Classic View: Browse Jobs By Position Type
All Types | Executive | Administrative | Faculty/Research | Organizations other than colleges
FIND A JOB
Today's Jobs
BROWSE JOBS BY CATEGORY
The Chronicle's jobs database currently has 1966 opportunities.
- Academic affairs (324)
- Arts (78)
- Business/ administrative affairs (334)
- Business/ management (183)
- Chancellors/ presidents (39)
- Communications (37)
- Deans (91)
- Education (120)
- Educational organizations (19)
- Executive directors (48)
- For-profit organizations (9)
- Health/ medicine (201)
- Humanities (134)
- Nonprofit/ government organizations (61)
- Other executive (53)
- Principals/ headmasters (3)
- Professional fields (103)
- Provosts (15)
- Science/ technology/ mathematics (187)
- Social/ behavioral sciences (155)
- Student affairs (280)
- Superintendents/ commissioners (3)
- Vocational/ technical fields (12)
First Time on the Market?
Going on the academic job market for the first time? Here are some things you should know.
2010 Great Colleges to Work For
More than 277 2-year and 4-year colleges participated in the third annual Great Colleges to Work For Survey. Ninety-seven were recognized as Great Colleges to Work For.
Who made the cut? View an interactive map of the winners to find out.
Great Colleges to Work For: A Special Report
-
97 Colleges Recognized in Chronicle Survey
In spite of the country's economic troubles, colleges remain sought-after places to work, the third annual Great Colleges to Work For survey found.
-
But Why Are They Great?
-
See All Schools
Latest Advice Columns
-
My Journey From Industry to Academe
Laid off by his pharmaceutical company, a chemist makes the transition to faculty life.
-
On the Pleasures (and Utility) of Summer Reading
Reading serious, substantive books can make you smarter, but enjoying mass-market novels doesn't necessarily make you dumber.
-
Working With Jerks
In science, tenured or not, sometimes you don't have a choice about who you collaborate with.
-
The Four Quadrants of Administrative Effectiveness
You can chart the skills of academic leaders by how much responsibility they accept and how much control they relinquish.

