Pat Heintzelman has been teaching for more than 22 years, but she isn’t confident she’ll have a job come this summer.
Heintzelman, an untenured English instructor at a regional university in Texas, got an ominous letter along with others in her department several months ago. The letter reminded them they should have no expectation of having their contracts renewed.
Heintzelman is president of the Texas Faculty Association; she has a track record of speaking out. Now, she’s scared of teaching her usual curriculum, which includes novels that discuss topics such as racism that conservatives have decried as divisive. When she testifies in front of lawmakers, she doesn’t specify which institution she teaches at.
“If you don’t have tenure, you don’t have a voice,” Heintzelman said.
A bill in Texas would do away with tenure altogether, prohibiting public colleges and universities from offering it to faculty members hired after this September. The legislation – accompanied by calls from Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick to ban the practice – is one of several efforts across the country seeking to chip away at professors’ job protections through practices such as post-tenure reviews.Proponents say tenure reforms will improve the student experience and allow for more freedom of expression. But academics say they will do the reverse, dampening state colleges’ competitive edge and chilling speech in classrooms at a time when tenure is already becoming less common.
What does tenure mean for professors?
The concept of tenure emerged in the mid-20th century as a means of supporting academic freedom. Professors granted tenure can speak, teach and conduct research about controversial issues without putting their job at risk. It’s an indefinite appointment, meaning they can’t be fired without cause – committing a crime, for example.
Even before the latest round of bills, however, tenure was already fading in prevalence. Fewer than a quarter of U.S. college faculty members were tenured in fall 2021, according to research by the American Association of University Professors, down from roughly 39% in 1987. Nearly half of faculty members at U.S. colleges and universities were employed part-time in 2021, compared with about a third in 1987.
Women and people of color are far more likely than men and white faculty members to serve in part-time or contingent appointments.
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Is tenure good for students?
Laws that weaken tenure would exacerbate the already grave disparities in job security, pay and scholarship priorities that exist on campus, said Marc Stein, a professor and LGBTQ+ history scholar at San Francisco State University who has studied the topic.