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Showing 421 to 435 of 602 results Save | Export
Borisoff, Deborah – 1997
From the time a new faculty member is hired until a final decision is made on promotion and tenure, his/her record will undergo constant scrutiny by departmental personnel committees, school and/or university-wide committees, external reviewers, and administrators. A formal and clear-cut mentoring system can benefit new faculty members: senior…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Higher Education, Interprofessional Relationship, Mentors
Schramm, Susan – 2000
Although mentoring is a popular practice in academia, mentor-protegee relationships are, for women faculty, problematic in several areas including power dynamics and cross-gender interactions. This paper discusses mentoring among academic faculty in the context of a feminist analysis of mentor-protegee relations, and suggests a feminist mentoring…
Descriptors: Colleges, Faculty, Feminism, Feminist Criticism
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Walden, John C. – National Elementary Principal, 1973
A discussion of two decisions by the U.S. Supreme Court relating to a nontenured teacher's legal rights, especially those rights related to contract renewal. (Author/DN)
Descriptors: Contracts, Due Process, Freedom of Speech, Nontenured Faculty
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Kroll, Keith – Teaching English in the Two-Year College, 1994
Explores the research regarding the profile and perspectives of part-time two-year college faculty in English. Considers weekly time management, research and professional activities, and views regarding the profession of teaching. Argues that all faculty should increase their activism in support of part-time faculty and their needs. (HB)
Descriptors: College English, Educational Research, English Instruction, Higher Education
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Boyer, Patricia; Cockriel, Irv – SRA Journal, 1998
A study examined factors motivating and hindering college faculty (n=248) in pursuit of grants, focusing on differences between tenured and non-tenured faculty. Results suggest non-tenured faculty perceive motivational factors and barriers differently than tenured faculty. Concluding that adequate training in grant writing is essential, it is…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Comparative Analysis, Fund Raising, Grantsmanship
Leatherman, Courtney – Chronicle of Higher Education, 1999
Increasing use of non-tenure-track, full-time college professors, which some thought a temporary solution to institutional budgeting, has become common policy, according to a study of existing data for 88 four-year institutions. While administrators find flexibility and savings in the practice, faculty accuse institutions of exploiting Ph.D.s and…
Descriptors: Administrator Attitudes, College Faculty, Costs, Employment Practices
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Gappa, Judith M. – New Directions for Institutional Research, 2000
Discusses the employment conditions and levels of satisfaction of the increasing numbers of full- and part-time college faculty members ineligible for tenure. Recommends extension of academic freedom, a reasonable amount of job security for all faculty, inclusion of tenure-ineligible faculty members in governance, and basing faculty rewards and…
Descriptors: Adjunct Faculty, Faculty Evaluation, Higher Education, Job Satisfaction
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Bess, James L. – Journal of Higher Education, 1998
Looks at how contracts impact on college faculty incentives to produce at high levels of quality and quantity. Focus is on the organizational and structural conditions that accompany tenure systems in academic organizations, on the associated motivational climate that is produced by either tenure or contract systems, and on the effect of…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Contracts, Higher Education, Incentives
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Perna, Laura W. – Journal of Higher Education, 2001
This study used data from the 1993 National Study of Postsecondary Faculty to examine the extent to which the concentration of women among part-time and nontenure-track faculty is related to family responsibilities. It found that in fact the effects of family responsibilities are less advantageous for women than for men. (EV)
Descriptors: Academic Rank (Professional), Adjunct Faculty, College Faculty, Family (Sociological Unit)
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Hill, Nicole R. – Counselor Education and Supervision, 2004
Pretenured faculty members experience unique challenges as they respond to the demands and opportunities of an academic appointment (A. E. Austin & R. E. Rice, 1998; M. D. Sorcinelli, 1994). Given the emphasis on wellness within the counseling framework, it is imperative to identify and address the experiences of pretenured counselor educators.…
Descriptors: Nontenured Faculty, Wellness, Quality of Working Life, Stress Variables
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Umbach, Paul D. – Review of Higher Education, 2007
The purpose of this study was to explore the impact of the use of contingent faculty on undergraduate education. This study presents three research questions: (1) To what degree do contingent faculty members engage students in good practices less frequently than their tenured and tenure-track counterparts?; (2) What effect does the proportion of…
Descriptors: Program Effectiveness, Individual Characteristics, Institutional Characteristics, Educational Practices
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Chen, Yining; Gupta, Ashok; Hoshower, Leon – Journal of Education for Business, 2006
In this study, the authors used expectancy theory to examine key factors that motivate business faculty to conduct research. The survey results, from 320 faculty members at 10 business schools, showed that faculty members who assign higher importance ratings to both the extrinsic and the intrinsic rewards of research exhibit higher research…
Descriptors: Teacher Motivation, College Faculty, Business Administration Education, Productivity
Cassebaum, Anne – 1995
At the post-secondary level, 38% of teaching is done by adjunct faculty. How did the profession become so divided? The answer goes beyond the academic profession because full-time positions are getting splintered into part-time ones all over the United States, but nevertheless academics make themselves particularly vulnerable because of their…
Descriptors: Adjunct Faculty, Attitude Change, College Administration, College Faculty
Staples, Katherine – 1984
Part-time instructors make up an increasingly large percentage of college faculty. In English departments, part-time instructors take on the least prestigious and most demanding work--the teaching of writing--for low wages and without job security or professional recognition. This unfair treatment stems from the belief that the study and teaching…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Educational Trends, Higher Education, Nontenured Faculty
Whooley, John E. – 1990
This study focused on what tenured faculty at a school of education presently do and what they could do to enhance the instructional effectiveness of nontenured faculty. Nontenured instructors and assistant professors (N=142) were asked to respond to open-ended statements on the subject. Responses from 47 nontenured faculty members (33%) indicated…
Descriptors: Collegiality, Educational Resources, Helping Relationship, Higher Education
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