Thursday, November 12, 2009

Education

Does It Matter That Your Professor Is Part Time?

Posted November 7, 2008

Corrected on 11/13/08: A previous version of this article incorrectly described Western Governors University. WGU is a 10-year-old private, nonprofit online university offering undergraduate and graduate degrees.

As colleges face increasing costs, the traditional tweed-coated, pipe-smoking, comfortable-job-for-life full-time professor appears to be going the way of the dodo bird. Nowadays, the typical college professor is a part-timer, moonlighting for extra cash or prestige, or "freeway flying"—cobbling together a teaching career with several classes at different colleges.

Some students are benefiting from adjuncts' lower costs and, often, more practical, up-to-date instruction, of course. But there's also considerable evidence that the proliferation of adjunct professors—many of whom don't have Ph.D.'s—is dumbing down many classrooms and contributing to grade inflation.

Despite 20 years of booming enrollment and skyrocketing tuition, colleges have been quietly filling the majority of new openings with part-time or short-contract adjunct professors (also often called "visiting professors," "instructors," or "lecturers") instead of the traditional assistant professors who have a chance to work up to a full tenured job. In fact, the nation's graduate schools are now pumping out hundreds more Ph.D.'s each year in some disciplines than there are tenure-track openings available. The trend has become so pervasive that about two thirds of America's college instructors are now adjuncts.

That's generated tremendous savings for colleges. On average, traditional professors, who have tenure (or lifetime job guarantees), benefits, and campus offices, cost colleges the equivalent of about $8,000 per three-credit class, one recent study found. Adjuncts, the vast majority of whom teach only one or two courses at any particular college, cost their employers an average of about $1,800 per course. Schools not only pay adjuncts less per classroom hour but often don't offer benefits or support such as offices or secretaries.

Acceleration. A few schools, such as Arizona State University, are responding to current budget shortfalls by laying off adjunct faculty. But looming financial problems are likely, over the long term, to cause many colleges to "accelerate the hiring of adjuncts," says Jane Wellman, director of the Delta Project on Postsecondary Education Costs, Productivity, and Accountability.

Indeed, many of the fastest-growing schools have eliminated tenure altogether. Western Governors University, a 10-year-old private, nonprofit online university, has found that non-Ph.D.'s, on average, do a better job of motivating and counseling students through the school's computerized lessons. And the freedom to release employees whose students fail improves the quality of the education, says Robert Mendenhall, WGU's president.

Many traditional colleges claim adjunct-taught classes are better for students than, for example, classes taught by graduate students.

Texas Woman's University Provost Kay Clayton says raising the share of part-time faculty about 4 percentage points to 44 percent in the past five years might be helping her students. For instance, by hiring moonlighting nurses for about $3,000 per course to teach some nursing classes, the school helped keep this year's tuition at $6,500 a year and, Clayton says, provided better teachers. "That is a real benefit to the students, because they are practitioners and bring in a wealth of experience," she says.

In fact, one study found that in some fields—especially technical and career-related programs such as psychology, architecture, and finance—students who are taught by professionals serving as part-time instructors appear to perform better academically. Such students also take more courses in the subject.

But that study (and others) found, in addition, that the students of adjuncts who are teaching the basic academic disciplines, such as English, history, and pure sciences, are more likely to drop out.

Despite that troubling research, more than half of all English professors are now not on the tenure track. And many adjuncts say most colleges provide them with so little support, job security, and money that it is inevitable that their students will underperform.

Since schools usually look at student evaluations to determine whether or not to invite adjuncts back, Lila Harper, who has a Ph.D. in English literature and teaches writing and literature at Central Washington University in Ellensburg, Wash., finds herself grading a little easier than she likes and avoiding controversial subjects. "We are gradually undermining the value of a college degree," she fears.

Reader Comments

Adjunct Faculty

I come with an alternate twist to the notion of part time instructional choices. As a part-time adjunct member of a local college faculty and with a doctorate in education, I cannot afford to teach at the University full-time at this point in my career. After one has invested so many hours in public education, it is not feasible to make the jump to the college level full-time until retirement (a $20,000/year pay cut for me). I have the best of both worlds, daily, hands-on experience with Middle School aged students which transfers over to my instructional methodology for preparing pre-service teachers at the post-secondary level.

My questions exactly!!

I am a doctorate student writing a disortation on the theori that many of the professionals that are teaching as adjuncts bring much needed cutting edge knowledge into the classroom along with their personal experience on the paticular subject they are teaching. This is great. However, they are lacking in pedagogical skilss needed to teach students of all agesa and I pose the question that they need to be given basic pedagogical knowledge and skills to round out the complete package.

The conditions fulltime "part-timers" face can cause burn out. I'm talking about the traveling time and the net pay, which is so far below the cost of living in Washington State that it should be criminal. But, despite all that, I'm back at a new community college after four years. I'm loving it, but I don't have the same illusions that I did when I started. I'm rested and having a good time.

The point is that teachers who are burned out will not teach as well as when they are rewarded, and not burned out. Sure, we can find the motivation to make the sacrifices to our own lives in order to better others, but sooner or later the wheels will fall off and the car just wont drive like it used to. This is true both metaphorically and literally. I have never bought a new car and I've put plenty of miles on those old junkers. The sad part is that nobody really cares. There's plenty of drivers that will take your place when you burn out. So, my advice to adjuncts is to enjoy the ride and don't rely just on teaching.

The one thing no one has talked about is the state budget. We are employees of the state, not just the colleges and universities. Ultimately the policy makers are setting themselves up for a major lawsuit. My prediction is that the unions will wake up when they realize that fulltimers are the expendable ones. Think about it. Why should the state, during a time of economic crisis, keep tenure track workers when colleges and universities can be run with full-time part-timers. It will be interesting to see what struggling states like California will do. Hopefully this magazine will continue to cover the issue!!!

Strangely the same rules of funding do not apply to k-12 education, even though educating parents and future parents is a better way to improve k-12 education than small class sizes and standardized testing. Parents tend to hold their kids to the same standards they hold themselves to. I believe in standards, but all the rhetoric in the k-12 system about raising standards does not give credence to the fact that standards need to be consistently upheld by a mentor and the k-12 system is set up where students cycle through teachers all the time. There is nobody like a parent to uphold the standards and there is no way better for them to uphold the standards than to get a quality education.

In conclusion, all higher ed. teachers should get paid as well as they would in the k-12 system.

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