Monday, June 8, 2009

Community College goals and reforms to be tossed aside?

From this morning’s Sacramento Bee:

Governor offers new plan to help community colleges weather budget cuts

Lawmakers are considering new proposals from Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger to allow community college districts flexibility to use more part-time instructors as part of the state's massive budget-cutting efforts.

The proposals are opposed by community college instructors and their largest union, the California Federation of Teachers, which recently helped defeat a Schwarzenegger-backed ballot measure – Proposition 1A – that would have extended newly imposed tax increases.

"Nothing the governor says these days surprises us," [CFT communications director Fred] Glass [said]. "He seems to be using this (fiscal crisis) as an opportunity to slash-and-burn education."

Specifically, Schwarzenegger is calling for a five-year suspension of portions of state education code that require 50 percent of a community college district's educational expenditures to be used for teacher salaries and which set a systemwide goal that 75 percent of instructional hours be taught by full-time faculty….


Cal Poly Pomona cancels summer session, affecting O.C. students (OC Reg)

Facing up to $35 million in budget cuts, Cal Poly Pomona (CPP) has abruptly canceled its summer session, eliminating a broad range of classes for 6,600 full and part-time students, some of whom live in Orange County.

CPP formally announced on June 5 that it has canceled its summer quarter classes, which were to begin on the staggered dates of June 22 and July 29. [Campus spokeswoman Uyen] Mai said CPP is studying whether it can offer some of the courses through its College of the Extended University, starting July 13.

If it is able to provide this alternative, students will have to pay more for their education. Mai said that a student taking 8 units of lecture classes in the regular summer quarter would have paid about $1,200. The figure would be closer to $1,800 through university extension….

Tenure and the public interest/another investigative reporter exits, stage left

Last week: at the Grand Canyon

From this morning’s
Inside Higher Ed:
Tenure's Value ... to Society
A judge ruled last week in Colorado that not only is tenure a good thing for the professors who enjoy it, it is valuable to the public. Further, the court ruled that the value (to the public) of tenure outweighed the value of giving colleges flexibility in hiring and dismissing….

While noting "countervailing public interests" in the case, the judge wrote that
"the public interest is advanced more by tenure systems that favor academic freedom over tenure systems that favor flexibility in hiring or firing." The ruling added that "by its very nature, tenure promotes a system in which academic freedom is protected" and that "a tenure system that allows flexibility in firing is oxymoronic."

Rachel Levinson, senior counsel for the AAUP, called the ruling "fantastic," both for the individual faculty members and for professors elsewhere….

"More broadly, what this does is reiterate the value of tenure and the importance of tenure, and that tenure itself can be a public interest," Levinson said….

THIS JUST IN:

The OC Weekly’s
R. Scott Moxley reports that Los Angeles Times in OC loses key investigative reporter.

According to Moxley,
Christine Hanley has resigned. He's got good things to say about her:

For several years, Hanley was the lone daily reporter who joined me in determined pursuit of Sheriff Mike Carona's corruption at the Orange County Sheriff's Department. She broke key Carona stories, got reluctant witnesses to talk, found smoking-gun documents and withstood the intimidation that comes with challenging a twisted little man who had no business running California's second largest policing agency. Her excellence made me a better journalist.

Moxley includes her June 1 email to her colleagues.

Other exiting OC reporters:
Norberto Santana Jr., John Gittelsohn both of the OC Register.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...