102 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
102 lines
5.8 KiB
Plaintext
Reprinted from the Education Workers Organizing Bulletin
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(Industrial Workers of the World), PO Box 762, Cortland NY 13045.
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Sample copy $1; 1-year subscription $4
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A Marxist Analysis of Participatory Management
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"I don't know what you have to say,
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"It doesn't matter anyway.
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"Whatever it is, I'm against it.
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"No matter what it is
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"or who commenced it,
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"I'm against it!"
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Groucho Marx, playing the college president in
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"Horsefeathers," greeted the faculty committee with those stirring
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words at the famous meeting when he announced that the
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institution's resources were to be yanked from academic programs in
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order to build up the college's failing football team.
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Administrators today are generally more sophisticated, and
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have built up so extensive an array of committee structures to
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incorporate faculty (and sometimes staff and students) into
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participatory management schemes that the U.S. Supreme Court has
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ruled that faculty are not workers, but rather part of management
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(and hence not entitled to union representation--the "justices"
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apparently did not trouble themselves to wonder why, if this was
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so, Yeshiva University's teachers felt they needed a union to
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protect themselves against the administration).
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Yet while these participatory management structures may have
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the appearance of democratic institutions, they rarely wield any
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genuine power. When I was an undergraduate, my program was
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theoretically governed by an assembly of students, faculty and
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staff that met to discuss curriculum, faculty needs, etc. (this was
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unique to our department, but several departments did have token
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student representation to faculty meetings). But year after year
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our decisions were routinely overturned and our faculty denied
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tenure.
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At the same school, student and student-faculty committees
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made recommendations on the allocation of student activity fees,
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only to have these decisions overturned when administrators took
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exception to our priorities; students were made to vote over and
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over again on fee hikes, the form of our "student government,"
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etc., until we got it right (i.e., they wore us down); and
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administrative operatives were sent from department to department
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as acting chair to bring recalcitrant departments in line.
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Ultimately the faculty senate voted no confidence in the chancellor
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and he was eased out--but not before doing enormous damage to the
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campus (nor has his successor been much better, to judge from
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reports from friends still in the area).
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More recently, my present department voted unanimously to
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renew two faculty contracts (including mine) and to deny tenure to
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someone who had been repeatedly warned that his work was not up to
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departmental standards. The college dean and president, however,
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overturned two of the three decisions--firing me and giving tenure
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to the fellow the department had unanimously found unqualified.
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(I seem to rub the bosses the wrong way--at my last job my
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department and a college-wide committee unanimously recommended me
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for promotion; instead the administration gave me the sack. The
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college's Academic Freedom Committee reviewed the case, including
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a memo in which the dean explained that I should be fired because
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I was trying to change University policies and criticizing
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administrators, and unanimously found that my rights had been
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violated and that I should be kept on. I was fired anyway.)
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Teachers and other educational workers devote a great deal of
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our time to the myriad of departmental and college-wide committees
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established to provide the illusion of participatory governance. We
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have personnel committees, ad-hoc committees, Faculty Senates,
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elections, advisory committees, Committees on Committees. But
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ultimately, all decisions are made by the administrators who are in
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no way accountable to these governance structures. Sure, faculty
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serve on the search committees which review prospective
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administrators' credentials and make recommendations for new ones
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and Faculty Senates have the right to ask administrators questions.
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But once the administrators are in place, they are accountable only
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to themselves and to higher administrators. Faculty committees may
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get a vote on who the new boss should be, but we don't have the
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power to remove administrators who turn out to be tyrants or simply
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incompetent. (Even where a no-confidence vote is taken, and this is
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no easy task, the administration often ignores it.)
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Colleges originally functioned without administrators, later
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we elected colleagues to handle routine bureaucratic functions in
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our behalf and to deal with unpleasantries such as wheedling money
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out of the government. It appears these early administrators served
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on a short-term basis, returning to the ranks of the faculty much
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like departmental chairs often do (in institutions where these are
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still accountable to the faculty) to this day. But power attracts
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the power-mad, and administrators long ago set themselves up as a
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caste apart, gathering enormous power over all aspects of the
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institution.
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Today, colleges across the country are facing budget cuts. But
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the numbers of administrators (and the enormous salaries they give
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themselves) continue to grow, even as faculty and staff ranks are
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being slashed. If we question the wisdom of their decisions, they
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establish another committee to keep us busy.
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Its time to ask ourselves whether we can afford
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administrators. They eat up resources that are desperately needed
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for education, they eat up our time with their endless paperwork,
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and they get in our way as we try to educate our students. It
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couldn't take much more time to run our institutions ourselves
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(staff, faculty and students together). As for the administrators,
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let them try teaching, sweeping the halls or some other useful job.
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X331117
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