期刊论文详细信息
Ecosphere
Contingent faculty in ecology and STEM: an uneven landscape of challenges for higher education
Mimi E. Lam1  Teresa Mourad2  Ned Fetcher3  Carmen R. Cid4 
[1] Centre for the Study of the Sciences and the Humanities University of Bergen Bergen Norway;Ecological Society of America Washington D.C. USA;Institute for Environmental Science and Sustainability Wilkes University Wilkes‐Barre Pennsylvania USA;School of Arts and Sciences Eastern Connecticut State University Willimantic Connecticut USA;
关键词: academic career stages;    adjunct faculty;    Coalition for the Academic Workforce;    contingent faculty;    diversity;    Ecological Society of America;   
DOI  :  10.1002/ecs2.2964
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Abstract The number of contingent or non‐tenure‐track faculty at colleges and universities in the United States has been growing over the past several decades; they now constitute nearly 70% of the non‐student academic workforce. A significant fraction of contingent faculty teaches in the fields of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). As an initiative of the Ecological Society of America (ESA), contingent faculty in ecology were surveyed and the results were compared with a survey of STEM faculty conducted by the Coalition for the Academic Workforce (CAW). Most respondents to the ESA survey were employed in research or research and teaching activities at doctorate‐granting institutions, whereas in the CAW sample, most were engaged in teaching at associate's and master's degree‐granting institutions. The ESA sample was almost evenly divided between women and men; women outnumbered men in the younger age classes, whereas men outnumbered women in the older age classes. The respondents to the CAW survey were older than the ESA respondents, with more men in computer sciences, engineering, and physical sciences, more women in the biological and health sciences, and a balanced gender ratio in mathematics. The ESA survey asked respondents to rank possible activities that ESA could undertake to support contingent faculty. The highest ranked activities included reduced fees for membership, page charges, and meeting registrations, followed closely by small grants for travel and research. The lowest ranked was the formation of an ESA section for contingent faculty. The causes and implications of contingency are analyzed in light of other recent surveys. Academic institutions and professional societies such as the ESA can reduce the loss of qualified individuals from the scientific community by recognizing and legitimizing contingency as an academic career stage and by offering professional development to support the careers of contingent faculty.

【 授权许可】

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