Home » Resources » Scholarship on Teaching » The American Faculty: The Restructuring of Academic Work and Careers
Scholarship
March 29, 2017
The American Faculty: The Restructuring of Academic Work and Careers
- Author
- Shuster, Jack H., and Martin J. Finklestein
- Publisher
- Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, MD
- ISBN
- 801882834
- Table of Contents
-
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
List of Figures and Tables
Part One. Overview of the American Faculty
ch. 1. Establishing the Framework
ch. 2. The American Faculty in Perspective
ch. 3. The Professoriate in Profile
Part Two. The Faculty at Work
ch. 4. The Changing Complexion of Faculty Work
ch. 5. Academic Culture and Values and the Quality of Worklife
Part Three. The Academic Career
ch. 6. The Changing Academic Career
ch. 7. The Revolution in Academic Appointments: A Closer Look
ch. 8. Compensation and Academic Careers: Trends and Issues
ch. 9. Pathways to the Professoriate
Part Four. Contemporary Academic Life: An Assessment
ch. 10. American Academic Life Restructured
ch. 11. What's Ahead? Agendas for Policy Analysis, Research, and Action on Academic
Staffing
Appendixes
A. Descriptions of the National Faculty Surveys
B. Selected National Faculty Surveys: A Concordance of Contents
C. Understanding Faculty Trends: Challenges to and Strategies for Interpreting Survey Data
D. Variables for Classifying Faculty Subgroups
E. Master Notes on Contents of Tables and Figures
F. Academic Appointments: Historical Milestones
G. Faculty Compensation: Data Sources
H. Note on Accessing Survey Instruments
I. Faculty Diversity: Race and Ethnicity Categories
J. Appendix Tables and Figures
List of Tables
Tables
References
About the Authors
Index
Higher education is becoming destabilized in the face of extraordinarily rapid change. The composition of the academy's most valuable asset—the faculty—and the essential nature of faculty work are being transformed. Jack H. Schuster and Martin J. Finkelstein describe the transformation of the American faculty in the most extensive and ambitious analysis of the American academic profession undertaken in a generation.
A century ago the American research university emerged as a new organizational form animated by the professionalized, discipline-based scholar. The research university model persisted through two world wars and greatly varying economic conditions. In recent years, however, a new order has surfaced, organized around a globalized, knowledge-based economy, powerful privatization and market forces, and stunning new information technologies. These developments have transformed the higher education enterprise in ways barely imaginable in generations past.
At the heart of that transformation, but largely invisible, has been a restructuring of academic appointments, academic work, and academic careers—a reconfiguring widely decried but heretofore inadequately described. This volume depicts the scope and depth of the transformation, combing empirical data drawn from three decades of national higher education surveys. The authors' portrait, at once startling and disturbing, provides the context for interpreting these developments as part of a larger structural evolution of the national higher education system. They outline the stakes for the nation and the challenging work to be done. (From the Publisher)
A century ago the American research university emerged as a new organizational form animated by the professionalized, discipline-based scholar. The research university model persisted through two world wars and greatly varying economic conditions. In recent years, however, a new order has surfaced, organized around a globalized, knowledge-based economy, powerful privatization and market forces, and stunning new information technologies. These developments have transformed the higher education enterprise in ways barely imaginable in generations past.
At the heart of that transformation, but largely invisible, has been a restructuring of academic appointments, academic work, and academic careers—a reconfiguring widely decried but heretofore inadequately described. This volume depicts the scope and depth of the transformation, combing empirical data drawn from three decades of national higher education surveys. The authors' portrait, at once startling and disturbing, provides the context for interpreting these developments as part of a larger structural evolution of the national higher education system. They outline the stakes for the nation and the challenging work to be done. (From the Publisher)