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msparticularity
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« Reply #4 on: January 02, 2010, 01:07:24 PM » |
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I think the difference might be not so much about load, per se, but about the teaching/mentoring expectations at the two places. I teach all grad students, with a 2/2 reduced load at the moment, in a department where 3/3 is the norm. The thing is, though, all of us have a requirement for 6 office hours per week, and that's really it; there is no expectation that we will be in and available for the majority of weekday hours, aside from normal meetings and other service commitments. This means that I am able to set aside one full day per week for research, and that I can also do a lot of my work from home, since my home office is much quieter than my departmental office.
At an undergrad liberal arts institution, by contrast, there can be very significant expectations as to "face time." At my daughter's SLAC, for example, she can pretty much drop into her major department at any time and count upon finding faculty around to talk to--unless they are teaching at that moment. All of the students write a senior thesis, as well, so there is significant research mentoring involved for all faculty. And in the sciences, the undergrad research is generally expected to be at a level that will lead to conference presentations--again overseen by faculty. At the same time, her classes are much, much smaller than those I teach. It is not unusual for an upper-division class at my daughter's SLAC to have only 6-8 students, while my master's classes have a cap of 25, and often are up close to that--which is a lot for a graduate research course.
I suggest that when you interview, you talk to faculty members about what their typical weeks "look" like: how much time do they spend in class, prepping and grading, seeing students, in meetings, and so on. And how do they manage their research; do they involve students in everything they do, and/or can they set aside one day per week? I, too, interviewed at very different schools, and I got good and interesting information from faculty about these questions. (It's important to come across as genuinely interested in their lives, of course, rather than critical.)
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