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Curran, Nathaniel Ming; Jenks, Christopher – Applied Linguistics, 2023
The gig economy is rapidly transforming service-based industries, including online teaching. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic forced millions of people worldwide to work remotely, gig economy teaching generated billions of dollars in revenue and was responsible for millions of lessons per month. Although the global labor market is currently…
Descriptors: Marketing, COVID-19, Pandemics, Entrepreneurship
Washburn, Micki; Crutchfield, Jandel; Roper, De'An O.; Smith, Dawnetta; Padilla, Yesenia – Journal of Social Work Education, 2021
As a result of the health and safety concerns associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, in Spring 2020 social work programs nationwide were required to make significant shifts in their instructional methods and field placements. These changes often resulted in faculty members taking on new or additional responsibilities related to teaching and field.…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Faculty Workload, Masters Programs, Social Work
Ruth, Stephen – International Journal of Technology in Teaching and Learning, 2018
For over a decade the annual Babson reports indicated that only about 30% of full-time professors approve of distance learning, and several other more recent reports echo that finding. Since about one third of all college students in the United States are currently taking at least one course at distance, this means that the pool of teaching talent…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Resistance (Psychology), Electronic Learning
Quillen, Ian – Education Week, 2012
Of all the recent budget cuts made by the Eagle County, Colorado, school district--the loss of 89 staff jobs through attrition and layoffs, a 1.5 percent across-the-board pay cut, and the introduction of three furlough days--none sparked as much anger or faced the same scrutiny as the decision to cut three foreign-language teaching positions and…
Descriptors: Educational Technology, Electronic Learning, French, German
Chisholm, Julie K. – Academe, 2006
These days, most newly hired faculty are appointed on a part-or full-time nontenure- track basis. The AAUP has reported that between 1975 and 2003, full-time tenure-track positions increased by only about 16 percent, while full-time non-tenure-track positions grew by 178 percent, and part-time appointment rose by 189 percent. Yet tenure…
Descriptors: Nontenured Faculty, Tenure, College Faculty, Job Security
Beyth-Marom, Ruth; Harpaz-Gorodeisky, Gal; Bar-Haim, Aviad; Godder, Eti – International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, 2006
Tutors working for The Open University of Israel (OUI), a distance learning institution, are often the only academic staff who have direct contact with students. Their performance is therefore crucial for the university. The nature of their job, however, might hinder optimal performance: they are temporary and part time employees, and thus have…
Descriptors: Open Universities, Academic Freedom, Job Satisfaction, Distance Education
Schneider, Helen – Journal of Instruction Delivery Systems, 1999
Discusses faculty concerns about adapting familiar courses to Web-based delivery, including class size, adequate compensation, ownership of course material, job security, acquiring needed skills, adequate support and facilities, and unrealistic administrative expectations for the technology. (Author/LRW)
Descriptors: Class Size, Computer Assisted Instruction, Higher Education, Instructional Materials