Women as part-time faculty members
β Scribed by Barbara H. Tuckman; Howard P. Tuckman
- Book ID
- 104633446
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1981
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 573 KB
- Volume
- 10
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0018-1560
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Part-time positions in, academe have long been considered women's work because of the opportunities they afford for child care and household responsibilities, as well as the lower status and pay which they generally carry. Recent data indicate that men are just as likely as women to be part-timers, and that the large majority of women do not fit the stereotypical view of women part-timers. This paper uses data from a nation-wide survey of part-timers, conducted by the American Association of University Professors in 1977, to compare job-related characteristics of males and females and their motivations for working part-time. The data suggest that part-time academic employment may, in fact, be a female issue since some differences between the sexes are found to exist. In several instances women appear to be worse off than their male counterparts. The article concludes with policy recommendations to improve this situation.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Pragmatic and strategic practices can be used to "fix" some of the deficits identified in the use of part-time faculty.
## Abstract Even at institutions where highly trained, highly motivated, and deeply committed partβtimers teach, partβtime instruction can adversely affect teaching, the support of students, the general quality of education, and morale in departments.
## Abstract Arguing that the professional lives of women faculty are different from those of their male counterparts, the author reviews several autobiographical texts focused on female faculty satisfaction.