#AdjunctChat is Coming; What does that mean to You?

I have taught as an adjunct faculty member at New York University and Pace University since 2005 and 2009 respectively, and while I do it for the love of teaching and academic discourse, I also realize that my commitment to the universities is only for that semester in which I am hired to teach. There is little ongoing support or communication outside of my ongoing teaching appointments. While I do not expect anything more from the institutions–after all, adjunct faculty are effectively (highly educated) contract workers–I do have some needs for support and communication and sharing and discussing these experiences with others who may also be in the same or similar situations.

It appears I am not alone.

In fact, the Chronicle of Higher Education cites the number at 70% of higher education faculty as off the tenure track. While not all of them are adjuncts, a good number of them, or us, are.

After so much personal success and academic fulfillment while completing my PhD through the wonderfully supportive community that is #phdchat, I felt my needs begin to shift, leading to my thoughts about a similar chat for adjuncts, or those who generally teach less than full-time and are not on the tenure track. That is the initial idea behind #adjunctchat.

AdjunctChatWhile I know others seem to find this idea useful, I am not sure what it may mean in practice, so with that I am looking forward to a first synchronous #AdjunctChat on Twitter on  Tues, May 14, 4:00pm EDT.

All that remains now is to brainstorm what to chat about!

Abstract accepted for BERA

I am very happy to share that the abstract I submitted for the Early Career Researcher Conference track of the British Educational Research Association (BERA) was accepted. This was entitled “Threshold Concepts and Transformative Learning: Points of Similarity and Difference when Considering Distance Doctoral Education,” and is rather related with my doctoral thesis work.

BERA is in London this year, and runs from 6-8 September. I have never attended this conference before, and only recently joined BERA now that my abstract was accepted. I look forward to seeing some of my Twitter-based #phdchat colleagues who I have met and spoken with over the past 6 months and who I know are also planning to attend the conference. Along with this my second visit to the UK this year, perhaps I will even be able to meet with my supervisors again in person, given now everything I do outside of work is focused on my doctoral thesis (with its working-title listed on the Lancaster University Graduate School Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences website).

I have a lot of research, writing, and planning ahead of me. Good thing I have a passion in this area, as that is what I need to get through the next year and a half of my thesis work!