Columnist correct on some concerns
Alan Remington
In the March 17 issue of the Daily Pilot, Humberto Caspa’s Latin
Landscape -- “Minority issues must be addressed at OCC” -- brought
out some excellent points concerning the future of Orange Coast
College.
Caspa correctly assessed the lack of concern top management has
for opinions of faculty -- full or part time. But the reasons OCC has
had an enviable record in transferring students to four-year schools
are directly due to the excellence of its faculty. Not one
administrator can claim credit for that achievement.
Caspa also accurately noted the disparity of salaries between
teachers and administrators. Arguing which is of more value to the
community is a no-brainer, but since administrators create the pay
scales and have more concern with their own well-being than with the
education of the community, a self-serving attitude is
understandable, if not appreciated.
Another telling concern for Caspa was that part-time faculty
outnumber full-timers, and that adjunct faculty are piteously
underpaid and work without fringe benefits or job security of any
kind.
Historically, part-time teachers were used to fill out academic
programs, to provide highly technical, job-oriented specialization
for career-oriented programs and to fill in as substitute teachers
when needed.
But school administrations -- not unlike corporations that ship
jobs overseas to lower labor costs -- began to replace retiring
full-time faculty with part-timers for the same reason, and that
practice continues.
But for the student, a part-time teacher -- no matter how capable
-- presents a problem. Part-time teachers have no office hours, and
are, for the most part, not on campus except for their classes, so
students have limited or no access to them -- before or after class.
But the administration does, indeed, save money. Does it plow
those savings back into the classrooms? Not yet. But it’s only been
doing this for about 20 years.
They obviously need more time.
I don’t agree with Caspa’s concern that not enough Latino teachers
are being hired. First, one of OCC’s problems in hiring faculty stems
from the combined facts that its salaries are comparatively low and
the Newport-Mesa district is not a low-priced area in which to live.
Many very competent teachers cannot afford to live here on the salary
they will earn and don’t usually look forward with much joy to a
daily commute.
OCC loses many of those most competent candidates for teaching
positions to neighboring schools, which pay at least one-third more.
Second, as a former OCC teacher who served on hiring committees
both as a member and as a chairman, I know that our concern was --
except once -- for the quality of the teachers to be hired, not their
ethnic background.
The only time that was not the case was when the committee chair
had his own preferred candidate, and it had nothing to do with
ethnicity.
The hiring procedure at OCC and at other schools, is very
stringent about maintaining a minority-friendly attitude. Our
committee was once told we would have to redo the paper-screen
procedure, because we had insufficient minority representation.
It’s a shame that ethnicity needs to be a consideration for
hiring. I’m well aware that over the years there has been
discrimination in all middle class jobs, and I deplore that obvious
fact. But insisting that an ethnic minority candidate be hired,
sometimes over a more qualified candidate, will merely achieve a
lower standard of education for our children.
We can’t right a wrong by creating another wrong.
I believe that any Latino teacher -- or other minority teacher --
who can demonstrate the background and ability the committee seeks
stands a reasonable chance of being hired.
Unless the hiring is for a top administrative job, the
administration usually defers to the faculty recommendation. For
administrative jobs or for academic direction, faculty concerns and
recommendations are generally ignored.
OCC will hire a new president, and it will make no difference what
that person’s gender or ethnicity is. What will make a great deal of
impact is whether the candidate will place education above politics
and academic excellence over all else.
Such a candidate won’t have a prayer of being chosen -- especially
if he or she is Latino.
* ALAN REMINGTON is professor emeritus at OCC and a resident of
Costa Mesa.
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