The article on the plight of graduate teaching assistants (¡°Ignored and forgotten¡±, Opinion, 13 February) was painfully true. I was a GTA for three years. I basically had a year when I?did almost no work on my PhD because I?was teaching full-time for a paltry sum I?couldn¡¯t live on. I almost killed myself trying to do both fieldwork and teaching in the second and third years, and then had to fund myself through a?fourth year to write the damn thing.
I often wondered what the students would think if they knew that their essays and exams were being given at most 15 minutes¡¯ consideration so I could come in at something like minimum wage. The marking load was crippling (150 essays in 14 days, no days off).
I?was very good at it, and I loved it. I?wouldn¡¯t have minded if I had been considered a member of staff, or valued, or given a route into employment afterwards, but I wasn¡¯t.
I¡¯m out of it now, but I wish something could be done. Value your GTAs, they are amazing.
M. Bodley
Via timeshighereducation.co.uk
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