NEA Higher Education Policy on Part-Time and Temporary Faculty
There is a recent societal trend toward the use of contingent
employees. Higher education must not become comfortable with that trend
and should resist its application on campus. Administrations are
increasingly hiring professionals into marginalized positions and
decreasing the numbers of tenured and tenure track faculty to the
detriment of those so marginalized, the institution, and the profession.
- NEA believes that it is time to end the abuse and inappropriate use of
part-time and temporary faculty by colleges and universities. Part-time
faculty should be treated no differently than full-time, tenured or
permanent faculty for purposes of employment conditions, including
eligibility to collectively bargain.
- Faculty work in non-standard employment situations for a variety of
reasons: because no full-time position is available, because part-time
employment is appropriate for them at that time in their career, because
they want to be involved in the academy. One of the primary abuses of
part-time faculty comes with campuses refusing to convert long-term
part-time positions into full-time, tenure track ones.
- It is appropriate to hire part-time faculty because of immediate
enrollment bulges, in grant-funded areas, for faculty on leave, or to serve
in a specialty area where there is clearly not a need for a full-time position.
- NEA believe it is inappropriate to maintain part-time lines long after
administrators can easily predict that large numbers of courses will be
necessary. Such part-time positions should be converted to full-time
tenure track positions, and the faculty in them offered the opportunity to
convert into full-time.
- Part-time faculty seeking full-time positions have the obligation to
ensure that their qualifications are competitive for the new positions,
including the attainment of an appropriate terminal degree, in return for
preference being given to those who have served the institution in
part-time employment.
- In order to ensure that the faculty are qualified to convert to
full-time, the institution, following appropriate governance procedures,
should develop and implement an appropriate evaluation system for part-time
and temporary faculty.
- Part-time and temporary faculty should be given equal treatment with
full-time faculty on campus in issues of resource allocation including
office space, access to phone and computer equipment, library facilities,
secretarial assistance and professional development opportunities, which
may include tuition waiver and sabbaticals. They should be included in
campus mailing lists.
- Salary schedules and benefits for part-time and temporary faculty should
be proportionate to their work on the campus: that is, they should be paid
for preparation time, office hours, committee assignments, and other
activities also performed by their full-time colleagues in the course of
their duties. Longevity should be taken into consideration. One
salary
structure that would accomplish this is pro rata pay. In return, part-time
and temporary faculty have the obligation to be on campus, meet with
students, remain current in their fields, and become part of institutional
life.
- The question of the role of part-time and temporary faculty in
institutional governance is a thorny one. On one hand, their connection
with any one campus may be tenuous as they might work at several
campuses. Moving from campus to campus may impair their ability to
participate. On the other hand, they are teaching large numbers of the
students on a campus, and their experiences and expertise are relevant to
promoting quality education.
- Part-time and temporary faculty should be treated as the professionals
they are and be involved in the governance of the campus.
- When part-time faculty wish to bargain collectively, they should be able
to do so. However, care should be taken in determining how they will be
organized and what their relationship will be with full-time faculty who
might also be in a bargaining unit. It should be a local determination
whether the part-time faculty are part of the full time bargaining unit or
whether they are part of a separate unit. What all faculty need to beware
of is the tendency on the part of administrations to pit full-time faculty
against part-time, which can easily be done through threats that increasing
resources for one group would be at the expense of the other.
- Full-time and part-time faculty are equal partners on the campus when it
comes to concerns about the delivery of quality education to the students.
This policy was first approved by NEA's Advisory Committee on Membership
and in May 2002 by the NEA Executive Committee. It is official NEA policy.