamiliar textbook and crossing my fingers that my plan will make sense in
time. I’ve read chapters immediately
before assigning them to my students, though obviously I give the impression
I’m completely in charge of the coursework.
Sometimes, you get offered a class, count on the income, and
then it gets cancelled due to low enrollment days before the start date,
after you’ve already prepared everything.
When that happens, at least in the state of Illinois, you can’t even apply
for unemployment. You’re simply out of
luck.
An adjunct usually doesn’t have an office on campus. The work is done predominantly at home. Even though my “office” is in my basement, I
can’t write it off for tax purposes like other self-employed people can, don’t
ask me why. Sometimes, there will be a
room at school for the adjuncts to share, with copy machines and maybe a
computer and printer. At one of my
places of employment, I’m not sure I’m even allowed to use the printer that’s
in the faculty workroom, because it’s not linked to my classroom computer. However, I pride myself on being moderately
technically-savvy and figured out how to add the printer to my computer before
each class. I bet other adjuncts for
that university are printing off their work in the library alongside the
students or with their home computers. I
refuse to use my personal supplies whenever possible. Ink and paper are expensive! I don’t get paid enough to cover those costs
as well.
How much do I get paid?
For 16 weeks of work, the average I’ve seen has been around $2300. Some schools pay more, some pay far
less. The pay is for the time spent in the
classroom and does not include the work that happens outside: preparing
syllabi, lesson plans, grading papers, answering emails, writing letters of
recommendations, professional development.
This is hours and hours a week per class. As I’ve noted here in this blog, one
school had me creating a new online course for six months before I saw a penny. I don’t qualify for insurance and only
retirement benefits at one state school.
The argument can be made that part-time workers anywhere
don’t normally get benefits. But last
year between my two schools I taught more credit hours than a full-time faculty
member. If there weren’t restrictions on
the number of courses I can teach at either school, I could easily have taught
a full-time coursework at one institution.
Just think: these schools can hire two or three adjuncts to teach the
equivalent of a full-time course load without having to pay a full-time salary
or benefits. Last year, I made $20,000
teaching 28 credit hours and taking substitute jobs. At one of my schools, the full-time course
load is 18-24 credit hours and the average full-time faculty member earns
$70,000 a year. Do the math. Recently, in a faculty meeting, I learned
that at one of my schools adjunct instructors comprise 75% of the faculty. Three-quarters of the faculty is paid at the poverty
level while the institution continues to raise tuition, create new jobs for
administrators, raise the salaries of administrators, advertise everywhere from
online to billboards, and construct new buildings.
There are different types of adjuncts. There are the ones who have careers outside
of academia and are just looking to teach on the side. Along with those, there are the retired
professionals or teachers who aren’t ready to stop working entirely. Then there are the adjuncts who are supported
by spousal income. I suppose I fall into
that category, but it feels more like I’m in the last one, the adjuncts who are
called “freeway flyers” due to the fact that they spend their time in
the car, driving from one school to another, trying to scrape together an
income. For these types of instructors,
the lifestyle is exhausting. We work on
our “days off”. We work on
weekends. I even check and respond to
emails when I am not currently teaching classes. When an adjunct isn’t in the car or the
classroom, they are bent over a desk somewhere, doing all the outside work I
mentioned before. We walk into our
classroom, teach, and go home. Rarely do
we connect with our bosses or other faculty.
We are lone wolves.
This is clearly not the best environment for students to be
in. Students need instructors who are
adequately prepared in every case, who collaborate with peers. An instructor who is travelling from school
to school and working from home and out of a briefcase cannot possibly be as primed
as he or she would be if everything was in one place. Despite this, most of us are doing the best
we can to stay on top of our work, to put the students’ educations first. Lately, adjuncts have come under scrutiny
for not educating students to the same standards as full-time faculty. Since Bruce has gone back to school, I’ve
actually witnessed the opposite. His
full-time professors take days to answer emails. Many have been disorganized with a
lackadaisical nature towards the students.
If they have tenure, meaning they can’t get fired, what would compel
them to work harder?
Since our position with an institution is so precarious,
some adjuncts have folded under the pressure and given students passing grades
in order to boost their student evaluations scores. These scores are often the only interaction
we have with administrators and keep us in good standing. I was in a similar, yet fundamentally
different situation. Though I couldn’t
say for sure, I got the impression at the for-profit school where I formerly
taught that failing a student was discouraged.
I sensed that they wanted students to keep moving along so that the
tuition would keep rolling in. I
instructed and graded the students fairly and at college-level, but started to
get passed over in favor of other, ‘easier’ instructors for classes by the
administrators, despite my consistently high-ranking evaluations.
A career as an adjunct means there is little or no time left
to augment our professional credentials.
When do we have time to do our own research or writing? How can I find time to publish when I have to
work a retail job just to make ends meet? Full-time faculty and tenured professors are
expected to attend conferences, do research, and publish. Their salaries include this expectation,
usually with the result that they teach less in order to do so. That’s why adjuncts are necessary, just like
part-time workers in a fast food joint support the managers.
The increasing corporatization of academia is finally
getting recognized by the media. In the
past few months, the New York Times and
the Atlantic have done pieces on this
phenomenon, as well as Yahoo! News. Some might contend that this is the way the
country is going, that the way of the world is that there will always be people
at the top and many more people at the bottom.
I see this point. However, you
have to understand, when instructors like me are responsible for educating all
the people who become educated – English composition classes are required at
every institution of higher learning for a reason – shouldn’t these instructors
at least make a living wage? Shouldn’t they
have some sense of job security? No one
ever says, “My college dean really prepared me for my career,” or, “My
university president really helped me to realize my potential and nurture my
skills.” Most of the time, students
never meet their dean or the president.
Often, students don’t even interact with full-time
professors until they are far along in their degree program. Since adjuncts are mainly responsible for
instructing the introductory-level classes, we are usually the first interactions
the students have with faculty. We make
the first impression. We can be the
reason a student succeeds and moves forward and keeps paying that precious
tuition. We are the lifeblood of the
institution.
This is not how I feel on a daily basis, however. Being a lone wolf is lonely. Most adjuncts don’t have the time to get
involved, don’t get paid to be involved, and/or are not invited to be involved
with campus life. We are excluded by our
peers. I once had a fellow English
instructor (who was tenured) refer to the other tenured English professors as his
“colleagues” to me. Apparently he did
not consider me a colleague, even though I have attained the same level of
education as him and teach the many of the same classes. I’ve been in meetings where I’m the only
adjunct and have felt entirely out of place.
In one a professor mentioned breezily how before she was full-time she’d
have to dig for change in her couch to pay for things. I turned bright red. Because we are paid considerably less, we
feel lesser. As another adjunct put it,
I am “merely an adjunct.” As my
father-in-law observed to me once, some character in a movie was “a real
professor.”
Why do adjuncts put up with this way of life? Many of us would reply, “Because I love what
I do.” I love English. I love reading and writing and critical
thinking and showing others the beauty and necessity of all of it. But just because we love what we do, does
that mean we should be treated as less than others? What I do matters. We’re living in a culture that ignores the
significance of manual labor, that funnels high-school graduates towards
college and requires entry-level job applicants to have Bachelor’s degrees. Despite this overemphasis on higher education,
we pay the majority of our educators less than what their pupils will someday
earn. I have had so many students come
back and thank me for helping them get scholarships or for preparing them so
that they earned high marks on papers in other classes. They’ve shared with me how my instruction has
aided them in getting recognized in their own careers. They have no idea that I barely make enough
money to afford the clothes I wear to work.
Maybe that old adage about “Those who can’t” isn’t misguided. Maybe I should have listened to my father and
gotten a practical job in business or marketing or something. Heavens knows I’d make more money. I regularly consider abandoning this
profession like I did once before. But
if three-quarters of university faculty chose another career, who would be left
to educate everybody? Without higher
learning, what would become of our society?
Benjamin Franklin noted that “an investment in knowledge pays the best
interest.” In order for that interest to
ultimately pay out, we also need to invest in those who do the educating.