Skip to main content
Home » Resources » Resource

Resources

Adjunctification as an "education problem." Addresses the fact that academia and the media continue to promote the myth of "an academy that doesn't exist," in which tenure-track is still the norm. Looks at steps schools ought to take to help adjunct instructors accomplish their teaching.

This in an "info" piece on the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and its provisions regarding part-time college instructors, including not only health insurance matters, but those relating to workload definitions.

The Journal of Online Teaching and Learning (JoLT) publishes the detailed results of a study. Briefly: student outcomes are better across the board when taught by FT faculty over adjunct faculty.

The MLA recommendations for departments concerning the treatment of non-tenure-track faculty members. The URL includes a link to a PDF entitled "PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES FOR NON-TENURE-TRACK FACULTY MEMBERS: RECOMMENDATIONS AND EVALUATIVE QUESTIONS".

The Coalition on the Academic Workforce seeks to "address issues associated with deteriorating faculty working conditions and their effect on college and university students in the United States." This URL links to a large-scale survey of part-time and "contingent" faculty members, conducted in 2010 and published in 2012.

This piece concerns "public work" in the sense of student assignments taking place outside the classroom or a closed Learning Management System. It is in the form of a Storify of a Twitter chat that took place March 26, 2012.

Baker offers four (4) strategies for being a public intellectual in one's field: Embrace mass media; imrove your communication style; resist the urge to dumb down the message; keep communication channels open.

The Transnational Character of Theological Education

Article by Stephen J. Bell and John Shanks in College and Research Libraries News (July/August 2004). Provides an overview of the concept of the blended librarian and provides six principles of blended librarianship.

Article in Diskus: The Journal of the British Association for the Study of Religions (2013) by Stefanie Sinclair. Considers issues of digital literacy in the context of religious studies. Suggests ways in which technology can contribute to teaching and learning religious studies.