So they offered me the job on Tuesday and I just accepted. I'm still letting it sink in that I'll be moving yet again in a couple of months.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Friday, 8 May 2015 18:57 (eight years ago) link
congrats!
― Sufjan Grafton, Friday, 8 May 2015 19:44 (eight years ago) link
congrats! nice to get a happy ending on this thread for once.
― ryan, Friday, 8 May 2015 21:11 (eight years ago) link
The successful candidate will teach a 4/4 load primarily in the areas of first-year writing courses and possibly second-year literature courses.
i swear that "possibly" appears in almost every miserable composition job listing.
― ryan, Friday, 8 May 2015 21:21 (eight years ago) link
the area of possibly second-year literature courses
― jmm, Friday, 8 May 2015 21:51 (eight years ago) link
Thanks, Sufjan and ryan! It's a visiting position (prob. renewable for four years) so not really an ending yet but, yeah, it's a great opportunity despite the mild upheaval. I hope it'll be happy though. There will be some real challenges at first.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Saturday, 9 May 2015 12:45 (eight years ago) link
http://chronicle.com/article/To-Protest-Colleagues-Lack-of/230057/
As a tenured associate professor of English at Yeshiva University, Gillian Steinberg had been a winner in academe’s fierce competition for secure, decent-paying jobs. For the past several years, as director of the writing program at Yeshiva's undergraduate men’s college, she had tried to lift up other writing instructors — offering them positions that, while not on the tenure track, at least were full time and on long-term contracts.Last week, however, convinced that her efforts were about to be undone by administrators as part of a broader reorganization, Ms. Steinberg decided to walk away from her otherwise secure position. She formally resigned, effective at the end of the summer, when she plans to begin teaching at a private Jewish high school in Riverdale, N.Y.
Last week, however, convinced that her efforts were about to be undone by administrators as part of a broader reorganization, Ms. Steinberg decided to walk away from her otherwise secure position. She formally resigned, effective at the end of the summer, when she plans to begin teaching at a private Jewish high school in Riverdale, N.Y.
― j., Tuesday, 12 May 2015 18:21 (eight years ago) link
well i finally got a break. i got a one year postdoc. i am being brought in as a replacement for someone who got a late TT offer and couldn't defer. ha. it's a pretty hi-falutin seminar though and hopefully i can do my damnedest one last time to salvage some kind of academic career.
― ryan, Friday, 29 May 2015 14:21 (eight years ago) link
― Merdeyeux, Friday, 29 May 2015 14:27 (eight years ago) link
thanks! seminar is a topic that is sort of adjacent to stuff i consider myself to "do." so the rest of summer will be a pretty intense cram session.
― ryan, Friday, 29 May 2015 14:29 (eight years ago) link
Congrats! Does that mean it's a teaching post-doc? (My summer is also going to be a music technology cram session.)
I had a Skype interview on Monday for a VAP teaching position and am already seriously questioning whether I would even want to move halfway across the continent for a 4/4 teaching load.
Ha, I actually got called back for another interview this week. It kind of felt good to say "I have accepted another offer." When it rains, it pours, I guess?
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Friday, 29 May 2015 15:06 (eight years ago) link
yeah it includes a small teaching load. i dont even know what the course(s) will be yet, other than undergraduate. this has been very sudden.
― ryan, Friday, 29 May 2015 15:13 (eight years ago) link
things are happening for me also! but this isn't on 77 so funk dat
― droit au butt (Euler), Friday, 29 May 2015 15:19 (eight years ago) link
but congrats ryan, keeping the game alive
stay of execution! they're gonna have to physically remove me from academia.
― ryan, Friday, 29 May 2015 15:29 (eight years ago) link
yay congrats ryan!
(btw not in academia rn & rn don’t plan to return, for my own reasons; don’t miss it rn but ivory tower will always have (gnawed off) piece of my heart)
― drash, Friday, 29 May 2015 21:43 (eight years ago) link
Has anyone been following the La C0ur scandal? Interesting stuff.
― badg, Wednesday, 3 June 2015 20:52 (eight years ago) link
http://crookedtimber.org/2015/06/08/professors-do-far-less-teaching-than-the-public-imagines/
― iatee, Monday, 8 June 2015 21:49 (eight years ago) link
'ppl we trust to teach' = some grad student who seemed ok and managed not to flunk out by year 3 or 4 and needs an assignment just when the dept needs a slot filled
so much trust
― j., Monday, 8 June 2015 21:52 (eight years ago) link
http://utotherescue.blogspot.com/2015/07/a-university-without-shared-governance.html
good stuff
― j., Friday, 17 July 2015 02:13 (eight years ago) link
http://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2015/08/entitlements-for-education-pension-universities/400820/
on 'coming pension crisis'
― j., Saturday, 15 August 2015 21:14 (eight years ago) link
yup, yet another reason to get out (of the country, for instance)
― droit au butt (Euler), Saturday, 15 August 2015 21:20 (eight years ago) link
you pastry-ass eatin motherfucker
― j., Saturday, 15 August 2015 22:05 (eight years ago) link
that's cheese-ass eatin motherfucker to you
― droit au butt (Euler), Sunday, 16 August 2015 10:58 (eight years ago) link
they got the one in the other over there, i hear
eat em in their little hats, with their little mustaches trimmed so they never get any cheese on em
― j., Sunday, 16 August 2015 13:50 (eight years ago) link
First lectures of the new semester tomorrow! I've spent most of today and yesterday and, still, things feel a little loose.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 25 August 2015 01:58 (eight years ago) link
Ditto, good luck out there!
― bentelec, Tuesday, 25 August 2015 02:06 (eight years ago) link
Thanks, you too! I'll need it.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 25 August 2015 02:25 (eight years ago) link
First day of class in a liberal arts college: we didn't get through everything because people were caught up in describing how Ligeti made them feel. I could get used to this.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 25 August 2015 20:41 (eight years ago) link
How was yours, bentelec?
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 25 August 2015 20:55 (eight years ago) link
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 25 August 2015 20:41 (15 minutes ago) Permalink
Haha. That's sweet.
― tayto fan (Michael B), Tuesday, 25 August 2015 20:59 (eight years ago) link
http://abcnews.go.com/US/wireStory/business-executive-named-university-iowa-president-33517754
― j., Thursday, 3 September 2015 20:13 (eight years ago) link
― EveningStar (Sund4r)
Just seeing this now - it was pretty good! It takes a while for those in-class powers of improvisation to come back. I just moved from teaching mostly grads at a mid-sized private university to mostly undergrads at a giant public university, so it's going to take some time to feel out who I'm working with.
Having come out of a highfalutin liberal arts college, Ligeti ~feelings~ are a very warm memory - it's possible but unlikely to get in a comparable situation in my field! Just be sure to sensibly prune back the 2.5 students who eagerly want to turn the class into a private discussion.
― bentelec, Thursday, 3 September 2015 20:51 (eight years ago) link
Just be sure to sensibly prune back the 2.5 students who eagerly want to turn the class into a private discussion.
This seems wise, yes.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Sunday, 13 September 2015 15:52 (eight years ago) link
MLA job list time! English is a brutal wasteland again, but this phrase amused me:
"Located approximately 30 minutes from culturally rich downtown Indianapolis..."
uh, if you have to say it...
― ryan, Monday, 14 September 2015 15:53 (eight years ago) link
i've been telling other academics that i plan for this to be my last year on the job market, no matter what. (I have said this before.) but i've noticed that to a man/woman, they unfailing respond with "what will you do?" (i have no idea.) at first i was thinking this might just be natural curiosity but now im starting to detect an amount of real interest, as if i might have figured something out, some hopeful alternative. alas.
― ryan, Monday, 14 September 2015 15:56 (eight years ago) link
that's so generous of them, they're assuming you would only be giving up if you had some actual plan, like a rational actor
i picked up another couple online courses late in the summer, and then just in the past week an emergency fill-in at a school in town here, so now i am adjuncting 3. not a lot at these rates, and no benefits anywhere, but enough to quit my side job that i hated, and maybe have enough money for some much-needed health care this semester. it's nice to think of being in a classroom again, too.
― j., Monday, 14 September 2015 16:18 (eight years ago) link
oh nice. congrats on that!
― ryan, Monday, 14 September 2015 16:23 (eight years ago) link
are other fields in the humanities as maddeningly specific as English? like, yes, i know you need to find some poor sucker to teach your undergraduate shakespeare course, but do they really need to specialize as a shakespeare scholar to do that? i find this assumption that you can only effectively teach an undergraduate course in something if you wrote your dissertation (itself highly specialized and probably of no interest to undergrads) about it really bizarre. i guess im saying, whither the generalists?
― ryan, Monday, 14 September 2015 16:30 (eight years ago) link
OMG music is not like that. With a composition PhD, I've taught so many popular music and world music (and popular music of the world) courses. I've seen theory classes taught by clarinettists or percussionists. This is the first year that I'm teaching what I did specialize in in my doctoral work, actually, unless you count post-tonal theory, which I've taught twice.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 14 September 2015 16:46 (eight years ago) link
they tend to apply that attitude in philosophy, although they just as often take any warm body in a pinch (so we're all assumed equally competent to teach intro, ethics and political, some ancient and modern, logic, with all of those assumptions actually ill founded). might apply more with upper-division courses.
woe to all generalists. : (
― j., Monday, 14 September 2015 16:54 (eight years ago) link
Yeah, what I said mostly applied to sessional/adjunct teaching or to more undergrad teaching-oriented f/t positions, especially with lower-level courses. For TT jobs at high-ranking or research-oriented places, you'd need to be very specialized. And, even then, music used to be more of a field for generalists, I think.
― EveningStar (Sund4r), Monday, 14 September 2015 18:55 (eight years ago) link
so we're all assumed equally competent to teach intro, ethics and political, some ancient and modern, logic, with all of those assumptions actually ill founded
c'mon we're talking undergrad here. if you can't teach all of those competently then you shouldn't have a phd in philosophy. but I think I've said this here before.
anyway I'd love to hire generalists. to get through a relatively open-area search though there have to be some upper level courses that the search committee can tag you as covering, courses already on the books (since adding courses is often pretty complex and time-consuming). the easiest thing to do is just to pick some pretty standard course that's relatively close to your dissertation topic / current projects.
― droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 19:09 (eight years ago) link
anyway I have just climbed into an ivory tower made of cheese and it is weird kinda starting all over again wrt knowing how things work
shoulds and realities are different. i've had credentialed colleagues who could have only taught logic under duress, if at all.
i don't think i complained about being passed over for not being able to teach upper-level courses.
― j., Tuesday, 15 September 2015 19:16 (eight years ago) link
humblebrag hall of fame xp
― 𝔠𝔞𝔢𝔨 (caek), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 19:29 (eight years ago) link
humblebrag? nah it kicks ass, but it's weird going into a different academic system, in a different language to boot. like I guess going to/from oxford/usa is weird b/c of the tutorial system, but at least it's all in english. maybe I can get a slate pub out of this or something.
― droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 15 September 2015 19:37 (eight years ago) link
did we do this one http://www.slate.com/articles/life/education/2014/09/how_do_professors_get_hired_the_academic_job_search_explained.html
― where the sterls have no name (s.clover), Friday, 18 September 2015 20:04 (eight years ago) link
“Well,” you soldier on, “have you ever thought of moving to [ major metropolitan area ] and working at [ world-renowned institution ]?"
― j., Friday, 18 September 2015 20:06 (eight years ago) link
I was once visiting the campus of [world-renowned institution] for reasons totally unrelated to a job and my dad, bless his heart, suggested i go to the english department and introduce myself and let them know i was looking for a job.
― ryan, Friday, 18 September 2015 20:16 (eight years ago) link