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Education

MIT Grad Students Vote To Form Labor Union (bizjournals.com) 82

Graduate students at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology overwhelmingly approved forming a union in a two-day vote this week by a nearly 2-to-1 margin. From a report: MIT is the latest Boston-area school where grad students have voted to join a union following pivotal federal ruling in 2016 recognizing grad students as employees with the ability to unionize. In all, 1,785 MIT graduate students voted in favor of unionization and 912 against, a figure confirmed by Jonathan Zong, a grad student organizer, and MIT. Three-fourths of graduate students voted, according to MIT. The vote seeks to join United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers of America, or UE. MIT grad students were pushing for help with affordable housing, support for international students, dental insurance coverage, and a better emphasis on diversity, equity and inclusion.

"We are grateful to the many members of our community, on all sides of the debate, who have engaged constructively and respectfully in this conversation," Melissa Nobles, the chancellor, and Ian A. Waitz, the vice chancellor, said in the message to grad students. The memo continued: "Indeed, as we wrote to you during this campaign: We agree that there are areas where MIT can improve, and we share many of the same goals as the MIT Graduate Student Union. ... With the election outcome now clear, we will continue to work alongside you to improve MIT for all of our students." MIT's Zong said being unionized will be a more democratic and formalized way of making grad students' concerns heard compared to MIT's Graduate Student Council. He described the council as more advisory to the school's administration.

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MIT Grad Students Vote To Form Labor Union

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  • higher edu is suck in the past and the high cost goes to admin staff and not the teachers or students.

    • Most education programs and costs from top to bottom have become bogged down in administration.

      -progress
      • by jbengt ( 874751 )

        Most education programs and costs from top to bottom have become bogged down in administration.

        You don't need to include the word "education" for that statement to be true.

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      I've yet to see any real evidence of that particular claim.

    • higher edu is suck in the past and the high cost goes to admin staff and not the teachers or students.

      There are an awful lot of admin staff involved in running a university. You NEED admin staff: janitors, groundskeepers, payroll, purchasing, IT, cooks, etc. A university is more than someone standing around on a street corner talking to himself (or herself...)

      Yes, we could roll back a lot of the feature creep that has happened in modern universities -but students keep demanding MORE, not less.

      • Yes, we could roll back a lot of the feature creep that has happened in modern universities -but students keep demanding MORE, not less.

        Are these the same students that now want everyone else to pay off their student loans because they decided to spend 4 years at Club EDU, an all-inclusive resort that claims to offer an education?

        Last I heard an Economics major from a middling university, earning $160K/year claimed she was being 'held back' because if her strident debt...

        • Pretty much, yes.

          But I was referring to the incoming students (and their parents) who are choosing university X over university Y, because university X has more/nicer/newer amenities.

  • School is a great place for learning. Going to be interesting to see how the adversarial Company/Union relationship fits in and what the unforeseen consequences are for education.
    • the bounty hunters become student loan bounty hunters.

    • by jbengt ( 874751 )

      Going to be interesting to see how the adversarial Company/Union relationship fits in and what the unforeseen consequences are for education.

      University of Illinois graduate students unionized almost 20 years ago. [uiucgeo.org] So just look at those schools for any unforeseen consequences.
      AFAIK, the only consequences were foreseen: TAs get paid more.

      • As a counter to that, another personal experience is above:

        https://news.slashdot.org/comm... [slashdot.org]

        It made it so that they couldn't hire RAs anymore because there wasn't the money to pay the higher rates. The difference may be in the funding sources though, RAs are paid from research grants, while TAs are paid for with tuition. TAs demand higher salaries, it just snowballs down to tuition rising faster.

  • Way back in the late 70's/early 80's I had free tuition and a stipend as part of being a RA. And the RA basically ended up as my thesis, so double duty. The stipend wasn't going to make me rich but it covered food and housing. Are things that different now? I graduated debt free as a result.
  • On the one hand, I'm glad I was a grad student eons ago so I didn't have to deal with this. Even in my 20s I knew wanted nothing to do with unions.

    On the other hand, it would have been nice to be able to argue against it. Sheesh, being a grad student on a stipend was the kooshiest job I ever had. I've never been paid so much for so little work.

    • I guess grad schools differ, 20ish years ago where I worked as a research assistant and then research scientist position people put in 1.5-2x the hours as were paid. Between classes, papers, and work it was typical to be doing 60 absolute minimum to 80 or even 90+ hours a week. Highest tier medical insurance and fully paid for all course work, but it was anything but easy.
  • Let me tell you a "known" secret of academia: There are *too many* PhDs...
    Why? Because they offer cheap labor.
    As simple as that.

    I know, because I was one. They keep the professor to assistant ratio so much skewed that single assistantships stopped giving even minimum wage: in other words, in my later years sitting a single class would only give half salary, and you needed to take 2x work to get your earlier wages.

    It will only get worse, because the universities know we will keep coming. Would I do it again?

    • by Arethan ( 223197 )

      I feel like you're alluding to an issue that many readers are not aware of, but this description could use more depth to help the layman understanding. Could you elaborate more, so that us heathens could fully comprehend? thx

      • by Whateverthisis ( 7004192 ) on Thursday April 07, 2022 @07:51AM (#62425034)
        I'll explain. Fortunately I avoided this issue, but i work with so many PhDs now that I've heard this story so many times that it's become glaringly obvious this is a common practice.

        There's a two-fold problem here. One is the constant encouragement of more kids going to college. College isn't for everyone, plain and simple, but the encouragement pushes kids to go there even further. A related problem with this is the lack of career counseling; most kids have no idea what they want to do. So they're brought up getting good grades in middle school, then high school is the next step, then of course they go to college (which is really optional). At 22 they don't know what to do except how to take and pass a test, but have no idea how to transition that into a career. SO what do they do? They go the next step: grad school. On to a Masters, then a PhD, then a post-doc. At this point they're in their 30's, buried in debt with a PhD and a low-paying post-doc position. Next step is professor, right? The numbers show that less than 8% of grad students end up becoming professors because of lack of jobs and tenure; there's little turnover in professor roles. But the kids do this, because it's an easier option than facing the existential question of: "Wtf am I doing, and what am I going to do with my life?" Fortunately there's the second problem: college financing which is easy to get, yet super hard to pay off. SO by not giving kids a way to figure out a career for themselves, and making the path to grad school easy to get into via debt financing, you end up with a unique problem: a host of very smart kids who are basically debt-bonded indentured servants.

        Why are the indentured servants? Because the kids have fallen into a trap that no one explained to them and yet is critical: Labor is a market. With the above two problems, the supply of labor in "higher education" has ballooned, and the demander of labor in academic science can't grow fast enough. As basic economics would teach you, this kind of situation results in a worsening situation for the grad student on the supply side. Many of the stories I've heard are:

        A grad student picking up their professor's dry cleaning and groceries for them as part of their grad work.

        Two grad students living 2 hours away from their lab to afford housing, often sleeping in sleeping bags in their shared office because the commute was so bad and sometimes they needed to pull 10-12 hour days in the lab.

        Inappropriate pay practices. Pay set as the minimum to be considered salaried (in some states that's around $50k/year) so that overtime is never considered; when looking at hours spent teaching classes, lab work, training new staff, etc. they were pulling effectively less than minimum wage. In other cases, grad students would be classed as 1099 contractors so they would be forced to find their own health insurance and were refused the protection of a W2 employee.

        In one case, a grad student was 3 years in, 1 year away from defending, but a grant fell through so the professor said he was going to be let go and not get his PhD at all. Fortunately the kid had a connection in a government agency, who moved some money aroudn in their own budget and gave him a grant that allowed him to continue his last year, otherwise he would be on the street, years of work, student loans and no PhD to show for it at all.

        Professors who spend no time in their lab at all. Their job is to write grants and go to paid speaking events, and barely interact with their grad students, letting their post-docs train the staff and run the lab. However said professor is on every paper published and every patent filed.

        In one case a professor had well over 50 grad students and 6 post-docs. How was he mentoring them at all? He wasn't; it was a PhD/post-doc factory; if they didn't perform they were out. When the post-docs term was over, he encouraged them to then start a startup on their IP, which they did. The university of course owned th

        • The job market for PhDs is heavily dependent on the field, at the PhD level there is heavy labor specialization. Humanities PhDs seek academia because often times its their only option. Most STEM PhD candidates I have met were ready to get the fuck out of academia (for many of the reasons you laid out) and move into high paying positions in industrial research. Personally I work in cybersecurity and every org I have ever worked with was desperate to get PhDs in the door (especially domestic US citizens beca
        • by sapgau ( 413511 )
          Mod parent up. A harsh and interesting reality
  • Something tells meactual workplace concerns, such as health insurance, hours, and pay will take a distant backseat to 'diversity' demands. This is after all a union run by students.

    • I think it's really touching that you believe health insurance, hours and pay have any kind of priority in places where diversity "demands" aren't on the table.

  • this is good the undergrads will be recognized for there work.
    collage just got a whole lot more expensive
    glad i finished what i wanted to.

    • From the standard of literacy exhibited here, I'd suggest when you say you "finished what i wanted to" (sic), you're referring to a degree featuring shrubbery pruning, basic hygiene and remedial arithmetic as core courses.

  • Is that in 1970, 70% of all teachers in college were tenured or tenure track... and now it's 30%. Most of the instructors are grad students... and they have ZERO job security. They aren't "employed", they're on contracts... and they have no guarantee that they'll have a contract in the fall. Basically, they're gig workers.

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