The biggest mistake an adjunct can make is thinking they are anything more than a temporary expediency. If they want to teach full time, then they need to find a tenure track position. Am I worng?
Adjunct faculty for 17 and 23 years….. as educated as they are, no common sense. On a more serious note, college is WAY too expensive! I’m almost done paying my student loans and the ROI for certain majors are not worth spending thousands. I’m glad the younger folk are going into vocational jobs or just working right after high school. Props to the changing views of attending college.
@@xianshi8896 Don't confuse STEM with people using 4th level languages (like Jave/C#) writing backoffice/web apps. It requires skill but the goal has always been to generate much of the code. So many people in the business just get in the way and really don't produce much. STEM involves bare metal engineering like embedded development, it's a much more difficult discipline and not many people can do it. Look at the firmware in semi-conductor factories or factories in general, AI isn't going to take those jobs. The days of people getting paid big money for poorly written C# apps for example are over.
@@rockpadstudiosThat’s a negative my friend. STEM degrees are overrated. Look at all the tech layoffs that happened this year. Many of them had CS and CE degrees.
I don’t want to Pooh Pooh this story but it’s a 2 tier system. I work in community college and the adjuncts always get the axe when it’s time to tighten up the belt buckle.
They could teach in a public school, but liberal humanities type people in education departments have made the public school environment a nightmare for public school teachers.
Don’t worry! Administrators get to keep their posh salaries and cushy jobs. On the flip side, hopefully this hastens the demise of some of these schools.
I'm a former SFSU adjunct lecturer and I'm glad this story is coming out, even if it's a bit late for many teachers. Before I started work I was informed I would never be eligible for tenure, it doesn't matter how long I might work there. I would not receive any benefits or have any negotiation with wages - which isn't enough to live off of in San Francisco. It cruel to treat highly skilled teachers in this way when the teaching staff is devoted to providing the level of education and care to students.
In certain Middle Eastern and Asian schools, universities, and other institutes, they pay foreign teacher beaucoup bucks, along with free housing and meals.
Here's an idea, SFSU, lower your prices. Considering they're supposed to be premier for their business department, I don't know why they refuse to do something so basic.
The other problem is BIG BUSINESS won't hire students straight from college unless they are STEM. Back in the 19X0's, companies would _train_ new hires. They don't anymore, as they are worried that they are training someone to leave them for a higher paying salary without thinking ... hey, if we paid this person just a little bit more, we could keep them.
I just got fired, and I'm 39 years old. Now that I have 425K saved for an early retirement at age 50, 10K in an HSA, and a property that could yield an extra 200K, what possibilities do I have for a steady stream of income?
I'm not sure whether I should merge all of my investing accounts into one. If so, what should I know and how should I respond to this? In addition, I intend to sell my property, which might potentially fetch an additional $200,000. Is it better to put everything in one account or spread it out among several investments?
These are important questions for a financial planner. I met mine at a summit, and with her assistance, my wife and I reallocate our $1.7 million assets between a regular IRA and a brokerage account. She has been handling the investment with our agreement and has helped us recover twice as much as we lost. Currently holding steady and gently navigating the market.
@@jamesnash6101 Several articles can explain it better than I can. Google "California unfunded pension liabilities." Unfunded pension promises are a disaster for many states and cities, especially Chicago. Chicago has around $20 billion cash and $75 billion debts, at least half of which are unfunded pensions. Money spent on pensions for teachers, firemen, and other workers is money that won't be spent on education.
@@jamesnash6101 Public workers in California have a pension. Not all but most. It means that after 20-25 years of government service they can retire up to 80% or more of their final salary. This includes annual COLA - cost of living adjustments for inflation. Plus health insurance benefits. This is very expensive to do for the state. Every teacher, police, firefighter, government administrator, all the employees hundreds of thousands of them past, present and future. The problem is the state does not have the money to pay for all the pension liability and its current obligations. Think government services and social services. So we’re racking up massive amounts of debt that needs to be paid in the future but we don’t have the money to pay it out. The organization responsible for managing California’s public pension is Calpers, but CalPers is severely mismanaging the money and is actually losing money through terrible investments. What will happen is taxes will need to increase significantly which can be very bad for the state’s economy.
@@jamesnash6101 Read "Calif. Unfunded Pension liabilities are ballooning out of control. Here's the fix." , from the San Francisco Chronicle. Many cities and states have to spend large parts of their budgets on pensions, instead of education or fixing roads and infrastructure.
Of course, I feel for him, but that's the reality of being adjunct. Secondly, here is a harsher truth, very few jobs are 100% secure, particularly if your job is contingent on people in some fashion. This is why I don't care how well I am doing, my philosophy never changes: spend wisely, save often, snd keep your debt under control. While it's not a panacea, it definitely will not hurt.
These teachers can possible go into online education. Private tutoring, curriculum making. It's where the changes are going anyway for financial and social reasons.
@P.90.603 I did watch the video. However, that's not why enrollment is down. It's down because of the economy couple that if high tuition in which the average American can't afford. Also Gen Z is seeing what Gex X and Millennials went through and with the economy its not a wise investment. Also I was giving alternatives to other forms of teaching that might be available to them. Stop being so narrow-minded and emotional.
@@selfmadesm2068 😅🤣 Dude, HALF of American aren't having children. Even if the economy is good and college is a great investment, when half of the population is gone, it means half of colleges will have to shut down or reduce by half. BASIC MATH! People with agendas or people who talk too much like you won't just state that basic fact.
Stuff like this is why people take online college courses because you don't have to worry about whether or not you can get educated or even the cost since a lot of the time it's affordable. I found the exact program I wanted to do for cyber security with my GI Bill to get into the field in spring 2025 and you don't necessarily have to rely on this. As for those two folks that were interviewed and seem to be very educated...even more than I with me only having an HS degree, the common sense to not seek tenure positions or ensure they had other education opportunities knowing the job security wasn't there is astounding.
Also, it’s not too late for these adjunct lecturers to retrain in in-demand fields like IT, finance, and the trades. Reskilling and upskilling will be more important now than ever and will be required more now for mid or later career professionals. It is what it is.
never have I thought that public universities are starting to behave like those "money grabbing" CEOs laying off devoted employees in this case adjunct professors who worked hard 24/7.
@@MichaelAlanis-t2v If the SFSU President truly cared for the Adjunct lectures, she would cut her salary like in order to save their jobs like the CEO of Nintendo or Tom Brady while he was with the Patriots.
@@MichaelAlanis-t2v If the leaders of SFSU truly cared about the adjunct professors they would cut their own salary to allowing to keep them their jobs.
They have raised TUITION that's why there are more staff than STUDENTS! Because working class families can't AFFORD TO SEND THEIR KIDS TO COLLEGE 🤦🤦🙄🙄🙄🙄
I don’t understand. How did our state budget go from a substantial surplus to where we are today? I am aware of Gov Newsom’s budget mismanagement. But is it really this bad?
I had some amazing lecturers at SFSU for grad and undergrad, but even in the early nineties, my course load and graduation date were hampered by the ever present budget cuts and “golden handshakes”.
I graduated from Long Beach State and I have never had a job that required a college degree. I did not borrow a lot of money and the VA picked up part of the cost. I wish had gone to trade school instead.
People who go to trade school have higher rate of student default and most don't even work in the field they studied in. You're looking at it the wrong way. It's not about jobs requring degrees...it's that companies prefer to hire college graduates. It's a lot like dating...you'll do better if you have more than the next guy.
Two tier employee status like this (adjunct vs tenure and contract vs FTE) is highlighting the disparity between the haves and have nots in our socioeconomic system. It’s fundamentally flawed, immoral, and will be the demise of the system.
Fewer students always means fewer faculty. Staff are administrators. All you have to do is see schools like some Bay Area cooking, art and business universities who paid their well-trained faculty less than SFSU.
Well, I don't know if I agree completely. Over the last 10 years. I have seen more diversity in the workplace. And not as much aggression related to Policing. Both are positive adjustments. It just that it's gone too far, and now the market is correcting itself. As it always does.
I don't understand why public schools aren't more subsidized with state funding? Is sf state ranked in any of their programs? If not maybe that's the issue...
How is she still adjunct after over 20 years? After only a few, if am not tenured, I am moving on. I appreciate doing what you love and where you love it, but self-preservation is the priority.
As former SFSU student, I stopped attending SFSU due to tuition cost increased! Too damn expensive and I knew there's no guarantee to get a job after graduation.
I just came here from a video talking about how 10% of medical students failed his class, and when asked if they did the reading (90 pages over five weeks with lots of illustrations), a lot of them would say, "I'm just not into reading and tried finding videos online."
@@mrparkerdanNot true in all cases. The highest paid sales reps I knew were English majors who knew how to speak well. CEOs I worked for had larger vocabularies than doctors. Research it.
SFSU is doing a smart move. Most of these professors leaves students with a software and don’t feel responsible enough. They just want it as an easy job to starting day of every week to send an email , THEY ACTUALLY DO NOTHING. Please stop FALSE reporting
That is not remotely true. Generalizing against a whole set of professionals who DO care-probably the only reason they can stomach the insulting and impossible pay.
@@VivianMastersYou have to go wayyyyyyy off campus to hit downtown. I went there for undergrad and grad. I turned down a lecturer job there because I did not want to starve.
The biggest mistake an adjunct can make is thinking they are anything more than a temporary expediency. If they want to teach full time, then they need to find a tenure track position. Am I worng?
You are correct ! The only issue is that tenure track jobs are few are far between
@@g0ssipg4ynobody is safe if $$$ gets tight
yeah as if tenure track positions grow on trees
@anuragchakraborty8766 Which means they have to accept the fact that they need to move on.
I guess you don’t know academia. Whether you work for a public or for-profit university, tenure track is extremely hard to get.
Adjunct faculty for 17 and 23 years….. as educated as they are, no common sense.
On a more serious note, college is WAY too expensive! I’m almost done paying my student loans and the ROI for certain majors are not worth spending thousands. I’m glad the younger folk are going into vocational jobs or just working right after high school. Props to the changing views of attending college.
Our son is an electrician. He charges 2X what I charged as a degreed accountant per hour. If I had to do it again....
a good STEM degree is still worth the money
@@rockpadstudios just for now, not for long.look what happened to computer science major. time has changed.
@@xianshi8896 Don't confuse STEM with people using 4th level languages (like Jave/C#) writing backoffice/web apps. It requires skill but the goal has always been to generate much of the code. So many people in the business just get in the way and really don't produce much. STEM involves bare metal engineering like embedded development, it's a much more difficult discipline and not many people can do it. Look at the firmware in semi-conductor factories or factories in general, AI isn't going to take those jobs. The days of people getting paid big money for poorly written C# apps for example are over.
@@rockpadstudiosThat’s a negative my friend. STEM degrees are overrated. Look at all the tech layoffs that happened this year. Many of them had CS and CE degrees.
They should offer more trade classes. I wish SRJC had plumbing classes but I’m taking automotive classes right now
Lol I'm at the JC thinking to transfer to SF state!! 😂 This is NOT a good look!!! 😢
SFSU is just being real. Can't keep the same number of teachers when enrollment is declining.
I don’t want to Pooh Pooh this story but it’s a 2 tier system. I work in community college and the adjuncts always get the axe when it’s time to tighten up the belt buckle.
Seems to me that they're expendable.
@@jamesnash6101And that’s nothing compared to what for-profit universities get away with.
@@HerAeolianHarp That was during the Steve Jobs' "Follow your Passion" and International students boom . . .
17 years as an adjunct and considers this his "career" - that's sad
He won't last 3 hours teaching in a prison. Delusional.
They could teach in a public school, but liberal humanities type people in education departments have made the public school environment a nightmare for public school teachers.
These professors should consider teaching in Rural Areas, Teachers are sorely needed there and would be most appreciated there 👍
Yes, they need to trade San Francisco/Bay Area for Smalleville, Kansas.
@oakridgemall-8jl2h9f i was in SF last year, you can have it
Not professors actually.
@@thenotoriousgryyn342 my reply is gone
Don’t worry! Administrators get to keep their posh salaries and cushy jobs. On the flip side, hopefully this hastens the demise of some of these schools.
Why hasten the demise of more affordable public universities?
@@HerAeolianHarp Only their arts and humanities departments . . . not the STEM and skilled trades programs.
@@rivertonhigh-v4tAs it is and should be.
I'm a former SFSU adjunct lecturer and I'm glad this story is coming out, even if it's a bit late for many teachers. Before I started work I was informed I would never be eligible for tenure, it doesn't matter how long I might work there. I would not receive any benefits or have any negotiation with wages - which isn't enough to live off of in San Francisco. It cruel to treat highly skilled teachers in this way when the teaching staff is devoted to providing the level of education and care to students.
Completely agree. No doubt worse at for-profit business and art schools in SF.
In certain Middle Eastern and Asian schools, universities, and other institutes, they pay foreign teacher beaucoup bucks, along with free housing and meals.
So why continue to work there? Why not look a job somewhere else?
If you knew this, wondering why you taught as an adjunct lecturer?
Adjunct for 17 years?
@@RacerX1971 that is a long time to be a temp.
Here's an idea, SFSU, lower your prices.
Considering they're supposed to be premier for their business department,
I don't know why they refuse to do something so basic.
The other problem is BIG BUSINESS won't hire students straight from college unless they are STEM. Back in the 19X0's, companies would _train_ new hires. They don't anymore, as they are worried that they are training someone to leave them for a higher paying salary without thinking ... hey, if we paid this person just a little bit more, we could keep them.
“Although adjuncts like John are experts in their field….”
John: Do you guys have like, questions? Do you want to talk about stuff?
I just got fired, and I'm 39 years old. Now that I have 425K saved for an early retirement at age 50, 10K in an HSA, and a property that could yield an extra 200K, what possibilities do I have for a steady stream of income?
It makes sense to consider a financial advisor at this stage, but delaying retirement might be a smarter choice
I'm not sure whether I should merge all of my investing accounts into one. If so, what should I know and how should I respond to this? In addition, I intend to sell my property, which might potentially fetch an additional $200,000. Is it better to put everything in one account or spread it out among several investments?
These are important questions for a financial planner. I met mine at a summit, and with her assistance, my wife and I reallocate our $1.7 million assets between a regular IRA and a brokerage account. She has been handling the investment with our agreement and has helped us recover twice as much as we lost. Currently holding steady and gently navigating the market.
That’s impressive! My portfolio has been struggling. Who is your advisor?
*June Renae Matthysse* You are likely to find more information if you look her up online
Maybe tuition will go down finally 🦎👽
HUMANITIES !!!
There are consequences to the state being $1 trillion in debt just with unfunded pension liabilities.
Interesting comment. Please explain in more detail. I'm not being facetious, just trying to understand. From a layman's point of view.
@@jamesnash6101 Several articles can explain it better than I can. Google "California unfunded pension liabilities." Unfunded pension promises are a disaster for many states and cities, especially Chicago. Chicago has around $20 billion cash and $75 billion debts, at least half of which are unfunded pensions. Money spent on pensions for teachers, firemen, and other workers is money that won't be spent on education.
@@jamesnash6101
Public workers in California have a pension. Not all but most. It means that after 20-25 years of government service they can retire up to 80% or more of their final salary. This includes annual COLA - cost of living adjustments for inflation. Plus health insurance benefits. This is very expensive to do for the state. Every teacher, police, firefighter, government administrator, all the employees hundreds of thousands of them past, present and future. The problem is the state does not have the money to pay for all the pension liability and its current obligations. Think government services and social services. So we’re racking up massive amounts of debt that needs to be paid in the future but we don’t have the money to pay it out. The organization responsible for managing California’s public pension is Calpers, but CalPers is severely mismanaging the money and is actually losing money through terrible investments. What will happen is taxes will need to increase significantly which can be very bad for the state’s economy.
Exactly, let’s stop cutting costs on community health…..higher education isn’t all it’s sold to us to be.😏
@@jamesnash6101 Read "Calif. Unfunded Pension liabilities are ballooning out of control. Here's the fix." , from the San Francisco Chronicle. Many cities and states have to spend large parts of their budgets on pensions, instead of education or fixing roads and infrastructure.
Less kids are born year after year, less student, less workers.... Why would there be as much teacher as 20 years ago...
Fewer students, fewer teachers is your point, but look at how this is being done? It is ham handed and disruptive.
Well these professors don’t want kids born so
@@Charles-d4e3bUm, what makes you say that?
@@HerAeolianHarp science.
@@HerAeolianHarp Teaching and researching is more fun than changing diapers.
Of course, I feel for him, but that's the reality of being adjunct.
Secondly, here is a harsher truth, very few jobs are 100% secure, particularly if your job is contingent on people in some fashion.
This is why I don't care how well I am doing, my philosophy never changes: spend wisely, save often, snd keep your debt under control. While it's not a panacea, it definitely will not hurt.
Professional Virtue Signaling
These teachers can possible go into online education. Private tutoring, curriculum making. It's where the changes are going anyway for financial and social reasons.
Did you guys not watch the FN video??????? Enrollment is down because of populatio decline. Half of Americans are not having children.
@P.90.603 I did watch the video. However, that's not why enrollment is down. It's down because of the economy couple that if high tuition in which the average American can't afford. Also Gen Z is seeing what Gex X and Millennials went through and with the economy its not a wise investment. Also I was giving alternatives to other forms of teaching that might be available to them. Stop being so narrow-minded and emotional.
@@selfmadesm2068 😅🤣 Dude, HALF of American aren't having children. Even if the economy is good and college is a great investment, when half of the population is gone, it means half of colleges will have to shut down or reduce by half. BASIC MATH! People with agendas or people who talk too much like you won't just state that basic fact.
will the tuition get lower after staff cut?
Maybe but colleges got bills to pay.
General education courses are a waste of time and money people don't want to pay another 50k for courses that they don't need.
That's my little sister... Hey ty
Shaun, if you don't mind public school, you can always get something there, and most system will permit you teach while getting your certification.
Stuff like this is why people take online college courses because you don't have to worry about whether or not you can get educated or even the cost since a lot of the time it's affordable. I found the exact program I wanted to do for cyber security with my GI Bill to get into the field in spring 2025 and you don't necessarily have to rely on this. As for those two folks that were interviewed and seem to be very educated...even more than I with me only having an HS degree, the common sense to not seek tenure positions or ensure they had other education opportunities knowing the job security wasn't there is astounding.
Also, it’s not too late for these adjunct lecturers to retrain in in-demand fields like IT, finance, and the trades.
Reskilling and upskilling will be more important now than ever and will be required more now for mid or later career professionals. It is what it is.
never have I thought that public universities are starting to behave like those "money grabbing" CEOs laying off devoted employees in this case adjunct professors who worked hard 24/7.
Bro you need more brain cells my friend... Let me see if I can make this simple for you...less students means less teachers.
@@MichaelAlanis-t2v Bot, we are not blood brothers.
@@MichaelAlanis-t2v If the SFSU President truly cared for the Adjunct lectures, she would cut her salary like in order to save their jobs like the CEO of Nintendo or Tom Brady while he was with the Patriots.
@@MichaelAlanis-t2v If the leaders of SFSU truly cared about the adjunct professors they would cut their own salary to allowing to keep them their jobs.
@@Vicente-en2zx 😂😂😂😂bro you really are missing brain cells...where did you get blood brothers from???
Why?
Trade schools are the new education we need..
Why don't they cut everyone salary? You just can't raise tuition fees every year.
Because it is a 2 tier system
We don’t get good pay working for CSU.
@@myphuongtran646the higher ups have outrageous salaries and pensions. Go to Transparent CA
They have raised TUITION that's why there are more staff than STUDENTS! Because working class families can't AFFORD TO SEND THEIR KIDS TO COLLEGE 🤦🤦🙄🙄🙄🙄
They make peanuts as it is!
I don’t understand. How did our state budget go from a substantial surplus to where we are today? I am aware of Gov Newsom’s budget mismanagement. But is it really this bad?
I can’t remember names of any of my professors. They were so unremarkable that I can’t remember one name.
Agree. Setting up a syllabus at the beginning of the semester and a short email every Monday
I had some amazing lecturers at SFSU for grad and undergrad, but even in the early nineties, my course load and graduation date were hampered by the ever present budget cuts and “golden handshakes”.
I love my department and I remember all my professors because they were all great. sfsu alumni. The adjunt staff not so much tbh.
I graduated from Long Beach State and I have never had a job that required a college degree. I did not borrow a lot of money and the VA picked up part of the cost. I wish had gone to trade school instead.
People who go to trade school have higher rate of student default and most don't even work in the field they studied in.
You're looking at it the wrong way. It's not about jobs requring degrees...it's that companies prefer to hire college graduates. It's a lot like dating...you'll do better if you have more than the next guy.
@P.90.603 But not many trade schools cost $300,000 or even $200,000.
Good. Let them go under with their bloat. There’s more staff than there are students
Plenty of teaching jobs in secondary public schools. You are not too good.
Maybe it's because the degrees don't get them jobs?
1:01 what is he talking about? There is no money! There just isn’t any money
Two tier employee status like this (adjunct vs tenure and contract vs FTE) is highlighting the disparity between the haves and have nots in our socioeconomic system. It’s fundamentally flawed, immoral, and will be the demise of the system.
common sense is less students means less staff
Fewer students always means fewer faculty. Staff are administrators. All you have to do is see schools like some Bay Area cooking, art and business universities who paid their well-trained faculty less than SFSU.
The mentality of the protesting teachers and students is why this nation is trillions in debt. Tough financial cuts are not made because it hurts.
Well, I don't know if I agree completely. Over the last 10 years. I have seen more diversity in the workplace. And not as much aggression related to Policing. Both are positive adjustments.
It just that it's gone too far, and now the market is correcting itself. As it always does.
When tou run education like a business venture...
I thought they cut people for bigger bonuses
No biggie. Adjuncts shouldn’t be complaining
is that all
Put the tenured Professors to work and get off their lazy behinds!
no one is buying what they are selling. It's why they are getting laid off. Go get a real job.
Did you watch the video? Enrollments are down because of declining populaton. Half of Americans are not having children.
Oh the humanities!
who is going to teach about men experiencing pregnancy?!
I will😂
How DARE you! 😂
i thought tampons prevented male pregnancies?
Oh baby 😅
Darn it I wanted to take a class in SFSU about that... lol
looks like everyone going bankrupt but i wonder where did all the money end up going
I bet they are Union.
3:00 borrow borrow borrow? Probably has a student they want forgiven.
Do they not understand economics?
Kids going into major debt? No thanks
Soon it'll just be the UCs left
Bring manufacturing back to the US
I don't understand why public schools aren't more subsidized with state funding? Is sf state ranked in any of their programs? If not maybe that's the issue...
It's time to get yourself a real job
Teaching is a real job and in most countries highly respected.
Who needs teaching when AI continues to advance? Chat GPT is incredible
Planned Parenthood affected the amount of students enrolling in college now and in the future
sounds like karma
Time to clean house and get back to the 3 R's!
You’re Misspelling the 2nd and 3rd of the 3R’s
Reading, Writing and Arithmetic
How Smart is that - of you?
@@markengel7545 Know sarcasm much homie?
How is she still adjunct after over 20 years? After only a few, if am not tenured, I am moving on. I appreciate doing what you love and where you love it, but self-preservation is the priority.
Unfortunately AI can do the job for free.
I mean working through a textbook at a library can do the same job for free, but universities still exist
ONLY GOING TO GET 1000 TIMES WORSE! WHEN trump starts cutting budgets for education!
Sadly, miserably true.
Get ready guys
Good. I don't know what they're teaching these days that employees are saying that college grads aren't ready for the workforce
Humanities- totally worthless as most college courses are
A useless class that nobody want to take. A waste of time, and people hard earn money.
Abortion has caused declining enrollment. Be careful of what you ask for.
Part of the propaganda machine being let go
I hope they at least keep funding the DEI department.
Excellent Most Excellent
Hope lesser than poverty-stricken years old 1000th years planned
Yeah 😂😂😂😂, Budget Deficits kept pile it up
Somebody from Humanity Dept is losing their job.
Humanities
As former SFSU student, I stopped attending SFSU due to tuition cost increased! Too damn expensive and I knew there's no guarantee to get a job after graduation.
Academy of Art students in SF have had it way worse. Many of them invest in courses and do not even graduate.
@@HerAeolianHarp Because that's considered private school which is not guaranteed to get a job after graduation.
Why waste money on a junk college degree, go to a trade school and get out making real money.
Humanities? English Literature? Yeah, those subjects can definitely go! 😂
I just came here from a video talking about how 10% of medical students failed his class, and when asked if they did the reading (90 pages over five weeks with lots of illustrations), a lot of them would say, "I'm just not into reading and tried finding videos online."
Why?
@@HerAeolianHarp because these subjects do not confer job skills that will lead to a higher paying job. 🤨
@@mrparkerdanNot true in all cases. The highest paid sales reps I knew were English majors who knew how to speak well. CEOs I worked for had larger vocabularies than doctors. Research it.
👋
SFSU is doing a smart move. Most of these professors leaves students with a software and don’t feel responsible enough. They just want it as an easy job to starting day of every week to send an email , THEY ACTUALLY DO NOTHING. Please stop FALSE reporting
That is not remotely true. Generalizing against a whole set of professionals who DO care-probably the only reason they can stomach the insulting and impossible pay.
I wouldn’t send my kids to San Francisco for an education. Drugs, crime, chaos.
SFSU is a largely safe campus miles from downtown. It is practically Daly City.
@ yup, but if they go off campus all bets are off
@@VivianMastersYou have to go wayyyyyyy off campus to hit downtown. I went there for undergrad and grad. I turned down a lecturer job there because I did not want to starve.
@ good move that you turned it down. I think at this point I would pretty much turn down any job in California.
What the governor didn't trump prove this at all? Only care about electric car????
What?
His administration is cutting as much fat/pork as possible. Since Trump doesn't need their support. He's independent. Therefore, he's cutting away.
Sorry but at the same time, people help voted in their leaders that created this mess ! No foresight
Wokes just got broke.
This is happening to college in every state, even MAGA areas.
Humanities profs are a dime a dozen.
FAFO
Its sad however college is outdated,. And not needed in todays business environment. If you are a doctor or a lawyer then yes you need school
I dropped out of SFSU. its not worth the student debt. Now I work as a electrician making $100k+
Computer made college obsolete.
but tuition is sky high. lol
Charge more money.
Y'all not teaching 😢things people get jobs from 😮
NOBODY CARES ABOUT CALIFORNIA.
the University model of education is dying
Everything is falling apart
🤣
Then who will teach the students to hate this country?
AI
Fact check: A.I. is taking over their job!
Layoffs in 2025 is about to get worse. Hope everyone is prepared for that