For almost 40 years, we've been witnessing the rise of the adjuncts.
Jordan Weissmann
The Atlantic - Apr 10 2013
Once, being a college professor was a career. Today, it's a gig.
That, broadly speaking, is the transformation captured in the graph below from a new report by the American Association of University Professors.
Since 1975, tenure and tenure-track professors have gone from roughly
45 percent of all teaching staff to less than a quarter. Meanwhile,
part-time faculty are now more than 40 percent of college instructors,
as shown by the line soaring towards the top of the graph.
This doesn't actually mean that there are fewer full-time
professors today than four-decades ago. College faculties have grown
considerably over the years, and as the AAUP notes, the ranks of the
tenured and tenure-track professoriate are up 26 percent since 1975.
Part-time appointments, however, have exploded by 300 percent. The
proportions vary depending on the kind of school you're talking about.
At public four-year colleges, about 64 percent
of teaching staff were full-time as of 2009. At private four-year
schools, about 49 percent were, and at community colleges, only about 30
percent were. But the big story across academia is broadly the same: if
it were a move, it'd be called "Rise of the Adjuncts."
To read more....
No comments:
Post a Comment