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Goodwin, Stephanie A.; Morgan, Susanne – Academe, 2012
In this article, the authors discuss the hidden epidemic in higher education. They describe the stigma of chronic illness and argue that the invisibility of chronic illness may elicit particularly problematic responses from others, especially when faculty work in a context where people are expected to be highly productive and have unlimited…
Descriptors: Productivity, Chronic Illness, Physical Health, College Faculty
Kerschbaum, Stephanie L. – Academe, 2012
In a recent issue of "Academe," Stephanie Goodwin and Susanne Morgan point out that faculty members with chronic illness are likely to find current accommodation procedures unhelpful, both because they might choose to remain silent rather than risk the stigma of disclosing a disability and because accommodations often do not meet their…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Chronic Illness, Social Problems, Social Attitudes
McGrew, Heidi; Untener, Joe – Academe, 2010
Challenges associated with the increasing use of contingent faculty appointments in American higher education are mounting. The AAUP and other professional groups have identified several major problems: (1) unacceptable conditions and compensation for contingent faculty members; (2) poor learning outcomes for students; and (3) the potential…
Descriptors: College Administration, College Faculty, Guidelines, Labor Conditions
Nelson, Cary – Academe, 2008
There are two worlds that exist in the academe: a world where the tenure system remains strong and a world dominated by the absence of tenure. In this article, the author cites the differences between these two worlds. In a world where tenure remains strong, academic departments benefit from a stable, dedicated workforce composed of tenured and…
Descriptors: Tenure, College Faculty, Organizational Development, Nontenured Faculty
Trower, Cathy A. – Academe, 2008
Beginning in 1934, representatives of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) and the Association of American Colleges (AAC) met and drafted the definitive statement on academic freedom and tenure. Like the U.S. Constitution, the 1940 "Statement on Principles of Academic Freedom and Tenure" was a commendable, if deficient, product…
Descriptors: Tenure, Academic Freedom, Higher Education, Policy Formation
Neal, Anne D. – Academe, 2008
Ever since the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) and the Association of American Colleges issued the joint 1940 Statement of Principles on Academic Freedom and Tenure, two truths have been deemed self-evident: that academic freedom is vital to meaningful teaching and intellectual work, and that tenure is necessary to ensure…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Tenure, Academic Freedom, Rewards
Ward, Kelly; Wolf-Wendel, Lisa – Academe, 2004
Biological and tenure clocks have the unfortunate tendency to tick loudly, clearly, and at the same time. The average age at which faculty earn the PhD is thirty-four, putting the tenure decision at about age forty, just when a woman's fertility is in serious decline. As more women enter the academic profession as assistant professors, more of…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Personnel Policy, College Faculty, Women Faculty
Quinn, Kate; Lange, Sheila Edwards; Olswang, Steven G. – Academe, 2004
Institutions of higher education nationwide have been adopting policies to help faculty members with primary caregiving roles to attain tenure, and much research has been devoted to their effectiveness. The range of policies and programs has expanded dramatically since the 1970s. Among the options now available are family leave, elder-care…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Personnel Policy, Research Universities, College Faculty
Sullivan, Beth; Hollenshead, Carol; Smith, Gilia – Academe, 2004
Today, American families juggle many competing priorities: home, work, school, medical care, after-school activities, and other responsibilities required to raise a family and maintain a household. At the same time, more employers are developing policies that acknowledge the need for a healthy balance between work and home. These policies allow…
Descriptors: Family Work Relationship, Personnel Policy, Colleges, College Faculty

Goodall, Leonard E. – Academe, 1992
Four steps to retirement planning, intended to demystify retirement investment, are offered for college faculty: (1) establish diversification goals; (2) urge their institutions to offer more investment options; (3) coordinate retirement investments with other investments; and (4) take steps to guarantee against inflation. Typical age-related…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Higher Education, Investment, Money Management

Ehrenberg, Ronald G. – Academe, 2001
Surveyed changes in retirement policies for tenured faculty at a large national sample of colleges and universities. Found variations in the characteristics of regular retirement programs, in the existence and nature of retirement-incentive and phased-retirement programs, in institutional policies relating to retired faculty, and in institutions'…
Descriptors: Colleges, Higher Education, Personnel Policy, Retirement

Finkin, Matthew W.; And Others – Academe, 1988
The clause in the American Association of University Professors' 1940 statement on academic freedom and tenure requiring that limitations on faculty academic freedom for religious or other aims of the institution be specified in writing upon appointment is discussed in a Committee A subcommittee statement and in two other commentaries. (MSE)
Descriptors: Academic Freedom, College Faculty, Contracts, Faculty College Relationship

Academe, 1998
The statement, prepared by representatives of ten academic associations attending a September 1997 conference on part-time and adjunct college faculty, argues that often the terms and conditions of such appointments are inadequate to support responsible teaching or, by extension, a career, and urges institutions not to rely inappropriately on…
Descriptors: Adjunct Faculty, College Faculty, Conferences, Employment Patterns

Farrell, Thomas J. – Academe, 1992
A tenured teacher at the University of Minnesota at Duluth examines institutional policy of hiring non-tenure-track faculty for its writing program. He argues that underfunding and understaffing created a backlog that was then passed on to full-time "temporary" teachers, at the same time administrative costs were increasing. (MSE)
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, College Faculty, Employment Practices, Faculty College Relationship

Bergmann, Barbara R. – Academe, 1985
The applicability of the principle of comparable pay for comparable worth is discussed for college faculty jobs, not only for alleviation of sex discrimination but also for eliminating bias-related discrepancies between departments or specialties. (MSE)
Descriptors: College Faculty, Compensation (Remuneration), Departments, Educational Economics