= Premium Content
Log In
|
Create a Free Account
|
Subscribe Now
Tuesday, May 29, 2012
Subscribe Today
Home
News
Opinion & Ideas
Facts & Figures
Blogs
Jobs
Advice
Forums
Events
Store
Forum Home
Help
Search
Login
Register
Chronicle Forums
Careers
The Nontenure Track
Toward and Adjunct Nation?
May 29, 2012, 09:30:02 AM
Welcome,
Guest
. Please
login
or
register
.
Remember Me
Login with your Chronicle username and password
News
: For all you tweeters, follow
The Chronicle
on
Twitter.
Pages: [
1
]
« previous
next »
Print
Author
Topic: Toward and Adjunct Nation? (Read 2482 times)
categorical
Senior member
Posts: 253
Toward and Adjunct Nation?
«
on:
May 24, 2011, 08:04:30 AM »
I saw this article today in the New York Times:
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/24/business/24lawyers.html?_r=1&hp
It's about the rise of non-partner track jobs at law firms around the country. If I were disinterested, I might say that it would be interesting to see where the adjunct trend goes next.
Logged
gsawpenny
Member
Posts: 228
Re: Toward and Adjunct Nation?
«
Reply #1 on:
May 24, 2011, 05:25:24 PM »
It is already on the track to this. No matter the wailing and threats, tenure is dying. Right now the profession is somewhere between "bargaining" and "depression" with a few youngsters and the old guard clinging to "denial," but the fat lady is singing. Academia, like the law, can no longer afford to promise a Nobel prize winner in every class when in reality they have always had a poorly trained TA in there. Education is now a commodity and folks want what they paid for - a PhD in every class from CC to Ivy League freshman all the way to senior. No university can afford this so they will turn to adjuncts to fill the need - and once they see there are plenty of people out there to do the work they will simply let the tenured ranks fade into history.
Logged
king_ghidorah
Disgruntled and looking for a little gruntle
Distinguished Senior Member
Posts: 1,249
Give me three steps, give me three steps, mister.
Re: Toward and Adjunct Nation?
«
Reply #2 on:
May 26, 2011, 05:37:05 PM »
Hate to say it, but the death of tenure might not be the worst thing (I realize that this is a primarily economic question, but I'm at one of those places where the tenured faculty are doing all the things tenured faculty should not do and which give tenure a bad name in the first place). What is too bad is that we don't have an viable culture of equitable non-TT contract positions in place.
And yet no one seems to do anything about it...
Logged
Last night I lay in bed looking up at the stars in the sky and I thought to myself, where the heck is the ceiling??
parispundit
Distinguished Senior Member
Posts: 1,194
Re: Toward and Adjunct Nation?
«
Reply #3 on:
May 27, 2011, 01:45:57 AM »
Nothing can or will be done. If people stopped doing Ph.Ds, it would just be a boost for online ed and further mass production. Sure, it's third-rate education, but that's what the American market wants. And higher ed exists to give the market what it wants, right?
Logged
Pages: [
1
]
Print
« previous
next »
Jump to:
Please select a destination:
-----------------------------
News & Opinion
-----------------------------
=> Discuss
Chronicle
Articles
-----------------------------
Cafe
-----------------------------
=> Meet and Greet
=> Tech Talk for Befuddled Academics
=> Conferences and Academic Travel
=> We Speak Volumes
=> Questions, Comments?
===> Frequently Asked Questions
=> Asked and Answered
===> Great Debates
-----------------------------
Careers
-----------------------------
=> Job-Seeking Experiences
===> The Two-Body Problem
=> The Interview Process
=> Balancing Work and Life
===> Health Issues on the Job
=> On the Money
=> In the Classroom
===> Online Teaching
=> Research Questions
=> Working as a Postdoc
=> The Nontenure Track
=> The Tenure Track
=> Mid-Career
=> Retiring From Academe
=> Grad-School Life
=> Diversity in the Workplace
=> Leaving Academe
=> Department Chairs and Deans
=> The Administrative Track
=> Working Abroad
===> Academics in the UK
===> Academics in the Middle East
-----------------------------
Special Topics
-----------------------------
=> Katrina, Rita, Wilma & Irene
=> Academic Libraries
=> School & College
Loading...
Copyright 2012. All Rights reserved
The Chronicle of Higher Education
1255 Twenty-Third St, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20037