Berklee Faculty Union welcomes 200+ new members

Berklee Faculty Union welcomes 200+ new members

It is now official! The Berklee Faculty Union has grown by a third now that Boston Conservatory faculty are in the fold. We warmly welcome our new colleagues and are full of excitement to go forward together.

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Response to "Your workload could be aging you"

Response to "Your workload could be aging you"

We have received many responses to our blog post regarding workload and stress. Below is one, posted with permission but with the name removed.

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Student Evaluations Paint A Faulty Picture

Student Evaluations Paint A Faulty Picture

Berklee student evaluations paint a faulty picture. How can we regain focus?

"We’re confusing consumer satisfaction with product value" -Philip B. Stark, UC Berkley

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Faculty Working Conditions = Student Learning Conditions

Faculty Working Conditions = Student Learning Conditions

Members of the Berklee Faculty Union attended a conference on collective bargaining in higher ed. Here are some nuggets they brought back...

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Mili Bermejo: Service to Students, Colleagues, and Art

Mili Bermejo: Service to Students, Colleagues, and Art

Our friend and colleague Mili Bermejo passed away on February 21. She had been serving students as a member of the Voice Department faculty since 1984.

Her teaching went hand in hand with her continued artistry...

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Your workload could be aging you

Your workload could be aging you

Even though we are on spring break, many Berklee faculty members are working hard on their teaching, research, and creative work. Is your workload causing you chronic stress? Berklee faculty member Kathleen Howland explains how you age 6 years for every year you live in chronic stress.

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Berklee Faculty Vision for 2025

Tom Plsek and Jimena Bermejo-Black

Tom Plsek and Jimena Bermejo-Black

SPACE and SUPPORT
World-class facilities and working conditions: 

  1. Teaching spaces that allow for flexibility in scheduling to meet the needs of students in rooms that promote a sense of ease and comfort, and which both preserve our hearing and have world-class acoustics.
  2. Ensemble, classroom, and studio spaces that promote making music with our students. Spacious rehearsal halls with excellent acoustics for performing, teaching, and learning.
  3. Quality office space with adequate privacy for every individual faculty member that permits each of us to hold office hours and to do work in a room that enhances our ability to support our students, to plan our classes and lessons, and to pursue our creative work.
  4. World-class concert halls for a world-class institution.

TIME to THRIVE
A workload that is an example to other world-class music institutions: 

  1. A workload that is an example to other topflight institutions in the nation, and one that allows us to respond more fully to the needs of all of our students.
  2. An optimal workload that permits our faculty to pursue the creative work that supports our essential musical and intellectual growth and that is an inspiration to our students.

AFFIRMATION and APPRECIATION
Significant resources allocated to faculty: 

  1. Compensation for faculty that reflects Berklee’s role as a leader of higher education in Massachusetts.
  2. High priority for significant grants, special project funding, and for compensated technological and pedagogical training.
  3. Commitment by the College to a higher ratio of full-time to part-time faculty, which strengthens the foundation that underlies the core mission of the college: world-class teaching by our world-class faculty.
  4. Affirmation by the College of senior faculty: the value of their instruction, creative contributions, experience, and wisdom provide unique perspectives that benefit the entire Berklee community.
  5. Strong support for our faculty as we address the diverse learning styles of our students and the many cultures they represent.

VISIBILITY and TRANSPARENCY
High priority and accessibility for faculty advancement: 

  1. Fair, transparent, and clear criteria for determining wages, promotions, sabbaticals, and part-time to full-time conversion.
  2. Transparent processes for faculty access to development and research funds. Explicit dedication of and ample funds for faculty support, training, and grant awards, and clear visibility for these funds.
  3. Develop connections to and support faculty with national and international grant research and programs.

COMMUNICATION and COLLABORATION
A clearly stated commitment to faculty in Berklee’s Vision for 2025: 

  1. In both the Berklee Vision 2025 and the Capital Campaign planning and implementation, our vision sees the inclusion of a stated commitment to faculty support and compensation, and to the development of these priorities.
  2. Our Faculty Vision for 2025 includes meaningful communication and collaboration: these are at the heart of effective teaching and great music. We see a stated commitment towards building trust across our institution, furthering Berklee’s ability to achieve the greatness to which it aspires. 

"I fought you at the beginning, but you made it a better school"

"I fought you at the beginning, but you made it a better school"

As part of a Labor Day-themed event in September 2016, Associate Professor of Liberal Arts Kevin Block-Schwenk interviewed Professor Dennis Leclaire, who has taught at Berklee since 1980, about the 1986 Faculty Strike, as well as what Berklee was like before then.

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So, I decided to go back to school (part 5 of 5)

So, I decided to go back to school (part 5 of 5)

When I am done with this degree I will have an immense amount of satisfaction.  I can feel the level of intellect with which I write and speak and comment on music is rising, so I might even be able to comport myself like a civilized human being when this is all over.   At the very least I will most likely get paid more by the institution at which I teach, and if we wind up living somewhere else I will be hireable.  

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So, I decided to go back to school (part 4 of 5)

So, I decided to go back to school (part 4 of 5)

I’m telling lots of jokes here to keep this interesting, but really I am learning so much in this program and I wish I’d done it sooner.  I hope to graduate before I am eligible for the AARP.   It’s making me a better teacher, too.  

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So, I decided to go back to school (part 3 of 5)

So, I decided to go back to school (part 3 of 5)

So I applied.  Not to a whole lot of schools, just to NEC, my alma mater, where some people still know me, and if that didn’t work then I’d weigh my options.  I got some super recommendations.  I sat in a room and took 8 hours of History and Theory entrance exams (after reading music history books and reviewing German 6th chords for a few months).  When I went to audition it was for Ken Schaphorst and Frank Carlberg, who used to crash on my couch in J.P. when he was in town in the late 90’s...

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So, I decided to go back to school (part 2 of 5)

So, I decided to go back to school (part 2 of 5)

So, I’ve spent the last almost 20 years spending my teaching income (I teach sometimes at University of NH, and I taught for a few years at the University of Southern Maine) on my creative career.  I’ve tried to produce records for a variety of artists, write tunes and arrangements for them and support them through the recording process.  I’ve played with lots and lots and lots and lots of singers, and that is often fun.  There have been peaks and valleys to this playing career of mine… 

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So, I decided to go back to school (part 1 of 5)

So, I decided to go back to school (part 1 of 5)

So, I decided to go back to school.  My pal and frequent musical collaborator David Scott asked me to write about it for the BFU blog.

Either Albert Einstein or Mark Twain famously said (on their Facebook profiles) “The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result.”  

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Full-Time to Part-Time Ratios

Full-Time to Part-Time Ratios

The increase in the ratio of Part-Time to Full-Time Faculty (or, the decrease in % of Full-Time!) is a matter of great concern to the Union, and we will need your support as we continue to work to address this.

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Rick Applin: A Remembrance

Rick Applin: A Remembrance

When we were graduate students at Boston University in the 1980’s, Rick Applin and I were roommates. Rick was also teaching at Berklee during this time and brought home lots of stories. In the fall of 1985, his stories started becoming more and more grim...

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You don't have to go to that meeting alone!

You don't have to go to that meeting alone!

One of the benefits of being a member of our (or any) union, is that you have legal rights to union representation at any hearing with a supervisor that may result in disciplinary action being taken against you.

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