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College and University Discussion
You can see the number and percentage of faculty without the terminal degree in their field on the Common Data Set for each university. |
| I have a PhD from Stanford and I have been a part time adjunct, so bite me. |
I agree with your assessment of Berkeley, although I think Harvard in STEM other than engineering is certainly worth mentioning, and Stanford should also get mentioned. In professional schools like business and law, Berkeley isn't quite there with Harvard. The closest public university to being as solid at a graduate and research level across the board is Michigan. I only included Berkeley in some stats on faculty composition because someone mentioned they are the "Gold Standard". But your post brings up what I think is an interesting point based on some data I saw (the data source is online on the National Center for Science and Engineering Statistics website and it is updated annually). Berkeley and W&M are two of the top public undergraduate institutions for producing graduates that go on to earn doctorates, both overall and in STEM, on a per capita basis. I think in STEM Berkeley was 2 and W&M was 3 (and some school like New Mexico Institute of Mining was #1). Overall, I think W&M was #1 and Berkeley was #2. Since the schools are so different, I think it shows that more than one type of approach can work. |
What is statistically incorrect? Where did anyone say W&M didn't have any adjuncts? My claim was W&M has a higher percentage of undergraduate classes taught by tenure/tenure track faculty than most public research universities. This was correct for Virginia research universities in the most recent data I've seen. I also said TAs weren't primary instructors in courses at W&M, and that again was correct based on the most recent data. UVA, VT, GMU, VCU, and ODU all have all reported a percentage of their credit hours being taught by "Teaching Assistants" in the same report. W&M was 0%. Other posters went on to say that TAs are never primary instructors, and they may be technically correct on nomenclature (e.g. teaching fellows), but this is not the way it is reported in anything I have seen: USNWR: https://www.usnews.com/education/best-colleges/the-short-list-college/articles/2017-02-21/10-universities-where-tas-teach-the-most-classes . "10 Universities Where TAs Teach the Most Classes". "PERCENTAGE OF GRADUATE TAS LISTED AS A PRIMARY INSTRUCTOR (FALL 2015)" Note that UNC-CH had 20% of courses with TAs as a primary instructor in that report. State of Maryland / University System of Maryland: https://www.usmd.edu/usm/adminfinance/IR/reports/USM_Faculty_Instructional_Workload_Report_2018_11_19_2018.pdf "Other faculty (including department chairs, non-tenure track research or public service faculty, and teaching assistants) account for 6% of the credit hours produced. " State of Virginia: "Percentage of Total Student Credit Hours Taught Institution-Wide by Faculty Type: Teaching Assistants" http://jlarc.virginia.gov/ report 450.. |
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If you put aside UVA, UMD , W&M, VT, how would you rate the rest of the public options in Maryland and Virginia top to bottom in a combined list?
Not in rank order from the top of my head below: UMBC, Towson, Salisbury, Frostburg, St. Mary's, etc. George Mason, James Madison, VCU, Old Dominion, Mary Washington, Christopher Newport, Radford, Longwood, VMI, etc. |
| Heavily depends on the major, but IMO on median student academic quality, UMBC tops that list. |
I do not know anything about the MD schools. For VA it is heavily dependent on the goals... Engineering/STEM: GMU>ODU Science: JMU/GMU/ODU > CNU>VCU>Longwood>Radford Business: JMU/GMU > the rest Social Sciences/Humanities: JMU>MWU/CNU/VCU>ODU>Radford/longwood Now, if you want the feeling of a small liberal arts college, Mary Washington. If you want a military experience, VMI Arts: VCU. GMU is generally looked down upon around here because of the proximity to us. Average SAT scores: UVA 1430 W & M 1415 VT 1285 -- GMU 1220 JMU 1205 CNU 1203 Mary Washington 1172 VCU 1165 ODU 1098 Longwood 1052 Radford 1041 ... VMI 1190 (separate because of the military component). |
| No one seems to care enough about the Maryland schools below UMD to take a shot at it. Telling. |
That is true, but the PP is right that you cannot equate non-TT with non-PhD. It totally depends on the university. A lot of research-intensive universities have full-time, non-TT faculty who are "teaching stream". You have to have a PhD and often some postdoctoral experience to get these jobs. Different schools use different titles for the non-TT positions. The UC system, for example, uses the word adjunct even for people who are full time. I agree that looking at the % of faculty with terminal degrees and who are full time are a better metric than just looking at TT vs. non-TT. |