President Washington - Reduce workloads in feedback-intensive courses for all Mason faculty

President Gregory Washington and Provost Mark Ginsberg

Dear President Washington and Provost Ginsberg,

The foremost value of the Mason Vision is “Our Students Come First.” To fulfill this vision, Mason's faculty have devoted their careers to supporting our students and giving them the feedback they need to grow as professionals and scholars.

But here's the truth. The punishing workloads faced by many Mason faculty members threatens our mission to put students first. Hundreds of Mason faculty teach three or four feedback-intensive courses every term. In these courses, faculty give extensive feedback on multiple assignments, often scheduling meetings outside class to help students improve their work. With 90-120 students per term, however, these faculty are forced to make terrible choices. They can give students the feedback they deserve and work all the time, every evening and every weekend for months on end, putting their health at risk and pulling them away from their families. Or they can try to put some boundaries around their work lives, which can mean less extensive and less timely feedback for students.

This cannot continue. Faculty deserve to live full lives with a healthy balance between work and family. Students deserve to have professors who are not harried and stressed, and who have the time to provide extensive and timely feedback. We cannot continue to grow the university on the backs of a burned out and overworked faculty.

Luckily, a solution to the problem already exists. Professional organizations like the Conference on College Composition and Communication suggest that, for writing-intensive courses, a single full-time faculty member should not teach more than 60 students in total, and that no writing class should have more than 15 students. Keeping enrollments small in feedback- or writing-intensive courses means that faculty have the time to provide each student with the mentoring and feedback they need to develop their knowledge and skills.

To this end, we call on President Washington and Provost Ginsberg to take decisive action to address the faculty workload and burnout crisis by committing the resources and supports necessary for changes to be made at the local academic unit level.

Lowering course caps will require hiring more instructors. We call for the university to meet this need by hiring additional full-time faculty and fully funded GTAs. To the extent possible, these positions should be created by converting existing adjunct faculty and Graduate Lecturers to full-time status. Salaries must be competitive to attract and retain the instructional workforce we need.

Surely we can find the funds to create better labor conditions for overworked faculty and better learning conditions for all our students, now and in the future. Mason students deserve no less.

Signatures:

1 Pouyan Ahmadi
2 Massimiliano Albanese
3 Jatin Ambegaonkar
4 Eric Anderson
5 LaShonda Anthony
6 Tawnya Azar
7 Angela Barajas
8 Iccha Basnyat
9 Anamaria Berea
10 Johanna Bockman
11 Kristen Brida
12 Jeremiah Brooks
13 Jackie Brown
14 Kenneth Broyles
15 Timothee Bryan
16 Amanda Bryan
17 Delaney Burk
18 Ahsan Butt
19 Jai C
20 Celia Causey
21 Juan Cebral
22 Jena Chanaa
23 Vincent Chanethom
24 Michael Chang
25 Rose Cherubin
26 Giovanna Chesler
27 Carlos Chism
28 Paola Choque Villarroel
29 keith Clark
30 Carol Cleaveland
31 Richard Craig
32 Reeshad Dalal
33 Betsy DeMulder
34 Stephanie Dodman
35 Matthew Doetsch-Kidder
36 Michael Don
37 Roxanne Dummett
38 Leslie Dwyer
39 Kossi Eklou
40 Rebecca Ericson
41 Anya Evmenova
42 Douglas Eyman
43 Elizabeth Ferguson
44 Lourdes Fernandez
45 Matteo Ferrari
46 James Finkelstein
47 Brian Fitzpatrick
48 Kevin Flanagan
49 Kerry Folan
50 Karen Foltz
51 Kenneth Foreman
52 Grace Francis
53 Cynthia Fuchs
54 Kirin Furst
55 Harold Geller
56 Tim Gibson
57 Iris Gibson
58 Kelby Gibson
59 Michael Gilmore
60 Gilbert Gimm
61 Ariel Goldenthal
62 Jack Goldstone
63 Rachael Goodman
64 Michele Greet
65 Parker Gregg
66 Anna S. Habib
67 Zayd Hamid
68 Nancy Hanrahan
69 Kayla Hare
70 Tamara Harvey
71 Sharrell Hassell-Goodman
72 Jennifer Hathaway
73 Gretchen Hendricks
74 Stephen Hickson
75 Julia Holcomb
76 Billy Howell
77 virginia hoy
78 Alexander Hulse
79 Abul Hussam
80 Benjamin Inks
81 Megumi Inoue
82 Timothy Johnson
83 R. Christian Jones
84 Jennifer Kahn
85 Shahnaz Kamberi
86 Joseph Killiany
87 Sara King
88 Peggy King-Sears
89 Vicki Kirsch
90 Emilie Maree Knudsen
91 Lisa Koch
92 Sean Kurth
93 Todd La Porte
94 Kerri LaCharite
95 Megan Lavengood
96 Susan Lawrence
97 jennifer Leeman
98 Bethany Letiecq
99 Steph Liberatore
100 Lisa Lister
101 Emily Lockwood
102 Cynthia Lukyanenko
103 Anton Lukyanenko
104 Haley Luna
105 M. Reece Mack
106 Ed Maibach
107 Tyler Martinez
108 Holly Mason
109 Jessica Matthews
110 Jessica McCaughey
111 Michael McDermott
112 Ayondela McDole
113 Jacqueline McDowell
114 Alison Melley
115 Spencer Merrow
116 Jennifer Messier
117 James Metcalf
118 Laurie Miller
119 Katherine Miscavige
120 Elizabeth Morris Lakes
121 Luma Mousa
122 Kylie Musolf
123 Robert Norris
124 Nic Nusbaumer
125 Parker O'Connor
126 Idris O'Connor
127 John Orens
128 Ben Orlando
129 Cindy Parker
130 Elizabeth Paul
131 Esther Peters
132 Emily (Russell) Philbrick
133 Natalie Plahuta
134 Peter Plavchan
135 Laura Poms
136 Lisa Rabin
137 Kathleen Rankin
138 Kelley Regan
139 Benjamin Renne
140 Sarah Rickless
141 Shauna Rigaud
142 Suzanne Rigdon
143 Charles Robison
144 Maria Esperanza Roman Mendoza
145 Raluca Romaniuc
146 Sophia Ross
147 Eric Ross
148 Lori Rottenberg
149 Richard Rubenstein
150 Mallory Saleson
151 Kristin Samuelian
152 Catherine Saunders
153 James Savage
154 DT Schatten
155 Anne Scherer
156 Lance Schmeidler
157 Jessica Schmid
158 Zachary Schrag
159 Sylvia Schreiner
160 Margaret Scolaro
161 Christina Seay
162 Ben Serber
163 Diane Seuss
164 Aparna Shastri
165 Lesley Smith
166 Lindsay Smith
167 Sheri Sorvillo
168 Benjamin Steger
169 Holly Stephens
170 Alysse Stephens
171 Elizangela Storelli
172 Leah Sumrall
173 Pavithra Suresh
174 Justin Sutters
175 Amykate (Kate) Sweeney
176 Desiree Tavarez
177 Daniel Temple
178 Tojo Thatchenkery
179 Lisa Thrasher
180 Evelyn Tomaszewski
181 Susan Trencher
182 Megan Tucker
183 Emily Tuszynska
184 Levi Van Sant
185 Anne Verhoeven
186 Colleen Vesely
187 Hollie Villanueva
188 John Walter
189 Michelle Webber
190 Katie Westhafer
191 Gail White
192 Martin Winkler
193 Jennifer Wood
194 Courtney Wooten
195 Sue Wrbican
196 Catherine Wright
197 Amy Zhang
198 Fengxiu Zhang



Sponsored by

To: President Gregory Washington and Provost Mark Ginsberg
From: [Your Name]

The foremost value of the Mason Vision is “Our Students Come First.” Yet the punishing workloads faced by Mason faculty members threatens this mission. Many Mason faculty teach three or four feedback-intensive courses every term. In these courses, faculty give extensive feedback on multiple assignments, often scheduling meetings outside class to help students improve their work. With 90-120 students per term, however, these faculty are forced to make terrible choices. They can give students the feedback they deserve and work every evening and every weekend for months on end, putting their health at risk and pulling them away from their families. Or they can try to put some boundaries around their work lives, which can mean less extensive and less timely feedback for students.

This cannot continue. Faculty deserve to live full lives with a healthy balance between work and family. Students deserve to have professors who are not harried and stressed, and who have the time to provide extensive and timely feedback. We cannot continue to grow the university on the backs of a burned out and overworked faculty.

To this end, we call on President Washington and Provost Ginsberg to take decisive action to address the faculty workload and burnout crisis:

1. Commit the budgetary resources and supports necessary to reduce course caps.

2. Provide the necessary funds at fair and competitive salary levels to hire the additional full-time faculty and fully funded GTAs needed to limit all feedback-intensive courses to no more than 15 students per section.

Surely we can find the funds to create better labor conditions for overworked faculty and better learning conditions for all our students, now and in the future. Mason students deserve no less.