HIGHER ED FACULTY
What Tenured and Tenure-Track Professors at 4-Year Colleges Made in 2015-16
March 28, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
"Instructors on the tenure track earned the biggest median salary bump from last year, at 2.2 percent." read more >
March 28, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
"Instructors on the tenure track earned the biggest median salary bump from last year, at 2.2 percent." read more >
March 25, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
Backlash is mounting against Emory students who protested pro-Trump chalk messages. University's president is under fire for not dismissing them outright. read more >
March 24, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
AAUP attempts to reframe debate and put focus on due process and the importance of faculty freedom of speech. read more >
March 23, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
The Executive Council has approved the Tentative Agreement and has referred it to the membership for ratification. You will receive a ratification ballot in your PDX mailbox soon. read more >
March 23, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
Ron was an associate professor in the Department of Curriculum and Instruction, serving more than 25 years at PSU. He was a beloved teacher of math and science education, as well as a valued colleague throughout the University. read more >
March 23, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
Chinese students hire imposter “gunmen” to take the SAT, the GRE and other tests. read more >
March 17, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
On Tuesday evening, after a twelve hour bargaining session, PSU-AAUP and the administration reached an economic settlement! read more >
March 15, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
According to a news release issued by the federal Environmental Protection Agency, the wastes — nearly 2,000 containers of laboratory chemicals and other substances — were unsafely stored and inadequately identified read more >
March 14, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
“The joke among my friends is that you can be gay at Messiah, just so long as you don’t act gay, or say gay things, or do anything to show you’re gay.” read more >
March 09, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
People support expanding pre-school for kids, but when it comes to free, public higher education, opinions split along more familiar political lines. read more >
March 07, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
We spent two days this week, including a Sunday session trying to resolve our outstanding issues and preparing for our Thursday, March 10th economic bargaining session. read more >
March 07, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
Campus-carry laws, like the one going into effect in Texas, pose a profound threat to free speech. read more >
March 04, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
When efforts to resolve a federal investigation into how the University of Virginia handled reports of sexual violence began in earnest last spring, campus officials were corresponding with a lawyer in a U.S. Department of Education field office. By the time the case was resolved in September, tense legal wrangling had reached the highest levels of the university, the state, and the federal agency. read more >
March 02, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
Portland Business Alliance questions constitutionality of the measure read more >
March 02, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
Conceptual agreement on Individual Professional Development Accounts! But still playing budgetary games… read more >
March 01, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
The University of Oregon's police chief has abruptly left the post. read more >
February 29, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
Carolyn Stefanco, president of the College of Saint Rose, cut 23 faculty positions and 12 academic programs. She won a prize for her efforts. read more >
February 26, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
Two public colleges in Illinois announced additional belt-tightening measures this week as they enter their ninth month without state funding due to a budget impasse in the legislature. read more >
February 23, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
In our Friday, February 19th bargaining session, we reached a tentative agreement on AP Workload and Terms of Employment issues. Those of you who have been closely following this negotiation know that we’ve spent hours going back and forth with the administrative team about what full-time employment means for academic professionals. read more >
February 19, 2016 / PSU-AAUP
Raising tuition every year has become a higher-education rite of passage, almost as predictable as graduation ceremonies. read more >