Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Some salaries in higher ed are inflated for sure, especially in administration and business and law schools. but MBAs and JD programs are also piggie banks for the school because students pay full freight. And as others have said this does not apply to your average sociology professor, especially pre-tenure. my friend who was at the top of his field at an Ivy in a humanities niche made less than I did (7 years into teAching) in my first job out of law school as a law clerk! Now he makes $150k after 10 years of tenure (in NYC, so adjust for COL). A nice job but not a boondoggle.
Humanities super super stars can make bank (by switching schools and bidding up their salaries) but this is rare.
Right, but what’s the market, outside of academia, for someone with a degree in a “humanities niche”? There is no market.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, you are delusional. The only people who make high wages in academia are specialty professors they pull from the private sector at the end of very successful careers or high level administrators (not faculty positions.)
Even tenured professors are lucky if they make six figures.
DP. Oh baloney. It’s not 1985.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are delusional. The only people who make high wages in academia are specialty professors they pull from the private sector at the end of very successful careers or high level administrators (not faculty positions.)
Even tenured professors are lucky if they make six figures.
Anonymous wrote:OP, you are delusional. The only people who make high wages in academia are specialty professors they pull from the private sector at the end of very successful careers or high level administrators (not faculty positions.)
Even tenured professors are lucky if they make six figures.
Anonymous wrote:Some salaries in higher ed are inflated for sure, especially in administration and business and law schools. but MBAs and JD programs are also piggie banks for the school because students pay full freight. And as others have said this does not apply to your average sociology professor, especially pre-tenure. my friend who was at the top of his field at an Ivy in a humanities niche made less than I did (7 years into teAching) in my first job out of law school as a law clerk! Now he makes $150k after 10 years of tenure (in NYC, so adjust for COL). A nice job but not a boondoggle.
Humanities super super stars can make bank (by switching schools and bidding up their salaries) but this is rare.
Anonymous wrote:Top professors in many fields make a lot of money. Their numbers are few compared to the total faculty count. What OP is saying is like assuming every law-firm associate makes the same salary as a partner.