Get 20M+ Full-Text Papers For Less Than $1.50/day. Start a 14-Day Trial for You or Your Team.

Learn More →

Making a Place for Teaching Faculty: Some Thoughts on David Bartholomae's "Teaching on and off the Tenure Track"

Making a Place for Teaching Faculty: Some Thoughts on David Bartholomae's "Teaching on and off... The report "Education in the Balance" represents a significant new acknowledgment of the centrality of teaching faculty to the academic project on the part of professional organizations in English studies. David Bartholomae is right to worry that the emergence of positions for teaching faculty may "enact an argument about the separation of teaching and research" that should be resisted, and healthy models of the academic workplace should make sure that teaching and research remain meaningfully responsive to one another. Recent developments in higher education, which promise an ever finer fragmentation of the academic labor force—along with new possibilities for labor abuses—make this especially urgent. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Pedagogy: Critical Approaches to Teaching Literature, Language, Composition, and Culture Duke University Press

Making a Place for Teaching Faculty: Some Thoughts on David Bartholomae's "Teaching on and off the Tenure Track"

Loading next page...
 
/lp/duke-university-press/making-a-place-for-teaching-faculty-some-thoughts-on-david-bartholomae-hvzpCs0GBI

References

References for this paper are not available at this time. We will be adding them shortly, thank you for your patience.

Publisher
Duke University Press
Copyright
Duke University Press
ISSN
1531-4200
eISSN
1533-6255
DOI
10.1215/15314200-2010-016
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The report "Education in the Balance" represents a significant new acknowledgment of the centrality of teaching faculty to the academic project on the part of professional organizations in English studies. David Bartholomae is right to worry that the emergence of positions for teaching faculty may "enact an argument about the separation of teaching and research" that should be resisted, and healthy models of the academic workplace should make sure that teaching and research remain meaningfully responsive to one another. Recent developments in higher education, which promise an ever finer fragmentation of the academic labor force—along with new possibilities for labor abuses—make this especially urgent.

Journal

Pedagogy: Critical Approaches to Teaching Literature, Language, Composition, and CultureDuke University Press

Published: Jan 1, 2011

There are no references for this article.