[This would be
the last week of classes, if the Spring 2020 semester had gone as scheduled. To
say that it didn’t is just to scratch the surface of this chaotic, crazy,
challenging spring, though. So for my usual semester recaps, this time I’ll
focus mostly on brief to those folks who helped us make it through this
incredibly tough time, leading up to a weekend post of my own reflections on
teaching in this new world.]
On the union chapter
president who exemplifies the need for this form of organization and collective
action.
Last spring, I wrote
a piece for my bimonthly Saturday
Evening Post Considering History
column on the funding crisis facing public higher education. In the piece’s
last paragraph, I highlight two proposed pieces of legislation, the Promise and
Cherish Acts, through which (if they are passed, which I am hopeful will be the
case) Massachusetts could begin to redress those funding gaps and failures for
both higher and secondary/primary education. Those bills, and the campaign to
garner support for them, have both been led by two unions: the Massachusetts Teachers Association (MTA)
and the Massachusetts State College
Association (MSCA). At FSU, the MSCA Chapter President is my English
Studies colleagues and friend Aruna
Krishnamurthy.
Aruna’s been a
wonderful chapter president from the jump, but this spring she took her and the
chapter’s work to a whole new level. While the first weeks of the unfolding
COVID-19 crisis (in early March) are largely and will always remain a chaotic
blur in my memory, one thing that stands out like the beacon it was is that it
was Aruna we FSU faculty heard from most consistently and helpfully—indeed, I
want to say that we got as many pieces of advice, clarification, guidance, and
support from Aruna as far all other FSU folks combined in those early weeks. As
I wrote in this
September post, the MSCA embodies the best of academic, public, and labor
unions, and I’ve never felt that more strongly—nor recognized the crucial role
performed by leaders like Aruna more fully—than I did over the course of this
Spring semester.
Last tribute
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. Reflections
or tributes of your own on Spring 2020?
Ben, thanks so much for your generous writeup--I am truly humbled by it! I do hope that we get out of this stressful situation by fall! Hope you have a wonderful summer!
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