Teaching 6 Courses @ 4 Institutions - Definitely Not Tenure Track
“We have to contend with increasing public demands for accountability, increased financial scrutiny and declining state support,” said Charles F. Harrington, provost of the University of North Carolina, Pembroke. “One of the easiest, most convenient ways of dealing with these pressures is using part-time faculty,” he said, though he cautioned that colleges that rely too heavily on such faculty “are playing a really dangerous game.”Mark B. Rosenberg, chancellor of the State University System of Florida, said that part-timers can provide real-world experience to students and fill gaps in nursing, math, accounting and other disciplines with a shortage of qualified faculty. He also said the shift could come with costs.
Adjuncts are less likely to have doctoral degrees, educators say. They also have less time to meet with students, and research suggests that students who take many courses with them are somewhat less likely to graduate.
“Really, we are offering less educational quality to the students who need it most,” said Ronald G. Ehrenberg, director of the Cornell Higher Education Research Institute, noting that the soaring number of adjunct faculty is most pronounced in community colleges and the less select public universities. The elite universities, both public and private, have the fewest adjuncts.
1 Comments:
Above you describe adjuncts as 'not tenure track'.
This is a very poor definition of adjunct labor. I think it would be a great idea to create more non-tenure track full-time positions on universities! Hire good teachers to teach with some measure of job security but not the entire protection that tenure affords.
But adjuncts are not that- we are paid a few thousand dollars per course, with no health insurance at most institutions. Obviously you know this, but if the community of higher ed is to become healthy and sustainable, everyone needs to be very aware of the financial realities of adjuncts, because *our* lives are not sustainable, and yet we are the very reason our institutions are surviving!
I love my students but this lifestyle of teaching 5 classes and doing freelance work to pay the bills and service the debt is not acceptable! This is a *serious* concern and we must address it!
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