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Arthur Delaney
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Unemployed For Years, Professor Turns To Ghostwriting For Students

Posted: 04/ 9/2012 2:16 pm

Unemployment
Job candidates fill out forms for employment interviews at the Goodwill Southern California job fair in Bell, Calif. on Friday, March. 9

Jennifer Sunseri lost her job as an assistant professor in 2009. Now, after nearly three years of unemployment, no health insurance, and diminished hopes of finding a new job, she's earning money by anonymously writing "model papers" for college and graduate students -- in other words, helping them cheat.

"It's highly unethical, though completely legal," Sunseri said in an email when she first started writing for an essay mill in February. "As a former professor, this is the equivalent of prostitution to me. However, I'm behind on my rent and I have not seen a doctor in three years. Moreover, I am 53, have no kids or spouse or inheritance to help me out when I can no longer work, and I've already dipped into my retirement."

Since 1998, she'd taught at Texas Tech, where she developed a course on Slavic folklore that traced the history of vampires in popular fiction from their roots in Eastern Europe centuries ago, when people would dig up dead bodies because bad things had happened among the living.

"The thought was, 'If he isn't decomposing, he must be leeching life out of others,'" Sunseri is quoted saying in a 2006 profile of her course on the school's website.

Now Sunseri is leeching the best life she can out of an academic system from which she couldn't earn a living the normal way. She didn't publish scholarly articles when she was at Texas Tech, she said, so when it came time to apply for tenure in 2009, she knew she wouldn't be a strong candidate and probably wouldn't be successful. So she left.

She immediately moved from Lubbock, Texas to Eugene, Ore. partly to be closer to her mom and sister. She said she's living with two cats in a studio apartment above a garage.

When she first lost her job, Sunseri -- who has master's degrees in technical communications and Slavic linguistics as well as a Ph.D. -- wasn't worried.

"I thought for sure my skills as an educator and writer would see me through," Sunseri said. "I am still in shock at how many applications for writing instructor at the local community college, for GED tester, for office manager, for adjunct this and that at the local university, even for substitute teacher resulted in naught ... I am astonished when I hear that those with college education are faring better than those without."

The unemployment rate for workers with college degrees is 4.2 percent. For workers who graduated high school, it's 8 percent, and for those with less than a high school diploma, it's 12.6 percent.

But advanced degrees can lose their talismanic power. Once they become unemployed, college-educated workers are just as likely as high school grads to wind up unemployed for an extended period of time. During the year ending last June, 12.4 percent of jobless workers with high school diplomas had been out of work 99 weeks or longer, according to a Congressional Research Service report. Among unemployed Americans with a bachelor's degree, 11.3 percent had been jobless 99 weeks or longer -- a statistically insignificant difference. And unfortunately for Sunseri, workers older than 45 are more than twice as likely as workers younger than 35 to wind up jobless for that long.

What gives? It could be that workers with just a high school education are more likely to leave the labor force -- i.e., stop actively searching for work for whatever reason and therefore reduce the proportion of workers who count as officially unemployed. Or, it could be that since a majority of new jobs created during the economic recovery are lower-paying and lower-skilled, they are easier for less-educated workers to learn, while higher-educated workers are simultaneously being more selective about the jobs they're willing to work.

Sunseri is not being picky. She was searching for an online editing job when she fell into the paper-writing work. The company she has been working for most recently asked her to send writing samples; since being accepted, Sunseri said, she gets to bid on jobs in an online forum.

Some of her recent assignments have included a six-page paper on fiscal policy and public debt, an eight-pager on a medieval polity in Europe, two pages on white privilege in the United States, and a gig editing somebody else's 40-page paper. Altogether, the four assignments brought in just $130. Sunseri said she figures that if she keeps writing papers, she could eventually improve enough to earn $12,000 in a year.

Sunseri first realized she could earn steady income ghostwriting after she read a November 2010 article in the Chronicle of Higher Education by an anonymous writer who claimed he made $66,000 a year ghostwriting graduate and undergraduate papers.

"In the midst of this great recession, business is booming. At busy times, during midterms and finals, my company's staff of roughly 50 writers is not large enough to satisfy the demands of students who will pay for our work and claim it as their own," the ghostwriter claimed in his story. "You would be amazed by the incompetence of your students' writing. I have seen the word 'desperate' misspelled every way you can imagine. And these students truly are desperate. They couldn't write a convincing grocery list, yet they are in graduate school. They really need help. They need help learning and, separately, they need help passing their courses. But they aren't getting it."

One benefit of the work, Sunseri said, is that she feels it keeps her from getting rusty.

"Ethics be damned: You gotta kind of look after yourself," Sunseri said. "You really do get afraid that your skills are deteriorating. It definitely is hard work. It's challenging and it forces you to make deadlines. It's kind of a training run to succeed at things I'd be proud of doing."

Sunseri's intuition that her skills might deteriorate during a long unemployment spell may be correct. A 2008 study by Swedish economists found that workers performed worse on reading and writing tests the longer they were unemployed.

One assignment was just too much for Sunseri to complete: She said she discovered it was for a business class at her former employer, Texas Tech University. She pulled out of the assignment partly because of the weirdness factor and partly because she felt she couldn't actually complete the work.

"And I was angry at the Tech kid I imagined partying in Florida," she said, "while I slaved away on his or her assignment for his or her MBA from the university I used to serve at as a faculty member."

Sunseri's goal remains to find Russian translation work, which comes in dribs and drabs. She said she's also earning a little more than $100 from landscaping work one day a week. But she's not quitting the paper-writing business, even though it will make her virtually unemployable in academia.

"Ironically, the paper mill seems to be the only company that understands the value of my extensive education, and, really, two masters and a doctorate, well, I guess I've been training for a job like this all my life."

FOLLOW COLLEGE

Jennifer Sunseri lost her job as an assistant professor in 2009. Now, after nearly three years of unemployment, no health insurance, and diminished hopes of finding a new job, she's earning money by a...
Jennifer Sunseri lost her job as an assistant professor in 2009. Now, after nearly three years of unemployment, no health insurance, and diminished hopes of finding a new job, she's earning money by a...
 
 
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JoeyDee2
I know what just passed here
03:27 PM on 04/11/2012
This idea is tempting. Yes, it's unethical, BUT. To save money, colleges and universities have adopted a corrupt system of "adjunct" instructors compensating them like Walmart floor clerks. No bennies. No professional status. Some adjuncts are on food stamps.

Another part of the corruption is grade inflation for the purposes of retention (keep those tuition checks coming). The average grade for a course in a national study is an 'A.' It is in fact possible for a student to get a good grade without learning anything. Ninety-five percent of all students I've had in the past five years are interested only in the grade.

This ghostwriting is not about getting back at the system. If you're underpaid or, worse, out of work, why not? The system, not the professor, created the conditions that spawned this.

The only limit I would set is, if you are teaching at a particular school, don't do it for students in your own school.

Something more ethical but less lucrative might be to offer comprehensive editing services. The student must write the rough draft. At my school most of the students work, many full-time, so they do not have a lot of spare change to pay for serious ghostwriting.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
methodman
05:28 PM on 04/10/2012
This actually could be a good thing. Academic reading is not encouraged before one gets to college. Religion isn't doing any favors. I am frustrated because there is so much out there very well written, none of it is finding its way onto the television or the Religious churches, temples or mosques. None of it being read by the pastors or priests or that myopic ilk. Time spent away from these institutions spent reading Academic press material is much more valuable and fruitful. If this professor gets the main points and can teach the students to model and moduleize their chapters that is a good thing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bessielil
trying to organize hummingbirds
10:15 AM on 04/10/2012
She is making me heartsick. What she is teaching is a horrible lesson for any student. I say this as someone heading for a meeting with a student for plagiarizing that will result in an F for the course in Comp 102.

Kids with money can pay someone else to do what they aren't learning. Kids w/o $ try the internet. Many get away with it. But it's wrong and she knows it's wrong. Ghostwriting is legal, but writing papers for students is cheating in so many ways, I am reduced to sputtering.
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KarmaPatrol
Riverboat Gambler, satellite whisperer. Independe
09:59 AM on 04/10/2012
Heart-breaking story but aren't vampires the "in" thing with the millenials and (I know) a lot of Gen X? Besides ghostwriting, she ought to try just plain old writing. Vampire vs. zombie ... What happens when blood suckers meet the undead. Oh wait, that was the Wall St. banks. Never mind.
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yoyodyne666
Just here to spool you up.
06:21 AM on 04/10/2012
Hey, Kurt Vonegut did it for Rodney in back to school ......
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jaye4412
Proud Liberal Marine..
08:44 PM on 04/09/2012
Wow.. This is like being an academic grug dealer...
11:36 AM on 11/07/2012
Hah) really well turned compare
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Crispaccio
The real trouble with reality: no background music
08:32 PM on 04/09/2012
academia is a scam. unfortunately, i learned this too late, but at least i can have babies so i don't "look" unemployed ;) with senior professors (assoc prof and profs) not being forced to leave their posts until they are literally dead (i kid not), new phds are fighting for jobs. we're staying in postdocs for sometimes (oftentimes) more than a decade which pay so little we might as well have gone to med school to get the benefit of "residency deferment" on student loans and a better job outlook. being in your 40s are just starting your career as an asst prof is a JOKE! and all those women who decided to wait until they got the coveted faculty jobs to have kids aren't having them. this means the educated class isn't procreating at a high rate at all. if and when we finally do land a faculty position, it might be 3000 miles away from anyone we know, yet we should be forever thankful someone saw the merit in our CVs, the Nature, Science, Cell, etc papers that, without which, we might as well have applied to be the campus janitor. bottom line, kids, stay the f__k out of academia.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Richard Bartholomew
My micro-bio isn't empty.
10:31 AM on 05/07/2012
'... this means the educated class isn't procreating at a high rate at all.'

Shades of 'Idiocracy'...
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jukesgrrl
Hands off SS, Medicare & Medicaid
08:12 PM on 04/09/2012
Good luck, Jennifer. You'll need it. Being over-50 is a death sentence in the job market. Even if you say you are willing to work for an entry-level salary, you will be rejected for full-time employment because they will assume you will be more expensive to insure than a young person. Your years of experience aren't worth the couple of bucks they will save on their Blue Cross bills.

You sound like a smart person, so I'm sure you've figured this out already. Seriously, I feel for you. Stop feeding the cats and buy some vitamins. You can't afford to get sick before Medicare kicks in ... if it still exists when you're 65. Maybe you'd be better off moving to Eastern Europe and teaching English. Seriously.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
05:05 AM on 04/10/2012
no, she shouldn't stop feeding the cats.  people with pets are often healthier than those who don't have them.

she'd be better off moving to europe, period.  at least people there value an education.
06:22 AM on 04/10/2012
Not true if you have the skills that empoyers need. My husband landed a job when he was 60. But Slavic linguistics, Dracula? Just not that much demand in those areas in the modern labor market. You need to choose your major with some greater care and thought if you need to work for a living and keep your skills up-to-date.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
andwhatarmy
Life is good beyond the United Gulags of America.
07:48 AM on 04/10/2012
How is one to choose a career based on projected needs later on? These things change, and some will just, unfortunately, be left out of the loop. It's not quite as bad in the EU. Why? Because they have a social safety net...ooh, bad, the dreaded socialism. You know, that stuff that provides health care for all, and more realistic benefits for those who get the unlucky breaks. Your husband was lucky. My friend who just got a job at 68 was lucky. Possibly they happened to be in fields that are still in demand (my friend is a nurse), but people don't and shouldn't pick a life's work that way. My friend likes nursing; if she liked weaving baskets, she would have done that. I like writing, so I became a writer. Guess what? I'm in a similar position to the lady in the article because society is already so dumbed down, writers are no longer needed...especially as the internet has now deluded so many idiots into thinking they can actually write. Fortunately, I was old enough to semi-retire when the S*** hit the fan. But I pity those who aren't, and empathize with them. It's just cruel to tell people they've hit the anti-jackpot in their life choice. Long live Dracula!
07:49 PM on 04/09/2012
Why doesn't she take hand-outs from the Democratic Party, become a Community Organizer, creating voters and false id's is the same as writing papers for students, it pays well and sets you on the path for political success in the Party! And you might even buy property at values way below market!

Just ask Obama.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dtallwalk
01:41 AM on 04/10/2012
People like you are the problem
But we under stand that's all you are capable of
Now go back to your cave
02:42 AM on 04/10/2012
"We" do, do "we".

Back to the "progressive" pre-K nap room with you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Shifu
Train and be ready
08:38 AM on 04/10/2012
What garbage.
07:17 PM on 04/10/2012
Reality, Democratic Party style.
06:54 PM on 04/09/2012
I think I missed a part of the article; it says she lost her job...but she says she left because she wouldn't be a strong candidate for tenure. Does that count as losing your job if you leave temporarily? I'm not trying to be snarky, I really don't know the answer...
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Arthur Delaney
Staff reporter for HuffPost since 2009.
08:09 PM on 04/09/2012
They don't let you hang around at that point.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
05:06 AM on 04/10/2012
"publish or perish."

she, unfortunately perished in the academic world.
06:47 PM on 04/09/2012
for a lot of folks these types of 'crimes' will become the norm. only so many people have the yard space to 'grow' their way to wealth. We've only just begun down the path of extreme poverty and the corporate government has the 'camp' space set up for all of us.
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lcr999
scientist
06:42 PM on 04/09/2012
"Some of her recent assignments have included a six-page paper on fiscal policy and public debt, an eight-pager on a medieval polity in Europe, two pages on white privilege in the United States, and a gig editing somebody else's 40-page paper. Altogether, the four assignments brought in just $130. Sunseri said she figures that if she keeps writing papers, she could eventually improve enough to earn $12,000 in a year."

Damn, she works cheap. Tutoring pays much better.
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jukesgrrl
Hands off SS, Medicare & Medicaid
08:14 PM on 04/09/2012
She has to work cheap. Most of the thesis-generating companies buy their products from India.
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Taterhead McGobstopper
Paddle faster, I hear banjos ...
01:32 AM on 04/10/2012
And they're good.
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julierose
Informative and Knowledge Investigator/Detective
06:41 PM on 04/09/2012
Unfortunately a lot of us out here in America are in the same boat. Have graduate degree and beyond and can't find work; becoming the normal. I can't blame Jennifer at all by being a ghost writer for college students; people don't write their own book and need ghost writers, why not students. Jennifer has a good point about students' writing abilities also; poor grammar, spelling, and no creativity in their writing. What is happening to our American system where educated people can't find work? Btw, Jennifer needs to post her email address on her sites so students can contact her for work.
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peacekitten
primum non nocere.
05:08 AM on 04/10/2012
the students she's working for have no business being in university on any level.  this country has been deliberately dumbed down, and far too many people are proud of their ignorance.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dallas Dunlap
05:15 PM on 04/10/2012
peacekitten - See the problem. She has done everything right and gotten a good education - for what? The people she's writing for will go on and earn far more than she is making with their faked degrees.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Amethystt
06:18 PM on 04/09/2012
Say it ain't so! I worked hard to get through school without some one doing my work :-(
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dtallwalk
01:52 AM on 04/10/2012
When I needed to take a CAD class we started with 45 people in the class
When I finished the class there where only 23 of us left this summed strange to me so I sake the teacher hay why are there so many open seats he said some quit some missed to many classes but most quit
Because I caught them cheating. How well in a CAD class you draw on the computer and no to drawing have the same amount to data
If they do it's a copy of someone drawing passed around and handed in as there own work and the teacher checks the data size and boom you are hand a latter and told you have been kicked out of CAD
Class. It for the better anyway if they would have got a job the people in the CAD lab would have spotted that they don't have a clue and been fired any way
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Gary St Lawrence
11th Commandment: Thou Shalt Not Get Away With It
10:02 AM on 04/10/2012
So if the place you took your CAD class has a "Basic English, Spelling and Grammar" class, as well.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Doobie Snacks
"Ruh-roh, Raggy"
06:18 PM on 04/09/2012
http://creativecommons.org/about
It's a start in the forward direction.