What's with the over-administration of higher ed? Sure, I know that the for-profit educational corporations have WAY more administrators/managers than they do faculty members (I know lots of these employees), but it looks as if traditional higher educational institutions are following suit.
In the latest issue of InsideHigherEd.com, you'll find the following data about "full time professional positions" in higher education: 50.6% faculty to 49.4% administrators in 2004, (in community colleges the ratio's a bit better: 63.6% faculty, 36.4% administrators in 2004).
But get this: in 2006, *every single type of institution* saw a rise in administrators and decline in faculty so that the overall percentages are now 48.6% faculty, 51.4% administrators (it's 61.4% faculty, 38.6% administrators in community colleges). So nationwide, the institutions that have been predicated on teaching, that exist precisely to teach, have less than half of their "professional positions" doing that teaching.
Of course, another way to interpret the data is to see that the teaching is not being done by "full time professional" folks; rather, contingent labor is the money-saving tactic used by those "full time professional" administrators. The teaching's done by part-time folks, adjuncts, contract workers.
Just what do all the administrators do, I wonder?
Thanks to The Cranky Professor for pointing this out.
Evacuation roots
5 hours ago
No comments:
Post a Comment