5/16/2014

Free Excerpt Online Teaching for Adjunct Faculty: How to Manage Workload, Students, and Multiple Schools


Free Excerpt Online Teaching for Adjunct Faculty: How to ManageWorkload, Students, and Multiple Schools 



With the recent trend in schools' cutting classes for adjunct faculty, adjuncts are resorting to teaching fewer classes at each of more schools. Gone are the days when we could teach at just one or two schools and have enough classes to make a decent income. Some adjuncts are teaching for fifteen or more schools while continuing to apply to new schools so there are enough classes in reserve when classes are inexplicably cut from their course load. Scheduling can be a nightmare and mistakes can mean losing classes. Managing workload, large classes, and multiple school schedules is vital to preserving an adequate course load and maintaining financial security. There really is no choice for most adjuncts and teaching ten or more online classes requires new strategies to manage workload so that each class takes no more than 2-4 hours a week. This guide provides online faculty with strategies and tips to streamline workload and manage large classes, with a chapter addressing the unique challenges in managing classes and schedules at multiple schools.

The consequences of recent trends in schools' cutting classes for adjunct faculty is that most adjunct faculty must now teach one to three classes at each of several schools to maintain the salary they have been accustomed to in previous years. Gone are the days when we could teach at just one or two schools and have enough classes to make a decent salary. I remember teaching at only two schools for quite a few years and making between $50K and $65K per year, with a maximum of 8-10 classes, many of which were multiple sections of the same class, and all of which I had taught for several years. Those days are over now for adjunct faculty.

Some adjunct faculty are currently teaching for 10 or more schools and are applying constantly for new job openings, hoping to get just one more class or, if they're lucky, two more classes. Often this seems like "feast or famine" where we have too few classes or, in some cases, it all hits the fan and we end up teaching for 10 or more schools with a total of 15 or more classes. We cannot really decline teaching offers because there is no guarantee that the next term we will be offered any classes from any given school. Adjuncts have to keep classes in reserve at all their schools to make up the difference when some of the schools inexplicably cut classes for one or more terms.

Adjunct teaching has never been secure, but it is far more insecure now than in previous years. What happens is that adjunct faculty are trying to find ways to balance many different classes and many different school schedules, which can end up being very confusing. I know faculty who have lost jobs because they forgot something important in one of their classes. "Important" in one case was giving a mid-term exam; in another case, an instructor forgot to grade final research papers. Some faculty have told me they have forgotten to "show up" at synchronous class lectures or faculty conference calls.

You may be shaking your head and thinking, "How in the world could someone forget something like that? You must be teaching too many classes." See, here's the thing though: it is not a case of teaching too many classes; it is a case of teaching for too many schools. We have all taught 10 or more classes at the same time, but teaching that many classes at 10 or more schools is a relatively new phenomenon. I know a few adjunct faculty who are teaching one class at each of three local colleges on campus and, at the same time, juggling one class at each of as many as fourteen online schools. And they are making only about 50-60K per year in salary. There really is no choice for most adjuncts and, obviously, some new strategies come into play to manage all those different class and school schedules.


 

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