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Jennifer Hynes; Sarah-Jane Cullinane – Irish Educational Studies, 2024
An increasing body of work has found higher education to be a challenging and stressful environment. Meanwhile, research on workaholism, characterised by an uncontrollable urge to work excessively, has been gaining momentum. However, few studies have explored its impact within higher education. This study addressed this gap by conducting 27…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Higher Education, Faculty, Work Ethic
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Yasmany García-Ramírez; Vera Bijelic – Cogent Education, 2024
In the realm of academia, the workload of professors varies widely depending on the institution, department, and specific roles they undertake. With many faculty members exceeding a fifty-hour workweek, the balance between teaching, research, administrative duties, and personal life becomes a challenging endeavour, potentially leading to high…
Descriptors: Needs Assessment, Task Analysis, Job Analysis, Faculty
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Miller, Julia – Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management, 2019
Many universities divide their academic workloads according to a model of 40 per cent teaching, 40 per cent research, and 20 per cent administration and service. Increasing demands on academic time, however, make this balance hard to achieve, since teaching and administration frequently impinge on research time. Moreover, regular academic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Faculty Workload, College Faculty, Time Management
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Hamel, Fred L.; Jaasko-Fisher, Heather A. – Teaching and Teacher Education: An International Journal of Research and Studies, 2011
This article argues that mentoring reflects a form of hidden labor within pre-service teacher education. Using Marx's concern for the ways in which aspects of an economic system are rendered invisible, the article draws on discussions from an American mentor teacher advisory council to illuminate otherwise marginalized aspects of mentors' work.…
Descriptors: Preservice Teacher Education, Mentors, Work Environment, Advisory Committees
Mager, Gerald M.; Myers, Betty – 1984
Career planning by new professors is discussed, based on recent studies. Productivity seems to be related to how a professor uses resources, including time. In 1981, work experiences of new education professors, were surveyed with attention to the amount of time they spent working and the kinds of work they did. Six kinds of work were identified:…
Descriptors: Career Planning, College Faculty, Educational Responsibility, Faculty Workload
Yuker, Harold E. – 1984
Kinds of faculty workload data that can be obtained from college and faculty reports are examined, along with potential problems in workload studies. A main research concern is deciding which faculty activities should be considered as workload. Types of data that are sometimes used in colleges' faculty workload formulas concern student credit…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Faculty Workload, Higher Education, Institutional Research
Massachusetts State Legislature, Boston. Senate Committee on Post Audit and Oversight. – 1992
This Massachusetts Senate committee study examined the current policies and procedures used by the University of Massachusetts at Amherst (UMA) to monitor, manage, and report on the activities of its faculty, in particular its faculty workload. The study had originally intended to analyze faculty workload in terms of instruction (teaching),…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Cost Effectiveness, Faculty Workload, Higher Education
McCormick, Anne – 1979
The opinions of the faculty at the College of the Sequoias, California, regarding their office facilities and scheduled office hours were surveyed. Ninety-nine faculty members completed a 10-item questionnaire, which is enclosed. It was found that the maintenance of faculty office hours and being available for students was viewed as an important…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Faculty Workload, Higher Education, Noninstructional Responsibility
1976
A study of the faculty work week at the University of Connecticut shows that the typical professor works 54.8 hours per week. The study, conducted between April 9 and April 29, 1976, involved 213 faculty members. This represents 18 percent of the faculty, excluding librarians, full-time extension agents, and health center faculty, and provides a…
Descriptors: Activities, Administrator Responsibility, Community Programs, Community Services
Archer, J. Andrew – 1974
Teaching load depends on many variables, however most colleges define it strictly in terms of contact or credit hours. The failure to give weight to variables such as number of preparations, number of students served, committee and other noninstructional assignments is usually due to the lack of a formula that will quantify the effects of these…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Committees, Faculty Advisers, Faculty Workload
Hopper, Lisa King – 1992
This conference paper presents a description of how faculty workloads are assessed for fiscal and other purposes at Northern Arizona University (NAU). Following a discussion of workload issues, the paper examines: (1) definition of workload; (2) methodology for data collection; (3) development of a faculty full-time equivalency database and two…
Descriptors: Data Analysis, Data Collection, Data Interpretation, Database Design
Parsons, Gary L. – 1976
This study examines the faculty workload policy of a community college that makes extensive use of non-traditional, innovative teaching methods. To measure workload, a mathematical equation whose sum was expressed as 100% was designed to include five factors: instructional hours, number of preparations, weekly student contact hours (WSCH), outside…
Descriptors: Administrative Policy, College Faculty, Community Colleges, Computation
Lacy, Larry W.; And Others – 1981
National estimates of activities of science and engineering faculty in universities and four-year colleges for 1978-1979 are examined, based on a National Science Foundation survey of faculty members in 20 science and engineering (S/E) fields. Individual respondents provided information for only one 7-day period; however, the survey sample was…
Descriptors: College Faculty, College Instruction, Comparative Analysis, Consultants