Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Lecturers make Cal State work

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Re “Lecturers struggle with big class loads, low pay,” Dec. 26

Growing up, job security loomed large in my family, so it was with great satisfacti­on that I accepted a tenure-track position in 1969 at Cal State Dominguez Hill.

Over the years, nontenured positions began to creep into the system, a response to budget problems that at first appeared temporary. Now, as your article on lecturers teaching on short-term contracts shows, it’s permanent.

I never liked it, and I don’t like it today because of the profound inequity between the job experience­s of revered colleagues.

My one regret is that I didn’t assume a role of aggressive advisor to my non-tenured colleagues in counseling them that if the institutio­n could not offer them a tenure-track position, they should say goodbye and go elsewhere to get the job security and profession­al rewards they deserve. Oliver Seely

Lakewood The writer is a professor emeritus of chemistry at Cal State Dominguez Hills.

Sadly, the problem of perpetual short-term employment is not just confined to academia. Throughout the workforce, many businesses don’t have “employees,” but rather independen­t contractor­s and gig workers.

Ours is not a healthy society when business executives earn hundreds of times what their workers earn.

Sara Schmidhaus­er Isla Vista, Calif.

The story on lecturers lamenting a lack of predictabl­e raises or a promise of consistent work highlighte­d one lecturer in the Cal State L.A. Department of Chicana (o) and Latina(o) Studies, another set to teach an African American history class at the same school, and a third who is a lecturer in the university’s philosophy department.

Is it possible that the subjects they teach make them more prone to experience the problems they lament? My guess is that there are far more people trained to teach those subjects than there are jobs available.

Perhaps if they had pursued specialtie­s such in STEM fields or economics, they would face less competitio­n for available jobs. Econ 101 tells us that those possessing scarce skills can demand higher pay and more secure work.

This is not to diminish the fields these three lecturers chose to pursue. Rather, it merely recognizes the economic reality of being a seller in a crowded marketplac­e.

Gerry Swider Sherman Oaks

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