From
the President and Provost
Grad
Student Union Won't Serve the Academic
Mission
For
the past year, there's been a lively
debate among members of the University
community about the issue of unionization
by graduate students. That debate
has raised important issues that are
academic, economic and also legal
in nature.
It's
important to know that the United
States has a well-developed body of
law specifically governing union organizing
and labor-management relations. But
recent efforts to unionize graduate
students at private universities have
raised a host of new issues for the
federal decision-making agency, the
National Labor Relations Board, (NLRB).
As a result, some important questions
about graduate student unionization
campaigns at private universities
have only recently been decided by
various regional NLRB directors. Others
are pending review by the NLRB itself.
Those questions include whether graduate
students at private universities should
be viewed as employees for the purpose
of unionizing, and if so, which graduate
students should be included in an
appropriate bargaining unit.
However,
there is one important question that graduate
students will be called on to answer when
the union election is held at Penn in February.
That is, whether their challenging and
uniquely personal academic experiences
can be as flexible, dynamic and appropriately
shaped to individual needs under a unionized,
collective bargaining regime as they are
now.
As
onetime graduate students ourselves,
those of us responsible for leading
this University are convinced the
answer is "no;" and that
a uniform contractual approach to
graduate education would not serve
the interests of current graduate
students, nor the long-term interests
of post-graduate scholarship.
Like
our colleagues at Brown, Cornell and
Columbia, we must stand up for the
central proposition that a truly great
graduate education can only be provided
by faculty members with the autonomy
to shape programs and projects to
suit their students, their departments
and their fields of study.
Strip
away the legal arguments and political
rhetoric and the unionization question
really boils down to this: Applying
for a doctoral or master's degree
program simply isn't the same as applying
for a job. Graduate students come
to Penn not to serve as employees,
but to become scholars in training
under a world-class faculty.
Undoubtedly,
that training requires hard work.
It includes many hours inside the
lab, library or out in the field doing
research. It includes learning how
to teach others by doing so yourself.
It includes collaborating with faculty
and other graduate students to solve
complex problems. And it includes
creating an individual work of original
scholarship that adds new knowledge
to your chosen academic field. A unionized
learning environment that would impose
an additional layer of rules and policies
that affects some but not all students,
for some but not all periods of their
student careers simply does not support
those objectives, and would jeopardize
the quality of graduate education.
On
Thursday November 21, the Regional
Director of the National Labor Relations
Board issued a long and complicated
decision about graduate student unionization
at Penn. The decision divides and
discriminates among different groups
of graduate students, depending on
their chosen area of scholarship or
degree program at Penn. Because of
these unreasonable distinctions, we
have appealed the Regional Director's
decision to the full National Labor
Relations Board in Washington.
A
university community--both here at
Penn and on other campuses--provides
a vital, vibrant forum for discussion
among students and faculty, staff
and administration. Especially now,
in light of the November 21st NLRB
decision and the union election on
February 26th and 27th, we as a community
must weigh how unionization might
affect the very goals we're all here
to pursue: teaching and learning,
research and scholarship. The University
strongly supports free and open discussion
of unionization and will continue
to encourage lively discussion of
the issues and widespread participation
by the graduate student voters.
Of
course, graduate students, faculty
and other members of the Penn community
are also rightly concerned with what
the imposition of a union might mean
to them personally. In the weeks to
come we will endeavor to inform students,
faculty and other members of the University
community about the issues involved.
The Penn web site (Graduate Student
Unionization at the University of
Pennsylvania, www.upenn.edu/grad/unionization)
will be a resource for updates on
the unionization effort and the administration's
position.
In
the union election Penn graduate students
will have to apply their critical
thinking and research skills to make
up their own minds on the issue of
whether having a union will enhance
their own educational experience and
that of future scholars. We hope that
they will conclude, as Cornell graduate
students did overwhelmingly in late
October 2002, that a uniform union
contract would not serve their unique,
individualized needs for graduate
scholarship.
Judith
Rodin, President Robert
Barchi, Provost
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