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Milestone
at a Crossroads
The
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences celebrated its 150th birthday
this spring with a gala in Commons. But all present were aware that
the School and its future students face some of the toughest challenges
in its history.
by
Bruce Fellman
Summer 1997
Yale's
Graduate School of Arts and Sciences -- the
oldest in the nation -- turned 150 this year, and at the official
celebration on April 26, Jaroslav Pelikan, the Sterling
Professor Emeritus of History,
seized the occasion to challenge a semi-sacred Yale text: the lyrics
of "Bright College Years."
Standing before an audience that packed Commons for the School's
sesquicentennial gala dinner, Pelikan said that -- contrary to the
sentiments expressed in Yale's alma mater -- the time spent as an
undergraduate was overrated. "The gladdest years of life,"
Pelikan declared, "are those we spend in graduate school."
Surely
many would agree. Whether one's standard is U.S. News & World
Report or the rankings of the National Research Council, Yale's
departments of history, English, and French literature dominate
the competition, while those of neuroscience, mathematics, and political
science consistently place in the top tier. Meanwhile, the roster
of former Yale graduate students -- from historian Garry Wills '61PhD
to fire-brand academic Camille Paglia '74PhD, from Duke University
president Nannerl Keohane '67PhD to author Tom
Wolfe '57PhD -- continues to confirm the institution's power
and influence on the national scene. And the appeal endures: Last
year alone, Yale's doctoral programs received 6,000 applications
for a mere 450 openings.
But
amid the celebration of a history rivaled by few other universities,
there was a palpable sense of unease about the future. Indeed, to
hear many of today's graduate students tell it, the initiation process
into what Pelikan called the "Eleusinian mysteries of a life
devoted to research" leaves much to be desired, and the prospects
for the future are by no means as bright as they once were. Those
facts were addressed squarely by Thomas
W. Appelquist, a professor of physics and the dean of the Graduate
School since 1993. At a panel discussion held as part of the semiannual
assembly of the Association of Yale Alumni, which this spring coincided
with the School's festivities and was entitled "The Graduate
School: Reflections on the Past and the Future," the dean insisted
that "graduate education is at the core of the University."
But he went on to concede that for the School as well as its graduates,
"This is a time of changes, of challenges, and of stress. It
is not at all clear what the future holds."
Of course,
the School has been confronting challenges internal and external
since its founding in 1847
as the Department of Philosophy and the Arts. But its mission has
not changed greatly since a future President of the University,
Arthur Twining Hadley, was appointed its first dean, in 1892. As
Dean Appelquist pointed out, the process of getting an advanced
degree -- taking a variety of courses, passing a series of examinations,
and writing a dissertation based on original research -- has remained
essentially unchanged for a century and a half. "The heart
of a graduate education is pretty much the same now as then,"
he said.
What
is not at all the same is the relationship between the graduate
students and the University, and the outlook for employment on completion
of their studies. These interrelated issues began to assert themselves
seven years ago, when a small group of graduate students founded
the Graduate Employees and Students Organization, or GESO.
In their view, the role played by graduate students as assistants
to senior faculty members in their teaching of undergraduates entitled
them to recognition as employees of the University. From the outset,
the University's response has been that the teaching done by graduate
students is a fundamental part of their training as future educators
-- in essence, an apprenticeship relationship analogous to that
of the ancient guild tradition. The University also emphasizes the
fact that most graduate students have their tuition and fees waived
and receive stipends that boost their total support to roughly $130,000
each over the course of a typical graduate student career at Yale.
The
graduate students' arguments have nevertheless become more strident,
at least in part because the prospects for jobs upon graduation
have steadily shrunk. An informal survey done by the Graduate School
itself last year shows that academic placement rates are indeed
low, and dropping. Just four years ago, 41 percent of Yale's doctoral
job seekers were offered tenure
track positions, and 25 percent garnered non-tenure track jobs.
By contrast, the hiring figures last year were 32 percent and 21
percent, respectively. The news is equally bad at other top graduate
schools. A study conducted by Harvard of its graduate students who
received doctorates in 1995 found that a mere 27 percent had found
tenure-track jobs as teachers.
Faced
with the prospect of extended service as assistants, GESO advocates
have demanded not only acknowledgement of their status as employees,
but also recognition of their organization as a union like any other,
with appropriate bargaining powers, and the provision of medical
and other benefits now available only to University employees.
To drive
their point home, about two dozen teaching assistants, all members
of GESO, in December of 1995 refused to turn in their grades for
the undergraduate sections they had taught in the fall semester.
In response to the grade strike, Graduate School officials threatened
participating students with disciplinary action, including the denial
of any further teaching assignments.
Under
federal labor law, an employer cannot punish unionized workers for
striking, but because Yale does not regard GESO as a union, and
because the University regards teaching assistants as students rather
than employees, it also maintains that regulations enacted to protect
auto workers, teamsters, and the like do not apply. The students
nevertheless characterized Yale's actions as retaliatory, and took
the University to court. The case resulted in a ruling last fall
by the National Labor Relations Board that the University had violated
federal labor laws. An appeal by Yale is now under review before
administrative law judges for the NLRB. A decision is expected this
fall.
Precedent
would seem to be on Yale's side.
While the courts have allowed teaching assistants at about a dozen
state universities to form unions, NLRB legal opinion has blocked
unionization attempts at private schools. In breaking with its interpretation
of the law over the last 20 years, the labor board will -- if its
initial ruling is affirmed through an appeals process that may extend
all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court -- not only change the relationship
between graduate students and professors, it will also change the
shape of both graduate and undergraduate education.
To give
delegates to the AYA's spring assembly on the state of graduate
education a chance to expand on these and other issues, assembly
chairman Robert F. Yeager '76PhD provided a series of panel discussions
with faculty, administrators, and graduate students, as well as
potluck suppers with students in their New Haven apartments. These
contacts only reinforced the impression that the status of the graduate
student has changed dramatically, even if the educational mission
of the School has not.
The
most fundamental change has been in the amount of time students
devote to their teaching-assistant role. In an assembly discussion
on "The Graduate School: Shaping the Future," Donald Engelman,
a professor of molecular biophysics and biochemistry who received
his doctorate from Yale in 1967, explained that TAs "have been
active for a long time" in teaching the laboratory sections
of science courses. But Ruth Yeazell '71PhD, a professor of English,
told the panel audience that the situation was very different in
her discipline. "In the 1960s, graduate students in English
didn't teach undergraduates," said Yeazell. "It was understood
that most people would get their teaching experience in their first
job."
The
1960s were boom times for higher education, and universities and
colleges throughout the country could afford to be relatively loose
in their hiring practices. President Richard C. Levin '74PhD, who
was Appelquist's predecessor as Graduate School dean, noted that
the personal and financial sacrifices made by graduate students
in those days were "ultimately made tolerable by the confident
knowledge that the experience was very likely to have a happy ending
-- a finished dissertation in four years or five, and a job teaching
in a good college or university." Neither is true any longer.
The
success of academic research in recent decades has so pushed the
front lines of knowledge that it simply takes longer to accumulate
enough expertise and data to complete a doctoral thesis. "There's
a demand for more sophisticated, and often interdisciplinary, work,"
says Yeazell, adding that while the PhD program in English was "officially
a four-year program" in the 1960s, the "average time to
earn a degree has increased to more than six years. In fact, at
some schools, it often takes eight or nine years."
Similar
increases prevail in other disciplines of the humanities, as well
as in those of the social sciences and the "hard" sciences.
But even meeting these more rigorous thesis demands is not enough
to satisfy potential employers, says Yeazell. "On-the-job teacher
training is no longer an option -- in this tight academic job market,
universities and colleges are looking for experienced teachers."
How this
experience is obtained and how it is valued are matters of intense
debate.
A teaching fellowship program, originally administered by the College
but now an integral part of the Graduate School, has been in place
since the early 1970s. Designed as a kind of apprenticeship, the
program provided opportunities for graduate students to develop
instructional skills under the tutelage of experienced professors.
Depending on their discipline, TAs perform such tasks as grading
papers and running the lab sections of science courses. Some of
the more advanced students have even designed and taught entire
courses, but the primary TA task is leading the seminar-like discussion
sections that supplement the lectures given by senior faculty members.
Learning
how to teach has long been considered an integral part of graduate
education, and in many disciplines, students are expected to teach
as part of the aid package most students receive at Yale. However,
unlike their counterparts in the professional schools, who pay tuition
to come to the University, graduate students are, in effect, paid
to study at Yale. Not only is tuition currently waived in more than
90 percent of the cases, but most students are supported with stipends
that are currently set at about $10,000 for students in the humanities
and social sciences, and $15,000 for those in the sciences. (The
former amount covers the academic year only, while the latter stipend
runs through the calendar year.) This support is typically granted
for a student's first four years, and Yale has recently inaugurated
a program believed to be unique in this country: a one-year-long
$10,000 dissertation fellowship -- which requires no teaching responsibilities
-- to do nothing but write the doctoral thesis.
"We
provide a lot of financial aid -- about $50 million annually, half
of which comes from the federal government, and half from the University,"
said Appelquist. "And we're trying to improve this."
In the
past, one way doctoral candidates could improve their financial
lot was to teach more. But if the overhaul of the teaching fellowship
program that was recently suggested by a review committee chaired
by English professor Vera Kutzinski ("Light & Verity,"
Apr.) goes forward, teaching will simply be a requirement of most
degree programs, rather than a quid pro quo for the stipend. "The
feeling here is that all graduate students should teach, but that
the teaching they do should be separated from matters of funding,"
said Katherine Kearns, the director of the teaching fellows program
and assistant director of the Whitney Humanities Center.
However
this volatile issue is resolved,
observers like Nannerl Keohane, who received her doctorate in political
science, feel that these apprentice teachers play "a critical
role." Speaking at a Graduate School panel chaired by writer
Tom Wolfe, who earned
his Yale PhD in American Studies, Keohane explained that "graduate
students work at the cutting edge, they speak the language, and
they show undergraduates that excellent teachers come in all shapes,
sizes, and ages. In terms of intellectual capital, they're a resource
we cannot afford to underestimate."
Feeling
underestimated explains some, but not all, of the sentiment that
has fueled the unionization movement, says Antony Dugdale, a fourth-year
graduate student in religious studies and co-chair of GESO. The
push is also, Dugdale explains, a response to "the larger trend
toward the downsizing and increased 'casualization' of the academic
workforce." A union would not be necessary, he continues, if
Graduate School administrators would meet GESO's goals for improving
the conditions of graduate student life -- and guarantee the improvements
in writing. In other words, GESO wants a contract.
That,
however, is not likely to happen any
time soon. The Graduate School has consistently rejected putting
into place what Dean Appelquist called, in an April 18th article
in the Chronicle of Higher Education, "the adversarial
economic relationship between employer and employees upon which
collective bargaining and the rules governing it are premised."
Instead, the dean has attempted to defuse the unionization issue
by addressing GESO's concerns, but not the organization itself.
In addition
to improvements in the financial aid package, Appelquist points
to the new McDougal Graduate Student Center, currently under construction
in the Hall of Graduate Studies, as a way to address many of the
quality-of-life concerns that have been raised. The center, funded
through a major grant from Alfred McDougal '53 and his wife, Nancy
A. Lauter, was designed as a place to meet the social, cultural,
and intellectual needs of graduate students. Lisa Brandes '94PhD,
the center's director, hopes it will become the "nerve center"
of the Graduate School. When the facility opens this fall, it will
include facilities ranging from practice space for musicians to
a fully wired meeting room to be used by the newly created student
assembly. Brandes expects two programs under her purview -- a center
for teaching and a career services office -- to be critical to the
center's success at meeting student needs.
Teacher
training is currently handled by the individual departments and
programs, as well as through a program called Working at Teaching
(WAT) that was set up in conjunction with GESO in 1992 and which
is administered by the Graduate School. "Teaching is one of
the most important -- and pleasant -- things that grad students
do," says Debby Applegate, who directs the WAT program and
expects to receive her doctorate in American Studies next year.
Even
the best-trained teachers, however, remain anxious about their future
these days. Many of current doctoral candidates are where they are
because in the1980s the academic world was abuzz with talk of a
looming dearth of faculty members as the generation hired in the
1960s retired in droves. But two unforeseen developments intervened.
One was the end of mandatory retirement at age 70, which has allowed
senior professors to go on teaching as long as they are healthy.
The other was the downsizing of faculties at many universities across
the land. (Yale's has shrunk by five percent in the past five years.)
The result, in many disciplines, has been a glut of PhD's.
Some
observers point to another cause
-- the conflicting trend toward increasingly rarified study in the
best graduate schools, and a growing demand among "lesser"
institutions for teachers who can cover more general subjects. Whatever
the merits of that argument, it is common to hear stories among
humanities students of several hundred qualified applicants angling
for a single job.
Chris
Gaj, a fifth-year student in molecular biophysics and biochemistry,
explains that the formerly dependable path to a secure career in
science was a PhD, a two-year post-doctoral fellowship, and then
a tenure-track position. "Now, it's a post-doc, another post-doc,
and another one -- all in the hope that something somewhere will
open up." He describes the growing number of such supplicants
as "gypsy" academics. "I've enjoyed science since
the third grade, and it's hard to imagine doing anything else,"
he says. "But I'm thinking about a career in business administration."
Well
aware that it risks charges of raising unrealistic hopes in those
applying to the Graduate School -- let alone charges that it is
holding graduate students hostage to its teaching demands -- the
University is reducing the number of graduate students it accepts.
"It's the prudent thing to do," says Dean Appelquist,
noting that a "10- to 15-percent reduction over the next six
years" is likely. There are also plans to reconfigure some
departments, expanding their reach and eliminating overlaps with
others.
Indeed,
"flexibility" seems to be the word that best describes
what will be required of both the Graduate School and its graduates
in the future. Last fall, the McDougal Center sponsored a program
on alternative careers, and, to hear students at the AYA's assembly
tell it, finding new and different career paths has become a fact
of life.
That
is not necessarily the worst of fates, said Dean Appelquist, who
drew a laugh from the assembly crowd when he described a physics
PhD who switched to Wall Street as a financial analyst. "He's
doing quite well-better than me, in fact," Appelquist conceded.
To be
sure, a life on Wall Street -- or anywhere outside academia -- isn't
what many in search of a doctorate had in mind when they started
their rigorous training. But Eric Papenfuse, who hopes to finish
his PhD in history in 1999, speaks for many when he explains why,
despite the uncertain job market, he became and continues to be
a graduate student. "I'm here to engage with the ideas of my
discipline and learn how to teach and share them," says Papenfuse.
"These are portable skills that enable you to find fulfillment
in many areas, vocational and personal. This has been a wonderful
opportunity."
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