Adjunct Faculty a.k.a. 'Academic Sharecroppers'

Adjunct faculty members, the silent majority in higher education in the United States, must contend with unique issues. The purpose of this article is to discuss the current situation of adjunct professors, also known as 'academic sharecroppers.' Specialties Educators Article

'Academic sharecropper' is a label that is usually applied to adjunct faculty members due to their status in the educational system and the backbreaking nature of their employment situations. Adjunct professors are also known as 'contingent faculty' in some settings, even though many never become full professors or associate professors.

Some people in academia presently feel that adjunct faculty are being exploited by the current system of higher education, just as many people firmly believed that the agrarian sharecroppers of more than one century ago had been exploited by wealthy landowners.

The workdays of adjunct professors are characterized by minimal support, no recognition, very low salaries, a lack of fringe benefits, perpetual part-time status, grueling workloads, and absolutely no assurance of a job during the next term. In other words, adjunct faculty members do not possess the same level of status or job security as their full-time counterparts.

Most brick-and-mortar college courses in the United States are taught by adjunct faculty. In fact, some estimates indicate that adjunct professors make up nearly two-thirds of all college faculty. Furthermore, the overwhelming majority of online schools employ very few full-time professors and high numbers of adjunct professors.

What are some of the drawbacks faced by schools who heavily depend on 'academic sharecroppers'?

For starters, adjunct faculty have virtually no control over the textbooks being used or the layout of the courses that they teach. In fact, they are often handed a standard curriculum and basically told how to instruct it, when to teach it, and where to deliver it. According to Rooney (2012), many have also long believed that adjuncts routinely inflate grades in order to hold onto their jobs. These aspects do not bode very well for the students who pay staggering amounts of tuition for what they believe will be top notch college educations.

Moreover, the widespread use of these so-called 'academic sharecroppers' is all about business to the many colleges and universities that employ them. School systems save a great deal of money because they do not have to offer fringe benefits or the same amount of pay to adjunct faculty members. In fact, the average adjunct professor receives one-fourth to one-third the pay of his or her full-time counterpart per course.

'Academic sharecroppers' are unquestionably vital to colleges and universities across the US because, without the thankless labor of adjunct faculty, higher education in this country would come to a screeching halt. Therefore, adjunct professors should receive more recognition and higher salaries for all of the work that they accomplish. However, I do not pretend to offer any easy solutions to this complex problem.

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Specializes in Nursing Professional Development.
I just accepted an adjunct clinical teaching position. I'll have 8 senior students who are expected to take 2 pts a piece.. With one or 2 students floating off the unit to ICU. Kind of scares me to think ill be over 12 pts. Is that safe? Passing meds to 12 pts, 12 assessments? It pays $5400 for one day a week clinical. I've never done this before but I need a side job with some consistency in pay as my PRN job keeps canceling me.

No, I don't think that is safe. That's one reason why many instructors don't have all students give meds, etc. They just can't safely supervise the care of that many patients and be at that many bedsides for so many meds, treatments, etc.

It's also one reason it is so hard for schools to find/retain good clinical instructors.

It's also one reason that so many students graduate so unready for the real world of nursing. Their instructors are spread too thin and under-paid.

It's also one reasonf or the tension that often exists between schools and the local hospitals.

Good luck to you.

Specializes in med/surg, home health, nursing education.

Just accepted a full-time position at a community college teaching first year ADN students... $40k for a 9-month contract... This is after getting my foot in the door adjunct at 4 different schools after the past 2 years... It takes time, patience, and persistence... The pay is crappy but it's summers off... And I'm planning on having babies soon!

How sad, indeed. Without teachers we would be nothing at all.:unsure:

Specializes in Nurse Faculty, PMHNP-BC.

@Kooky Korky

You are absolutely correct, I found myself in an unusual position working a full-time faculty position. The director of the program is a "big bully" the entire environment is hostile, academia is a very hostile place most people on the outside do not realize this.

Specializes in nursing education.

I'm going to present another point of view here. I took an adjunct position with one day a week of clinical. It gets my foot in the door, it's a chance to stretch my skill set, and it's actually been a wonderfully supportive environment- the other faculty and staff have been nurturing and embracing. The pay is in line with what others have stated above and it seems adequate, especially since I still have my other job.

One reason nursing schools have to have flexible people willing to be adjuncts is because they can't be certain how many adjuncts they will need in any semester: they don't know how many students they will have. There is student attrition. There are students who will fail an important prerequisite (and the number may vary significantly from year to year). There are students who take a semester or more off because of "life" (such as having a baby).

If I don't like it, I won't do it again. If I like it and want to do it again, there are no guarantees that this particular college will have a spot for me, but there are plenty of other schools in my area. I'm not locked into the politics of academia.