Wednesday May 28 & Thursday May 29
On the Quad
Attention University of Chicago Students, Staff, and Faculty
On Wednesday May 28th and Thursday May 29th, we call upon you
to hold your classes outside to show solidarity with graduate
student employees and their demands for fair pay, guaranteed
teaching opportunities, and health care benefits.
For over a year, we have been calling attention to the
shockingly low wages paid to graduate students teachers. Our
pay has not increased in over eight years. Whether we grade
papers as Teaching Assistants ($1,500 per quarter) or instruct
a course ($3,500 per quarter), our pay remains the lowest
among peer institutions and most area universities, and far
below the cost of living. Furthermore, none of the teaching
positions we hold include health care insurance or other
employee benefits,
The work we do is essential to the functioning of this
university, but we are paid as if we are disposable.
In response, Graduate Students United and the Graduate
Council's Graduate Funding Committee have been collecting
petitions, holding rallies, and organizing students to fight
for a change. While we have won some improvements in graduate
stipends, summer funding, and dissertation fellowships, these
limited changes have not met the needs of current students.
And it was only at the start of the Spring Quarter that we
were successful in getting the Provost's Office to convene a
student-faculty Committee on Teaching to review these and
other employment issues.
While this committee will likely recommend a much-needed raise
in teaching pay, these recommendations must be approved by
many of the same administrators who have failed year after
year to increase pay!
To help support the work of the Teaching Committee, Graduate
Students United and the Graduate Funding Committee is calling
for a two-day Teach Out so that the university can see how
much teaching we do as well as how much support we have from
students, staff, and faculty.
Who: All Students, Staff, and Professors
Where: Outside on the Main Quad
What: A Two-Day Teach Out in Solidarity with Graduate Students
When: Wednesday May 28th and Thursday May 29th
Why: Graduate students demand fair pay and health care
coverage for all university employees!
For more info or a PDF copy of the event flyer, contact:
Joe Bonni: joebonni@uchicago.edu
Toussaint Losier: tlosier@uchicago.edu
Sponsored by:
the Graduate Funding Committee
Graduate Students United
Saturday, May 24, 2008
Chicago Maroon: Grad Group Seeks Better Benefits
The formation this school year of Graduate Students United (GSU), a group of graduate students seeking to improve graduate employee benefits at the University, has added yet another voice to the chorus of calls for better representation and funding at the University.
GSU was organized in September to present a unified group to advocate for graduate student worker issues.
“The main goal was to build the power of working graduate students,” GSU member Jack Lesniewski said. “Not to be relying on ad-hoc committees or on particular administration at particular points but to have a sustained power and presence that democratically represents the interests of working graduate students.”
Click here for more:
http://www.chicagomaroon.com/online_edition/article/9846
GSU was organized in September to present a unified group to advocate for graduate student worker issues.
“The main goal was to build the power of working graduate students,” GSU member Jack Lesniewski said. “Not to be relying on ad-hoc committees or on particular administration at particular points but to have a sustained power and presence that democratically represents the interests of working graduate students.”
Click here for more:
http://www.chicagomaroon.com/online_edition/article/9846
Saturday, May 17, 2008
Article in the University of Chicago Magazine
“First we took our classes / Then we wrote up our MAs,” sang Joe Grim Feinberg, AM’06, a fifth-year anthropology graduate student and Graduate Students United (GSU) member, at a March 12 rally outside Swift Hall. “Then we took exams / And we proposed to dissertate. / Then we did our research in the field so far away. / Then we looked into our pockets / And we found we had no pay.”
Click to read more:
http://magazine.uchicago.edu/0856/chicago_journal/graduated_aid.shtml
Click to read more:
http://magazine.uchicago.edu/0856/chicago_journal/graduated_aid.shtml
Friday, May 16, 2008
Chronicle of Higher Ed:Grad Student Union Launched at U. of Chicago
In 2004, the Bush mob’s infamous executive arrogance in the Brown decision jammed the brakes on the organizing of graduate student employees at private universities (previously green-lighted by a bipartisan unanimous NLRB decision consistent with the law governing grad employees at public institutions, affirming the victory of GSOC-UAW at NYU).
Despite the setback, organizing is once more on the front burner at private universities in the U.S., including by committed, activist grad employees at the University of Chicago, outraged by an unfair stipend arrangement and by some of the lowest wages for teaching in the country (as low as $1,500 per quarter). As a result of graduate employee agitation, commonly through collective bargaining, 3/4 of university employers pay for graduate employee health insurance; the University of Chicago does not. Among the graduate employees that I met there last month was one whose earnings as a gardener offered far better pay than his teaching.
Click for more:
http://chronicle.com/review/brainstorm/bousquet/grad-student-union-launched-at-u-chicago
Despite the setback, organizing is once more on the front burner at private universities in the U.S., including by committed, activist grad employees at the University of Chicago, outraged by an unfair stipend arrangement and by some of the lowest wages for teaching in the country (as low as $1,500 per quarter). As a result of graduate employee agitation, commonly through collective bargaining, 3/4 of university employers pay for graduate employee health insurance; the University of Chicago does not. Among the graduate employees that I met there last month was one whose earnings as a gardener offered far better pay than his teaching.
Click for more:
http://chronicle.com/review/brainstorm/bousquet/grad-student-union-launched-at-u-chicago
Thursday, May 15, 2008
Saturday, May 3, 2008
Chicago Reader response: Slaves to the System but Free to Organize
The members and supporters of Graduate Students United would like to thank Deanna Isaacs for her sensitive and sympathetic treatment of student labor and funding issues at the University of Chicago, as well as in the city’s universities and colleges more broadly. Readers who would like more information about these issues, such as our current organizing drive, should check out our Web site: uchicagogsu.org/index.html.
Click for more:
http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/letters/080515/
Click for more:
http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/letters/080515/
Friday, May 2, 2008
Chicago Reader: And All I Got Was This Lousy PhD
In February 2007, the University of Chicago announced a new program that promised to transform the lives of its graduate students. Beginning the following fall, almost every entering grad in the humanities and social sciences divisions would receive an annual stipend of $19,000 for five years, along with free tuition, guaranteed teaching opportunities, and other benefits. The $50 million program looked downright princely, until it became evident that none of the university’s 800 or so current grad students in those disciplines would be included.
Click for more:
http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/thebusiness/080501/
Click for more:
http://www.chicagoreader.com/features/stories/thebusiness/080501/
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Open Forum
Open Forum
Wednesday, April 2
7-10 pm
Ida Noyes rm 216/217
The Graduate Funding Committee is holding an open forum to
discuss its plans for action in Spring Quarter.
We want to hear from everyone on what actions the Funding
group should take this quarter to get the University moving on
our demands.
Please come out and give us your imput and ideas!
Wednesday, April 2
7-10 pm
Ida Noyes rm 216/217
The Graduate Funding Committee is holding an open forum to
discuss its plans for action in Spring Quarter.
We want to hear from everyone on what actions the Funding
group should take this quarter to get the University moving on
our demands.
Please come out and give us your imput and ideas!
Wednesday, March 5, 2008
RALLY FOR GRADUATE FUNDING
RALLY FOR GRADUATE FUNDING
Wednesday, March 12
Noon
Main Quad (near Swift)
• Guest Speakers
• Loud Music
• Refreshments
• Big Stage
• Graduate Funding Demands
Wednesday, March 12
Noon
Main Quad (near Swift)
• Guest Speakers
• Loud Music
• Refreshments
• Big Stage
• Graduate Funding Demands
"the university applauding itself"
I particularly like the part where i'm explicitly told that i suck. yeah.
kat.
----------------------
Graduate Aid Initiative
And on February 21, the Provost’s Office announced that the
Graduate Aid Initiative will extend to doctoral students in
the Divinity School. In addition, the University will provide
nearly $5 million in new support over the next five years for
current doctoral students in the Humanities, Social Sciences,
and Divinity.By 2013, the University will provide graduate
students with an estimated $13 million annually in new support.
This new model sends a clear signal: the best and brightest
students will be supported throughout their doctoral
studies—and they will be able to complete their degrees as
expeditiously as possible.
http://beta.uchicago.edu/features/20080225.shtml
kat.
----------------------
Graduate Aid Initiative
And on February 21, the Provost’s Office announced that the
Graduate Aid Initiative will extend to doctoral students in
the Divinity School. In addition, the University will provide
nearly $5 million in new support over the next five years for
current doctoral students in the Humanities, Social Sciences,
and Divinity.By 2013, the University will provide graduate
students with an estimated $13 million annually in new support.
This new model sends a clear signal: the best and brightest
students will be supported throughout their doctoral
studies—and they will be able to complete their degrees as
expeditiously as possible.
http://beta.uchicago.edu/features/20080225.shtml
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