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Adele, Niame; Rack, Christine – Academe, 2008
In this article, the authors provide a description of the academic climate in New Mexico. Like many other places in the world today, New Mexico is trying to find an identity in an environment that the authors label "increasingly privatized, corporatized, and militarized." New Mexico's higher education salaries are lower than those in…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Salary Wage Differentials, Nontenured Faculty, College Administration
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Rizzo, Elaine; Guerra, David; Pitocchelli, Jay – Academe, 2006
Having recently represented their colleagues in discussions with the administration of their institution, Saint Anselm College, about faculty compensation, the authors of this paper decided to compile a guide for other professors at similar institutions--small, private liberal arts colleges--who may be called on to negotiate salary packages…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Small Colleges, Private Colleges, Compensation (Remuneration)
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Bergmann, Barbara R. – Academe, 1985
The applicability of the principle of comparable pay for comparable worth is discussed for college faculty jobs, not only for alleviation of sex discrimination but also for eliminating bias-related discrepancies between departments or specialties. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Compensation (Remuneration), Departments, Educational Economics
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Nelson, Cary – Academe, 1997
Argues that, although the high salaries of faculty "superstars" may disadvantage other faculty and staff, particularly in a period of downsizing, the more serious problem is the tradition of large discipline-based differences in faculty salaries which undermine the principles of merit-based compensation. Resentment of "superstar" salaries may have…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Compensation (Remuneration), Educational Economics, Faculty College Relationship
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Heim, Werner G. – Academe, 2006
In this paper, the author describes what might happen if a college got rid of its board of trustees and the faculty became voting partners in running the "corporation." What if there was no board of trustees composed mainly of outsiders? What if the president was chosen by and responsible to the faculty? What, in short, if the faculty owned the…
Descriptors: Governing Boards, Higher Education, College Faculty, Governance
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Hamermesh, Daniel S. – Academe, 1988
Disciplinary and rank salary differences in higher education are immense and growing, and neither a marketplace nor a uniform approach explains or guides the setting of academic salaries. Salary differences must be prevented from generating feelings of second-class citizenship to maintain a common purpose among faculty. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Rank (Professional), College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, Economic Change
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Sojka, Gary A. – Academe, 1985
The difficulty for an institution of finding a balance between traditional faculty compensation practices and free labor market practices that raise the salaries of faculty in high-demand disciplines in government, industry, and education is discussed. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Compensation (Remuneration), Competition, Educational Economics
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Thompson, Karen – Academe, 1992
Issues arising from the increasing use of part-time college faculty as an institutional cost-management strategy are discussed, including implications for faculty joining unions, tenure, governance and administrative hierarchy, faculty workload, quality of education, and public confidence in higher education. The trend is seen as ultimately…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, College Administration, College Faculty, Costs
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Academe, 1996
The report and proposed policy statement of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) concerning tenure among medical school faculty describes some changes occurring in academic medical centers and their implications for faculty status and academic freedom. It then details AAUP policy principles, focusing on academic appointments,…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, Educational Trends, Employment Practices, Futures (of Society)
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Academe, 1999
Introduces three articles describing how faculty at three medical schools fought back against aggressive medical school administrators who tried to limit the faculty's power by cutting salaries and/or threatening tenure. (DB)
Descriptors: College Administration, College Faculty, Faculty College Relationship, Higher Education
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Tierney, William G. – Academe, 1999
Notes that increasing numbers of medical schools no longer guarantee the full salary of tenured professors and suggests faculty members must rely on traditional structures of shared governance to ensure that the decoupling of tenure from salary does not destroy academic freedom within the university. Evaluates five models proposed to deal with the…
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Faculty, Governance, Higher Education
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Badgett, M. V. Lee – Academe, 1994
At most colleges and universities, fringe benefits are offered only to married faculty. Requiring marriage for benefit eligibility discriminates against all unmarried couples, homosexual or heterosexual. Resistance to providing benefits to unmarried couples is declining, but both gay and straight couples will have to lobby together for domestic…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Family (Sociological Unit), Fringe Benefits, Higher Education
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Cahn, Steven M. – Academe, 2004
Most college and university administrators claim to care deeply about the quality of teaching at their institutions. But, too often, their actions belie their words. Consider, for example, the following questions. Which candidate for a faculty position is usually viewed as more attractive, the promising researcher or the promising teacher? Who…
Descriptors: Researchers, College Faculty, Personnel Selection, Teacher Salaries
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Burgan, Mary A. – Academe, 1988
The current trend toward academic gamesmanship, characterized by interinstitutional competition for faculty, gives the general public a superficial notion of academic excellence, deceives higher education supporters, deprives undergraduates of teaching that they are paying higher prices to receive, and gauges success by ephemeral standards.…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Competition, Educational Economics, Faculty Recruitment
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Hansen, W. Lee – Academe, 1988
The role of merit pay is examined in the contexts of two different faculty salary systems, and the interaction of the salary system and assessment of individual merit to produce particular patterns of faculty mobility is discussed. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, Faculty Mobility, Faculty Promotion
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