by Chris Cumo
Part-time faculty should think twice before marking up a stack of essays. An adjunct lecturer at Southern Connecticut State University, who spoke on condition of anonymity, suspects she lost a part-time stint at another college because she wouldn’t hand out As and Bs to students who hadn’t earned them. But she can’t be certain. The department Chair simply didn’t renew her contract after two semesters, leaving her to connect the dots on her own. She now curves grades so no one fails and, just as important, no one complains.
“I can no longer do absolute grading on the basis of how well they do on exams,” she said, “but how people do in relation to their classmates, which is ridiculous at times.”
Welcome! The article you'd like to read is available to Adjunct Advocate subscribers, or to non-subscribers for purchase with AdjunctNation Passport credits. Your AdjunctNation Passport credit purchases compensate the writers directly!
If you like, visit our secure online store to purchase AdjunctNation Passport credits or subscribe. PLEASE NOTE: If you're already registered, you don't need to register again to read the article! You need to login, go to our secure online store, and purchase AdjunctNationCredits.
2. Adjunct Activists in the Sciences: Missing in Action
3. E-Books: Should You Use Them?
4. Visiting Faculty: Are Their Numbers on the Rise?
5. Land A Job As A Visiting Faculty Member
6. Look Who's Coming to Lecture
7. A Year in the Life of a Visiting Faculty Member
8. Adjunct Faculty Fulbright Winners
Part-Time Thoughts
A Bigger Slice of Pie for Part-Timers
Lesko Blog
No Conflicts at CCCCs This Year