The rise in adjuncts is a cost-saving move for universities, most of the time.
It's a huge cost savings. At a research university full-time faculty only teach two or three courses a year. For the same price, you can get adjuncts to teach 15 courses, and forget about providing health and retirement benefits. Plus, administrators like the fact that part-time faculty lack power in the system.
On the other hand, if you are teaching something that you care about and you find the interactions with students to be satisfying, then part-time teaching is kind of like a hobby that you get paid for.
Rick is right. I love teaching, I would do it again in a heartbeat. The money is a nice bonus, though
Also, having taught in a creative field is a nice thing on a resume.
I enjoyed the classes I taught as a academic law librarian as well, but it was always part of the job description, so I didn't get paid extra for doing it.
t /unhelpful comment
ita, will you come pretend I am a krav student and yell at me in order to make me pack. I'm scared of how much I still have left to do, but I still don't seem to be doing it.
Gorgeous wildflower pictures. The flowers in Texas were incredible, but where I was, it was less a 100 year spring thing than just the usual explosion.
I've missed ALL the desert psychoflower springs, despite having grown up there. They just didn't much happen those 17 years.
Gah! One of the single-family homes in my neighborhood that I covet is on the market. $850,000! good lord.
The circus top room scares me a bit.
I'm sorta morbidly curious what one of the ginormous old houses on my way to work sold for. It went within 2 weeks.
FTR, the house is here. Any sugardaddies wanna buy it for me?
Kate, let me know if you're interested in Tropicalia after the book. I've got a bunch, and it's on the expensive side so I could send you some.
You mean, am I interested in Tropicalia music? I think the answer I'm looking for is "hell yeah!"