Education

Why We’re Voting Yes in Our Strike Authorization Vote

North America / United States2 views1 min
Why We’re Voting Yes in Our Strike Authorization Vote

This image was generated by AI and may not depict real events.

Harvard's non-tenure-track faculty and post-doctoral fellows are voting on whether to authorize a strike due to disagreements with the university administration over issues like time caps, compensation, and job security. The strike authorization vote is a historic move, with the potential to impact the university's operations and student education.

Harvard's non-tenure-track faculty and post-doctoral fellows are voting on a strike authorization. The vote is a response to the university administration's refusal to bargain at a reasonable pace. Key issues include time caps, compensation, and job security. The administration has proposed job classifications with no time limit, but these positions require more work and teaching. The university's proposed contract article also adds a new job title, 'Annual Lecturer,' which is capped at three years. Faculty members are concerned about the impact of these proposals on their ability to serve students.

This content was automatically generated and/or translated by AI. It may contain inaccuracies. Please refer to the original sources for verification.

Rate this article

0.0 (0 ratings)Log in to rate

Comments (0)

Log in to comment.

Loading...

Chat

No messages. Start the conversation!

Start the conversation!

Log in to send messages