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Showing 256 to 270 of 602 results Save | Export
Kezar, Adrianna; Maxey, Daniel – Pullias Center for Higher Education, 2012
It is important to understand existing research on the connections between non-tenure-track faculty and student learning and to continue to research these issues. Although working conditions vary across the academy and even within a single institution, many faculty--particularly part-timers--are not permitted to contribute to curriculum planning…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Part Time Faculty, Tenure, College Instruction
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Santiago, Rui; Carvalho, Teresa – Higher Education Quarterly, 2008
New public management (NPM) approaches have informed policy in the public sector in advanced countries in the last decade. Some authors suggest that the main objective of NPM at the organisational level is to change the traditional way professionals are regulated. This study examines the impact of NPM on the working conditions of Portuguese higher…
Descriptors: Employment Practices, Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Work Environment
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McMahon, Deirdre; Green, Ann – Academe, 2008
This article talks about the issues on gender and contingent labor in the field of composition. The authors contend that the composition programs are feminized, devalued, and heavily populated by contingent faculty. The feminization of the field of composition in particular makes the work--and the potential solidarity between those on and off the…
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Gender Issues, Women Faculty, Nontenured Faculty
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Nelson, Cary – Academe, 2008
There are two worlds that exist in the academe: a world where the tenure system remains strong and a world dominated by the absence of tenure. In this article, the author cites the differences between these two worlds. In a world where tenure remains strong, academic departments benefit from a stable, dedicated workforce composed of tenured and…
Descriptors: Tenure, College Faculty, Organizational Development, Nontenured Faculty
American Federation of Teachers (NJ), 2010
A combination of destructive trends in higher education--shrinking state budgets, stagnant student aid, the growth of corporate-style management, the overuse and exploitation of contingent faculty, increasing workloads and attacks on academic freedom--is weakening the educational integrity and professionalism of American colleges and universities.…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Teacher Salaries, Labor Force, College Faculty
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Friend, Jennifer I.; Gonzalez, Juan Carlos – Academe, 2009
New faculty members are traditionally indoctrinated into a system that demands that they write incessantly and successfully publish their manuscripts. Yet they typically are not offered help in navigating the publishing process. For junior faculty members who have little experience with scholarly writing beyond their doctoral dissertations, these…
Descriptors: Tenure, Doctoral Dissertations, Journal Articles, Writing for Publication
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Greene, H. Carol; O'Connor, Katherine A.; Good, Amy J.; Ledford, Carolyn C.; Peel, Betty B.; Zhang, Guili – Mentoring & Tutoring: Partnership in Learning, 2008
This article describes the experiences, perceptions, and available support systems of untenured faculty from a south eastern United States public university system in their progress toward tenure. Survey results were used to develop a model support system for new faculty. Data were collected from an online survey sent to 191 tenure-track faculty…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Nontenured Faculty, Tenure, Mentors
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Gappa, Judith M. – Change: The Magazine of Higher Learning, 2008
The work of colleges and universities is carried out each day by committed, talented faculty members. The faculty's intellectual capital, taken collectively, is every institution's principal asset. Today, as higher-education institutions are faced with new challenges that only seem to grow more difficult the importance of all faculty members in…
Descriptors: Tenure, College Faculty, Nontenured Faculty, Diversity (Faculty)
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Callie, Trina M.; Cheslock, John J. – Review of Higher Education, 2008
This study uses a mixed methods approach to examine how business school deans alter the appointment status and salary structure of their faculty. In addition to analyzing interviews with deans, we examined faculty-level data for more than 200 business colleges between the 1997-1998 and 2005-2006 academic years. We find that business deans are…
Descriptors: Academic Rank (Professional), College Faculty, Deans, Compensation (Remuneration)
Kezar, Adrianna; Maxey, Daniel – Pullias Center for Higher Education, 2012
The nature of the American academic workforce has fundamentally shifted over the past several decades. Whereas full-time tenured and tenure-track faculty were once the norm, more than two-thirds of the professoriate in non-profit postsecondary education is now comprised of non-tenure-track faculty. New hires across all institutional types are now…
Descriptors: Tenure, Outcomes of Education, Interaction, Educational Environment
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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
Olson, Gary A. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
The tenure system is a tenure of one's own making. It can be flexible, supple, and responsive to the diverse needs and life situations of faculty members, or it can be rigid and uncompromising. The tenure years need not be a time of high anxiety, but for that to happen, institutions will need to make structural changes in the tenure system. In…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Tenure, Personnel Management, Personnel Policy
Perlmutter, David D. – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2007
In this article, the author talks about the tenure process of being a professor which can be gloomy for assistant professors as they share a common culture of the joyless quest for promotion and tenure. Life as an assistant professor has its bleak moments; however, the downbeat cosmology is, in the end, dysfunctional and hurts more than it…
Descriptors: Tenure, College Faculty, Teacher Promotion, Nontenured Faculty
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Kezar, Adrianna; Lester, Jaime – Research in Higher Education, 2009
Various factors are making faculty leadership challenging including the rise in part-time and non-tenure-track faculty, the increasing pressure to publish and teach more courses and adopt new technologies and pedagogies, increasing standards for tenure and promotion, ascension of academic capitalism, and heavy service roles for women and people of…
Descriptors: Role Models, Tenure, Leadership, College Faculty
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Maguire, Daniel C. – Thought & Action, 2008
This article presents the outcomes from a case at Marquette University (USA), brought by seven Ph.D. adjuncts who had completed their doctoral programs and were currently teaching part-time as they sought full-time positions elsewhere. The case identified a disparity that is happening at many U.S. colleges and universities that increasing rely…
Descriptors: Adjunct Faculty, Doctoral Degrees, Part Time Faculty, College Faculty
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