HRC gets a job
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@jon-nyc said in HRC gets a job:
"Professor of Practice" seems designed to address that distinction.
I think you're right.
This subcommittee has been asked to comment on a category of full-time non-tenure-track faculty appointments known as "professors of practice." While appointments to these positions and similarly titled positions such as "practice professors," "professors of the practice," and "professors of professional practice" have commonly been reserved for practitioners who are appointed because of skills and expertise acquired in nonacademic careers, such appointments are also being offered to individuals with academic backgrounds. These latter professors of practice are principally engaged in teaching and are not expected to be significantly involved in research activities, but they can be distinguished from the large majority of other full-time non-tenure-track teaching faculty in a number of ways. They are usually appointed following a national search. Their academic performance is regularly evaluated according to criteria appropriate to their positions. The length of their renewable term appointments is typically five years rather than one year. Their salaries and benefits often approach those of probationary and tenured faculty members, although they do not match them. They may also have more opportunity to participate in departmental and institutional structures of faculty governance than is ordinarily the case with full-time faculty not on the tenure track, including the opportunity to serve as department chairs.
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What’s the pay?
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What’s the pay?
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@George-K said in HRC gets a job:
@LuFins-Dad said in HRC gets a job:
What’s the pay?
Great. Now what’s HER pay?
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@George-K said in HRC gets a job:
@LuFins-Dad said in HRC gets a job:
What’s the pay?
Great. Now what’s HER pay?