Holy smokes, folks, do you ever break down those $1500-$3000 per course salaries into how much you get per hour for the number of hours you actually work, including preparing, teaching, grading, etc.? Is it worth it vs. just going out and getting a different kind of job? Even if you string together 4 courses at $3,000 a whack, that's just $12,000 for, what, six months of work? X2 (for another semester), that's below poverty level!
Why do people do this?
More like three and a half months and when teaching courses I've taught before the prep can be quite minimal. I'll admit that adjuncting isn't perfect but I have broken down the rate I get to an hourly wage and I find it rather generous compared to other work I've done. I get twenty dollars an hour, and that's actually an underestimate, assuming I work two hours per class hour outside of class working on the course (which I rarely do). Maybe this makes me a bad teacher but I just don't need to spend seven hours a week outside of class every week on making my composition class run smoothly. The classes are capped at fifteen students so even the grading is't that great of a time drain.