Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know anything about Amherst, but at a lot of schools there has been a tilt toward teaching (non tenure track) faculty members.
The tenure track faculty have the same pedigrees and publication expectations as before (often higher tenure standards, in fact) but they are a smaller portion of the faculty as a whole.
These are tenure track faculty being discussed with really low publication records
Having publications doesn't make one a better instructor. Do you want good teachers or just impressive research? It's hard to do both.
The top LACs have always had both. So have the top universities. You shouldn't be a bad researcher as a Professor, unless you're at a community college. Amherst is a research-teaching expected load. You will get a 2/2 and be expected to release books, have a publication record, and work with students.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's very disappointing OP! The best researchers have all gone into industry from Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley, etc. Being a professor doesn't have the "perks" it used to, so now everyone-even the humanities PhDs-are not even attempting postdocs and moving into industry. Academia is rotten.
Cry me some more tears. As a new faculty at UVA everything is fine, and the DEI rot has begun to abate. Normalcy returns.
How can you seriously say this when there's clearly a ton of action that is affirmative in this group of new hires. They hardly have a publication record while other "overrepresented" demographics have always had to publish and teach an insane amount to land Amherst.
Here we get to the OP’s real agenda. 🙄
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know anything about Amherst, but at a lot of schools there has been a tilt toward teaching (non tenure track) faculty members.
The tenure track faculty have the same pedigrees and publication expectations as before (often higher tenure standards, in fact) but they are a smaller portion of the faculty as a whole.
These are tenure track faculty being discussed with really low publication records
Having publications doesn't make one a better instructor. Do you want good teachers or just impressive research? It's hard to do both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's very disappointing OP! The best researchers have all gone into industry from Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley, etc. Being a professor doesn't have the "perks" it used to, so now everyone-even the humanities PhDs-are not even attempting postdocs and moving into industry. Academia is rotten.
Cry me some more tears. As a new faculty at UVA everything is fine, and the DEI rot has begun to abate. Normalcy returns.
How can you seriously say this when there's clearly a ton of action that is affirmative in this group of new hires. They hardly have a publication record while other "overrepresented" demographics have always had to publish and teach an insane amount to land Amherst.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know anything about Amherst, but at a lot of schools there has been a tilt toward teaching (non tenure track) faculty members.
The tenure track faculty have the same pedigrees and publication expectations as before (often higher tenure standards, in fact) but they are a smaller portion of the faculty as a whole.
These are tenure track faculty being discussed with really low publication records
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those are fine professors. No, they aren't household names, but everyone has to start out assistant and make themselves known. There's an economist from UChicago, a Princeton classicist, and a legal studies professor from Harvard. An uninteresting lineup but they'll make themselves known.
I'm checking through their pages and it looks like they are amateurs. Sakeef Karim, one of the new full time faculty, has only published 3 articles, has only gotten small grant funding, and has less research experience than a newly minted PhD student...How this person is getting a position at Amherst College is very very suspicious.
This seems very troll-y. He got his PhD in 2022, had two articles published in 2024 with a half dozen more publications in progress and he’s in sociology so the noise about “grant money” and “research experience” seems pretty off base.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know anything about Amherst, but at a lot of schools there has been a tilt toward teaching (non tenure track) faculty members.
The tenure track faculty have the same pedigrees and publication expectations as before (often higher tenure standards, in fact) but they are a smaller portion of the faculty as a whole.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those are fine professors. No, they aren't household names, but everyone has to start out assistant and make themselves known. There's an economist from UChicago, a Princeton classicist, and a legal studies professor from Harvard. An uninteresting lineup but they'll make themselves known.
I'm checking through their pages and it looks like they are amateurs. Sakeef Karim, one of the new full time faculty, has only published 3 articles, has only gotten small grant funding, and has less research experience than a newly minted PhD student...How this person is getting a position at Amherst College is very very suspicious.
This seems very troll-y. He got his PhD in 2022, had two articles published in 2024 with a half dozen more publications in progress and he’s in sociology so the noise about “grant money” and “research experience” seems pretty off base.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's very disappointing OP! The best researchers have all gone into industry from Harvard, Stanford, Berkeley, etc. Being a professor doesn't have the "perks" it used to, so now everyone-even the humanities PhDs-are not even attempting postdocs and moving into industry. Academia is rotten.
Cry me some more tears. As a new faculty at UVA everything is fine, and the DEI rot has begun to abate. Normalcy returns.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Those are fine professors. No, they aren't household names, but everyone has to start out assistant and make themselves known. There's an economist from UChicago, a Princeton classicist, and a legal studies professor from Harvard. An uninteresting lineup but they'll make themselves known.
I'm checking through their pages and it looks like they are amateurs. Sakeef Karim, one of the new full time faculty, has only published 3 articles, has only gotten small grant funding, and has less research experience than a newly minted PhD student...How this person is getting a position at Amherst College is very very suspicious.