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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Comparison  





2 Uses around the world  



2.1  Australia  





2.2  India  





2.3  United Kingdom  



2.3.1  Historical use  





2.3.2  Current uses  





2.3.3  Tenure and permanent lectureships  







2.4  United States  





2.5  Other countries  







3 See also  





4 References  





5 External links  














Lecturer: Difference between revisions






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In Germany, C3 professors can be "university professors" with a chair, with the only difference being the pay. In most cases, C3/W2 professors are "full professors" at universities of applied sciences without chair.
 
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{{Short description|Academic rank}}

{{short description|Tenure-track or tenured position at a university or similar institution}}

{{about|the academic rank|a person who gives [[public speaking|public speeches]]|lecture|the ecclesiastical usage|Lecturer (clergy)}}

{{About|the academic rank|a person who gives [[public speaking|public speeches]]|lecture|the ecclesiastical usage|Lecturer (clergy)}}

{{Refimprove|date=May 2021}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=March 2020}}

[[File:Bundesarchiv B 145 Bild-F079042-0031, Duisburg, Gymnasium.jpg|thumb|Lecturer and students in [[Duisburg]] (June 1988)]]


'''Lecturer''' is an [[List of academic ranks|academic rank]] within many universities, though the meaning of the term varies somewhat from country to country. It generally denotes an academic expert who is hired to teach on a full- or part-time basis. They may also conduct research.

'''Lecturer''' is an [[List of academic ranks|academic rank]] within many universities, though the meaning of the term varies somewhat from country to country. It generally denotes an academic expert who is hired to teach on a full- or part-time basis. They may also conduct research.


==United Kingdom==

{{further|Academic ranks in the United Kingdom}}


In the UK, the term lecturer is ambiguous and covers several academic ranks. The key distinction is between permanent/open-ended or temporary/fixed-term lectureships.


A permanent lecturer in UK universities usually holds an open-ended position that covers teaching, research, and administrative responsibilities. Permanent lectureships are tenure-track or tenured positions that are equivalent to an assistant or associate professorship in North America. After a number of years, a lecturer may be promoted based on his or her research record to become a [[senior lecturer]]. This position is below [[Reader (academic rank)|reader]] and [[professor]].


Research lecturers (where they are permanent appointments) are the equivalent in rank of lecturers and senior lecturers, but reflect a research-intensive orientation. Research lecturers are common in fields such as medicine, engineering, and biological and physical sciences.


In contrast, fixed-term or temporary lecturers are appointed for specific short-term teaching needs. These positions are often non-renewable and are common post-doctoral appointments. In North American terms, a fixed-term lecturer can hold an equivalent rank to assistant professor without tenure. Typically, longer contracts denote greater seniority or higher rank. Teaching fellows may also sometimes be referred to as lecturers—for example, [[Exeter]] named some of that group as education and scholarship lecturers (E &S) to recognise the contribution of teaching, and elevate the titles of teaching fellows to lecturers. Some universities also refer to graduate students or others, who undertake ad-hoc teaching for a department [[sessional lecturer]]s. Like adjunct professors and sessional lecturers in North America, these non-permanent teaching staff are often very poorly paid (as little as £6000 p.a. in 2011-12). These varying uses of the term lecturer cause confusion for non-UK academics.


As a proportion of UK academic staff, the proportion of permanent lectureships has fallen considerably. This is one reason why permanent lectureships are usually secured only after several years of post-doctoral experience. Data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency show that in 2013–14, 36 per cent of full- and part-time academic staff were on fixed-term contracts, down from 45 per cent a decade earlier. Over the same period, the proportion of academic staff on permanent contracts rose from 55 per cent to 64 per cent. Others were on contracts classed as "atypical".'<ref>{{cite news|last1=Else|first1=Holly|title=Zero Points: the persistence of temporary measures|url=https://www.timeshighereducation.com/content/few-crumbs-of-comfort-in-a-temporary-lecturers-day|access-date=22 January 2016|publisher=Times Higher Education|date=4 June 2015|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160201032540/https://www.timeshighereducation.com/content/few-crumbs-of-comfort-in-a-temporary-lecturers-day|archive-date=1 February 2016}}</ref>


===Historical use===

Historically in the UK, promotion to a senior lectureship reflected prowess in teaching or administration rather than research, and the position was much less likely to lead direct to promotion to professor.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://london.ac.uk/about-us/how-university-run/policies|title=Policies|website=University of London}}</ref>


In contrast, promotion to senior lecturer nowadays is based on research achievements (for research-intensive universities), and is an integral part of the promotion path to a full chair. Promotion to reader is sometimes still necessary before promotion to a full chair; however, some universities no longer make appointments at the level of reader (for instance, the University of Leeds and the University of Oxford). Senior lecturers and readers are sometimes paid on the same salary scale, although readers are recognized as more senior.


Many open-ended lecturers in the UK have a [[doctorate]] (50.1% in 2009-2010) and often have [[Postdoctoral researcher|postdoctoral research]] experience.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/the-rise-and-rise-of-phds-as-standard/415203.article |title=The rise and rise of PhDs as standard|work=Times Higher Education | publisher=timeshighereducation.co.uk |access-date=2011-03-04 }}</ref> In almost all fields, a doctorate is a prerequisite, although historically this was not the case. Some academic positions could have been held on the basis of research merit alone, without a higher degree.<ref>For example, [[David Fowler (mathematician)|David Fowler]] retired as a Senior Lecturer in Mathematics at Warwick in 1990 without having obtained a doctorate. See [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/david-fowler-549972.html "Obituary: David Fowler"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110314083904/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/david-fowler-549972.html |date=14 March 2011 }}, ''The Independent''</ref>


===Current uses===

The [[new universities (United Kingdom)|new universities]] (that is universities that were until 1992 termed [[Institute of technology|polytechnics]]) have a slightly different ranking naming scheme from the older universities. Many pre-1992 universities use the grades: Lecturer (A), Lecturer (B), Senior Lecturer, Reader, Professor. Meanwhile, post-1992 grades are normally: Lecturer, Senior Lecturer, Principal Lecturer (management-focused) or Reader (research-focused), Professor. Much confusion surrounds the differing use of the "Senior Lecturer" title. A Senior Lecturer in a post-1992 university is equivalent to a Lecturer (B) in a pre-1992 university, whereas a Senior Lecturer in a pre-1992 university is most often equivalent to a Principal Lecturer in a post-1992 university.<ref name=Webb>Graham Webb, ''Making the Most of Appraisal: Career and Professional Development Planning for Lecturers,'' Routledge, 1994, p. 30, {{ISBN|0-7494-1256-9}}</ref>


According to the Times Higher Education, the [[University of Warwick]] decided in 2006 "to break away from hundreds of years of academic tradition, renaming lecturers 'assistant professors', senior lecturers and readers 'associate professors' while still calling professors 'professors'. The radical move will horrify those who believe the "professor" title should be reserved for an academic elite."<ref>Lee Elliot Major, "[https://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/get-the-drinks-its-professor-all-round/202229.article Get the drinks. It's professor all round]", ''Times Higher Education'', 31 March 2006</ref> Nottingham has a mixture of the standard UK system, and the system at Warwick, with both lecturers and assistant professors. At Reading, job advertisements and academic staff web pages use the title associate professor, but the ordinances of the university make no reference to these titles. They address only procedures for conferring the traditional UK academic ranks.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.reading.ac.uk/web/FILES/Calendar/New_Section_F_2010.pdf | title=Section XI Election and Appointment to Professorships or Readerships or Senior Lecturerships | work=Ordinances of the University of Reading (2010-11) | access-date=18 December 2011 | pages=23–25 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140416221602/http://www.reading.ac.uk/web/FILES/Calendar/New_Section_F_2010.pdf | archive-date=16 April 2014}}</ref>


===Tenure and permanent lectureships{{anchor|Tenure}}===

Since the Conservatives' 1988 Education Reform Act, the ironclad tenure that used to exist in the UK has given way to a less secure form of tenure.<ref>{{cite web|url = https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/memories-of-jobs-for-life/104896.article?storyCode=104896&sectioncode=26|title = Memories of jobs for life|work = Times Higher Education (THE)|last = Court|first = Stephen|date = 5 December 1997|url-status = live|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160201042445/https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/memories-of-jobs-for-life/104896.article?storyCode=104896&sectioncode=26|archive-date = 1 February 2016}}</ref> Technically, university vice-chancellors can make individual faculty members redundant for poor performance or institute departmental redundancies, but in practice, this is rare. The most noted use of this policy happened in 2012 at [[Queen Mary University of London]] where lecturers on permanent contracts were fired. The institutions now has a stated policy of firing and replacing under-performing ''teaching'' staff members. This policy is complicated by the 2008 ''[[Ball v Aberdeen]]'' tribunal decision, the distinction between teaching and research faculty is blurring- with implications for who can and cannot be made redundant at UK universities, and under what conditions.


Despite this recent erosion of tenure in the UK, it is still practiced in most universities. Permanent contracts use the word "tenure" for lecturers who are "reappointed to the retiring age". This is equivalent to a US tenure decision—references are sought from world-leading academics and tenure and promotions committees meet to decide "tenure" cases. There is normally no title elevation in such instances—tenure and title are independent.



==Comparison==

==Comparison==

Line 44: Line 13:

! Commonwealth system

! Commonwealth system

! American system

! American system

! German system

! German system

|-

|-

|Professor (chair)

|Professor (chair)

| Distinguished [[professor]] or equivalent

| Distinguished [[professor]] or equivalent

| Professor (Ordinarius, W3 with Chair, C4)

| Professor (ordinarius, W3 with Chair, C4 or C3 with Chair)

|-

|-

| [[Reader (academic rank)|Reader]] (mainly UK)/[[associate professor]] (Australia, NZ, India, Southeast Asia, South Africa, Ireland)

| [[Reader (academic rank)|Reader]] or principal lecturer (mainly UK) or principal research scientist (mainly National institutes/laboratories) / [[associate professor]] (Australia, NZ, India, Southeast Asia, South Africa, Ireland)

| Full professor

| Full professor

| Professor (extraordinarius, W2, W3 without chair, C3)

| Professor (extraordinarius, W2, W3 without chair, C3)

|-

|-

| Senior lecturer or senior research scientist (mainly National institutes/laboratories)

| Senior lecturer

| Associate professor

| Associate professor

| Hochschuldozent, Oberassistent (W2, C2)

| Hochschuldozent, Oberassistent, Akademischer Oberrat (W2, C2, A14)

|-

|-

| '''Lecturer or Higher Research Scientist (mainly National institutes/laboratories)'''

| '''Lecturer'''

| Assistant professor

| Assistant professor

| Juniorprofessor, Wissenschaftlicher Assistent, Akademischer Rat (W1, C1, A13)

| Juniorprofessor, Wissenschaftlicher Assistent, Akademischer Rat (W1, C1, A13)

|}

|}



==Uses around the world==

==United States==

{{further|Academic ranks in the United States}}

As different US academic institutions use the term lecturer in various ways, there is sometimes confusion. On a generic level, the term broadly denotes ''one who teaches at a university but is not eligible for tenure and has no research obligations''. At non-research colleges, the latter distinction is less meaningful, making the absence of tenure the main difference between lecturers and other academic faculty. Unlike the adjective adjunct (which can modify most academic titles, from professor to lecturer to instructor, etc. and refers to part-time status), the title of lecturer at most schools does ''not'' address the issue of full-time vs. part-time status.



===Australia===

Lecturers are almost always required to have at least a master's degree and quite often have earned doctorates. (For example, at [[Columbia University]] in New York, the title of lecturer actually requires a doctorate or its professional equivalent; they also use the term for "instructors in specialized programs."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/vpaa/handbook/instruction.html|title=Officers of Instruction|website=www.columbia.edu|access-date=2 May 2018}}</ref>) Sometimes the title is used as an equivalent alternative to [[Teacher|instructor]], but schools that use both titles tend to provide relatively more advancement potential (e.g. multiple ranks of progression, at least some of which entail faculty voting privileges or faculty committee service) to their lecturers.<ref name="lsa.umich.edu">{{cite web |url=http://www.lsa.umich.edu/UMICH/pite/static%20files/lec34.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2014-03-13 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140313194335/http://www.lsa.umich.edu/UMICH/pite/static%20files/lec34.pdf |archive-date=13 March 2014}}</ref>

{{Further|Academic ranks (Australia and New Zealand)}}



In Australia, the term lecturer may be used informally to refer to anyone who conducts lectures at a university or elsewhere, but formally refers to a specific academic rank. The academic ranks in Australia are similar to those in the UK, with the rank of associate professor roughly equivalent to reader in UK universities. The academic levels in Australia are (in ascending academic level): (A) associate lecturer, (B) lecturer, (C) senior lecturer, (D) associate professor, and (E) professor.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.eui.eu/ProgrammesAndFellowships/AcademicCareersObservatory/AcademicCareersbyCountry/Australia.aspx|title=Australia, Academic Career Structure|website=eui.eu|access-date=2 May 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170628005947/http://www.eui.eu/ProgrammesAndFellowships/AcademicCareersObservatory/AcademicCareersbyCountry/Australia.aspx|archive-date=28 June 2017}}</ref>

Major research universities are more frequently hiring full-time lecturers, whose responsibilities tend to focus primarily in undergraduate education, especially for introductory/survey courses. In addition to the reason of higher-ranking faculty tending to prefer higher-level courses, part of the reason is also cost savings, as non-tenure-track faculty tend to have lower salaries.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20130122162139/http://hr.umich.edu/hrris/reports/docs/FSA_2011-2012.pdf ]</ref> When a lecturer is part-time, there is little practical distinction in the position from an [[adjunct professor]]/instructor/etc., since all non-tenure-track faculty by definition are not on the tenure track. However, for full-time lecturers (or those regularly salaried above some stated level, such as half-time<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.regents.umich.edu/bylaws/bylaws05a.html|title=Chapter V. The Faculties and Academic Staff - Regents of the University of Michigan|website=www.regents.umich.edu|access-date=2 May 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180502114737/http://www.regents.umich.edu/bylaws/bylaws05a.html|archive-date=2 May 2018}}</ref>), many institutions now incorporate the role quite formally—managing it with performance reviews, promotional tracks, administrative service responsibilities, and many faculty privileges (e.g. voting, use of resources, etc.).<ref name="lsa.umich.edu"/>



===India===

An emerging alternative to using full-time lecturers at research institutions is to create a parallel professorship track that is focused on teaching. It may offer tenure, and typically has a title series such as teaching professor. (This is analogous to the ''research-only'' faculty tracks at some universities, which typically have title series such as research professor/scientist/scholar.) A related concept—at least in professional fields—is the [[clinical professor]] or professor of practice, which in addition to a teaching focus (vs. research), also tend to have a practical/professional/skills oriented focus (vs. theory and scholarship, etc.).

{{Further|Academic ranks in India}}



In India, one can appear for interviews for a post of a lecturer after passing the combility Test conducted by the [[University Grants Commission (India)|University Grants Commission]].

In some institutions, the position of lecturer, especially "distinguished lecturer", may also refer to a position somewhat similar to ''emeritus professor'' or a temporary post used for visiting academics of considerable prominence—e.g. a famous writer may serve for a term or a year, for instance. When confusion arose about President [[Barack Obama]]'s status on the law faculty at the [[University of Chicago]], the institution stated that although his title was "senior lecturer", the university considered him to be a "professor" and further noted that it uses that title for notable people, such as federal judges and politicians, who are deemed of high prestige but lack the time to commit to a traditional tenure-track position.<ref>[http://www.factcheck.org/askfactcheck/was_barack_obama_really_a_constitutional_law.html "Was Barack Obama really a constitutional law lecturer?"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080617230454/http://www.factcheck.org/askfactcheck/was_barack_obama_really_a_constitutional_law.html |date=17 June 2008 }}, Fact Check</ref> Other universities instead use the term "senior" in that context as simply a matter of rank or promotion. In any case, references to lecturers of any rank as "professors" are consistent with the normal U.S. practice of using ''lower-case p'' "professor" as a common noun for anyone who teaches college, as well as a ''pre-nominal'' title of address (e.g. "Professor Smith") without necessarily referring to ''job'' title or position ''rank'' (e.g. "John Smith, Assistant/Associate/Full Professor of X").



The position is equivalent to assistant professor in the US system. The term is not universally applied, with some universities preferring the lecturer/reader/professor titles, while others work with the assistant professor/associate professor/professor title.

==Australia==

{{further|Academic ranks (Australia and New Zealand)}}



As such, most lecturers' position can be considered tenure track.

In Australia, the term lecturer may be used informally to refer to anyone who conducts lectures at a university or elsewhere, but formally refers to a specific academic rank. The academic ranks in Australia are similar to those in the UK, with the rank of associate professor roughly equivalent to reader in UK universities. The academic levels in Australia are (in ascending academic level): A) associate lecturer, (B) lecturer, (C) senior lecturer, (D) associate professor, and (E) professor.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.eui.eu/ProgrammesAndFellowships/AcademicCareersObservatory/AcademicCareersbyCountry/Australia.aspx|title=Australia, Academic Career Structure|website=eui.eu|access-date=2 May 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170628005947/http://www.eui.eu/ProgrammesAndFellowships/AcademicCareersObservatory/AcademicCareersbyCountry/Australia.aspx|archive-date=28 June 2017}}</ref>



In many states of India, the term lecturer or Post Graduate Teacher (PGT)<ref name="kvs">{{cite web|title=KENDRIYA VIDYALAYA SANGATHAN|url=http://kvsangathan.nic.in/FAQ/recruitmentrulesfooter.htm|website=kvsangathan.nic.in|access-date=27 April 2016|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160509234607/http://kvsangathan.nic.in/FAQ/recruitmentrulesfooter.htm|archive-date=9 May 2016}}</ref> is also used for the intermediate college teachers.<ref name="lect">{{cite book |last1=Alam |first1=Shah Manzoor |title=Urban Growth Theories and Settlement Systems of India|date=2011|publisher=Concept Publishing Company |isbn=9788180697395|page=xii|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2E-XejrqHt0C&q=lecturer+intermediate+college&pg=PR12 |access-date=27 April 2016}}</ref> The intermediate colleges or Junior Colleges are equivalent to [[Higher Secondary Examination|higher secondary]] schools. Such lecturers are subject experts specifically engaged to teach a particular subject in higher classes.<ref name="pgt">{{cite book|last1=Gore|first1=C. S.|title=Professional Preparation in Physical Education and Sports|date=17 January 2010|publisher=Pinnacle Technology|isbn=9781618205803|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1ZUEih1Vy90C&q=PGT+or+lecturer&pg=PT69|access-date=27 April 2016|language=en}}</ref>

==India==

{{further|Academic ranks in India}}



===United Kingdom<!--'Principal lecturer' and 'Principal Lecturer' redirect here-->===

In India, one can appear for interviews for a post of a lecturer after passing the combility Test conducted by the [[University Grants Commission (India)|University Grants Commission]].

{{Further|Academic ranks in the United Kingdom}}



In the UK, the term lecturer is ambiguous and covers several academic ranks. The key distinction is between permanent/open-ended or temporary/fixed-term lectureships.

The position is equivalent to assistant professor in the US system. The term is not universally applied, with some universities preferring the lecturer/reader/professor titles, while others work with the assistant professor/associate professor/professor title.



A permanent lecturer in UK universities usually holds an open-ended position that covers teaching, research, and administrative responsibilities. Permanent lectureships are tenure-track or tenured positions that are equivalent to an assistant or associate professorship in North America. After a number of years, a lecturer may be promoted based on their research record to become a [[senior lecturer]]. This position is below [[Reader (academic rank)|reader]] ('''principal lecturer'''<!--boldface per WP:R#PLA--> in post-1992 universities) and [[professor]].

As such, most lecturers' position can be considered tenure track.



In contrast, fixed-term or temporary lecturers are appointed for specific short-term teaching needs. These positions are often non-renewable and are common post-doctoral appointments. In North American terms, a fixed-term lecturer can hold an equivalent rank to non tenure-track (visiting) assistant professor. Typically, longer contracts denote greater seniority or higher rank. Teaching fellows may also sometimes be referred to as lecturers—for example, [[Exeter]] named some of that group as education and scholarship lecturers (E &S) to recognise the contribution of teaching, and elevate the titles of teaching fellows to lecturers. Some universities also refer to graduate students or others, who undertake ad-hoc teaching for a department [[sessional lecturer]]s. Like adjunct professors and sessional lecturers in North America, these non-permanent teaching staff are often very poorly paid (as little as £6000 p.a. in 2011-12). These varying uses of the term lecturer cause confusion for non-UK academics.

In many states of India, the term lecturer or Post Graduate Teacher (PGT)<ref name="kvs">{{cite web|title=KENDRIYA VIDYALAYA SANGATHAN|url=http://kvsangathan.nic.in/FAQ/recruitmentrulesfooter.htm|website=kvsangathan.nic.in|access-date=27 April 2016|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160509234607/http://kvsangathan.nic.in/FAQ/recruitmentrulesfooter.htm|archive-date=9 May 2016}}</ref> is also used for the intermediate college teachers.<ref name="lect">{{cite book |last1=Alam |first1=Shah Manzoor |title=Urban Growth Theories and Settlement Systems of India|date=2011|publisher=Concept Publishing Company |isbn=9788180697395|page=xii|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2E-XejrqHt0C&q=lecturer+intermediate+college&pg=PR12 |access-date=27 April 2016}}</ref> The intermediate colleges or Junior Colleges are equivalent to [[Higher Secondary Examination|higher secondary]] schools. Such lecturers are subject experts specifically engaged to teach a particular subject in higher classes.<ref name="pgt">{{cite book|last1=Gore|first1=C. S.|title=Professional Preparation in Physical Education and Sports|publisher=Pinnacle Technology|isbn=9781618205803|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1ZUEih1Vy90C&q=PGT+or+lecturer&pg=PT69|access-date=27 April 2016|language=en}}</ref>



As a proportion of UK academic staff, the proportion of permanent lectureships has fallen considerably. This is one reason why permanent lectureships are usually secured only after several years of post-doctoral experience. Data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency show that in 2013–14, 36 per cent of full- and part-time academic staff were on fixed-term contracts, down from 45 per cent a decade earlier. Over the same period, the proportion of academic staff on permanent contracts rose from 55 per cent to 64 per cent. Others were on contracts classed as "atypical".'<ref>{{cite news|last1=Else|first1=Holly|title=Zero Points: the persistence of temporary measures|url=https://www.timeshighereducation.com/content/few-crumbs-of-comfort-in-a-temporary-lecturers-day|access-date=22 January 2016|publisher=Times Higher Education|date=4 June 2015|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160201032540/https://www.timeshighereducation.com/content/few-crumbs-of-comfort-in-a-temporary-lecturers-day|archive-date=1 February 2016}}</ref>

==Other countries==

{{further|List of academic ranks}}



====Historical use====

In other countries, usage varies. In [[Israel]], the term has a meaning in academia similar to that in the UK.

Historically in the UK, promotion to a senior lectureship reflected prowess in teaching or administration rather than research, and the position was much less likely to lead direct to promotion to professor.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://london.ac.uk/about-us/how-university-run/policies|title=Policies|website=University of London}}</ref>



In contrast, promotion to senior lecturer nowadays is based on research achievements (for research-intensive universities), and is an integral part of the promotion path to a full chair. Promotion to reader (or principal lecturer in post-1992 universities) is sometimes still necessary before promotion to a full chair; however, some universities no longer make appointments at the level of reader (for instance, the University of Leeds and the University of Oxford). Senior lecturers and readers are sometimes paid on the same salary scale, although readers are recognized as more senior.

In [[France]], the title ''maître de conférences'' ("lecture master") is a permanent position that covers research and teaching (and usually administrative responsibilities). It is the lower of the two permanent faculty ranks (the other being ''professeur des universités'' or "university professor").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do?cidTexte=LEGITEXT000006064492|title=Décret n°84-431 du 6 juin 1984 fixant les dispositions statutaires communes applicables aux enseignants-chercheurs et portant statut particulier du corps des professeurs des universités et du corps des maîtres de conférences|website=legifrance.gouv.fr|access-date=2018-11-02}}</ref> The title of ''lecteur'' is used for teachers of foreign languages with no research responsibilities.<ref>{{Citation|title=Décret n°87-754 du 14 septembre 1987 relatif au recrutement de lecteurs de langue étrangère et de maîtres de langue étrangère dans les établissements publics d'enseignement supérieur relevant du ministre chargé de l'enseignement supérieur|date=14 September 1987|url=https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do?cidTexte=JORFTEXT000000867627|access-date=2018-11-02}}</ref>


Many open-ended lecturers in the UK have a [[doctorate]] (50.1% in 2009-2010) and often have [[Postdoctoral researcher|postdoctoral research]] experience.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/the-rise-and-rise-of-phds-as-standard/415203.article |title=The rise and rise of PhDs as standard|work=Times Higher Education |date=17 February 2011| publisher=timeshighereducation.co.uk |access-date=2011-03-04 }}</ref> In almost all fields, a doctorate is a prerequisite, although historically this was not the case. Some academic positions could have been held on the basis of research merit alone, without a higher degree.<ref>For example, [[David Fowler (mathematician)|David Fowler]] retired as a senior lecturer in mathematics at Warwick in 1990 without having obtained a doctorate. See [https://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/david-fowler-549972.html "Obituary: David Fowler"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110314083904/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/david-fowler-549972.html |date=14 March 2011 }}, ''The Independent''</ref>


====Current uses====

The [[new universities (United Kingdom)|new universities]] (that is universities that were until 1992 termed [[Institute of technology|polytechnics]]) have a slightly different ranking naming scheme from the older universities. Many pre-1992 universities use the grades: lecturer (A), lecturer (B), senior lecturer, reader, professor. Meanwhile, post-1992 grades are normally: lecturer, senior lecturer, principal lecturer (management-focused) or reader (research-focused), professor. Much confusion surrounds the differing use of the "senior lecturer" title. A senior lecturer in a post-1992 university is equivalent to a lecturer (B) in a pre-1992 university, whereas a senior lecturer in a pre-1992 university is most often equivalent to a principal lecturer in a post-1992 university.<ref name=Webb>Graham Webb, ''Making the Most of Appraisal: Career and Professional Development Planning for Lecturers,'' Routledge, 1994, p. 30, {{ISBN|0-7494-1256-9}}</ref>


According to the Times Higher Education, the [[University of Warwick]] decided in 2006 "to break away from hundreds of years of academic tradition, renaming lecturers 'assistant professors', senior lecturers and readers 'associate professors' while still calling professors 'professors'. The radical move will horrify those who believe the "professor" title should be reserved for an academic elite."<ref>Lee Elliot Major, "[https://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/get-the-drinks-its-professor-all-round/202229.article Get the drinks. It's professor all round]", ''Times Higher Education'', 31 March 2006</ref> Nottingham has a mixture of the standard UK system, and the system at Warwick, with both lecturers and assistant professors. At Reading, job advertisements and academic staff web pages use the title associate professor, but the ordinances of the university make no reference to these titles. They address only procedures for conferring the traditional UK academic ranks.<ref>{{cite web | url=http://www.reading.ac.uk/web/FILES/Calendar/New_Section_F_2010.pdf | title=Section XI Election and Appointment to Professorships or Readerships or Senior Lecturerships | work=Ordinances of the University of Reading (2010-11) | access-date=18 December 2011 | pages=23–25 | url-status=live | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140416221602/http://www.reading.ac.uk/web/FILES/Calendar/New_Section_F_2010.pdf | archive-date=16 April 2014}}</ref>


====Tenure and permanent lectureships{{anchor|Tenure}}====

Since the Conservatives' 1988 Education Reform Act, the ironclad tenure that used to exist in the UK has given way to a less secure form of tenure.<ref>{{cite web|url = https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/memories-of-jobs-for-life/104896.article?storyCode=104896&sectioncode=26|title = Memories of jobs for life|work = Times Higher Education (THE)|last = Court|first = Stephen|date = 5 December 1997|url-status = live|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20160201042445/https://www.timeshighereducation.com/news/memories-of-jobs-for-life/104896.article?storyCode=104896&sectioncode=26|archive-date = 1 February 2016}}</ref> Technically, university vice-chancellors can make individual faculty members redundant for poor performance or institute departmental redundancies, but in practice, this is rare. The most noted use of this policy happened in 2012 at [[Queen Mary University of London]] where lecturers on permanent contracts were fired. The institutions now has a stated policy of firing and replacing under-performing ''teaching'' staff members. This policy is complicated by the 2008 ''[[Ball v Aberdeen]]'' tribunal decision, the distinction between teaching and research faculty is blurring- with implications for who can and cannot be made redundant at UK universities, and under what conditions.


Despite this recent erosion of tenure in the UK, it is still practiced in most universities. Permanent contracts use the word "tenure" for lecturers who are "reappointed to the retiring age". This is equivalent to a US tenure decision—references are sought from world-leading academics and tenure and promotions committees meet to decide "tenure" cases. There is normally no title elevation in such instances—tenure and title are independent.


===United States===

{{Further|Academic ranks in the United States}}

As different US academic institutions use the term lecturer in various ways, there is sometimes confusion. On a generic level, the term broadly denotes ''college-level faculty who are not eligible for tenure and have no research obligations''. At non-research colleges, the latter distinction is less meaningful, making the absence of tenure the main difference between lecturers and other academic faculty. Unlike the adjective "adjunct" (which can modify most academic titles, and generally refers to part-time status), the title of lecturer at most schools does ''not'' address the issue of full-time vs. part-time status.


Lecturers are almost always required to have at least a master's degree and quite often have earned doctorates. (For example, at [[Columbia University]] in New York, the title of lecturer actually requires a doctorate or its professional equivalent; they also use the term for "instructors in specialized programs."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.columbia.edu/cu/vpaa/handbook/instruction.html|title=Officers of Instruction|website=www.columbia.edu|access-date=2 May 2018}}</ref>) Sometimes the title is used as an equivalent alternative to [[Teacher|instructor]], but schools that use both titles tend to provide relatively more advancement potential (e.g. multiple ranks of progression, at least some of which entail faculty voting privileges or faculty committee service) to their lecturers.<ref name="lsa.umich.edu">{{cite web |url=http://www.lsa.umich.edu/UMICH/pite/static%20files/lec34.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2014-03-13 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140313194335/http://www.lsa.umich.edu/UMICH/pite/static%20files/lec34.pdf |archive-date=13 March 2014}}</ref> The term "instructor" can be broad enough to cover certain non-faculty teaching roles, such as when graduate students teach undergraduates.<ref>[https://gsi.berkeley.edu/ GSI Teaching & Resource Center<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>


Major research universities are more frequently hiring full-time lecturers, whose responsibilities tend to focus primarily in undergraduate education, especially for introductory/survey courses. In addition to the reason of higher-ranking faculty tending to prefer higher-level courses, part of the reason is also cost savings, as non-tenure-track faculty tend to have lower salaries.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20130122162139/http://hr.umich.edu/hrris/reports/docs/FSA_2011-2012.pdf Wayback Machine<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> When a lecturer is part-time, there is little practical distinction in the position from an [[adjunct professor]]/instructor/etc., since all non-tenure-track faculty by definition are not on the tenure track. However, for full-time lecturers (or those regularly salaried above some stated level, such as half-time<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.regents.umich.edu/bylaws/bylaws05a.html|title=Chapter V. The Faculties and Academic Staff - Regents of the University of Michigan|website=www.regents.umich.edu|access-date=2 May 2018|url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180502114737/http://www.regents.umich.edu/bylaws/bylaws05a.html|archive-date=2 May 2018}}</ref>), many institutions now incorporate the role quite formally—managing it with performance reviews, promotional tracks, administrative service responsibilities, and many faculty privileges (e.g. voting, use of resources, etc.).<ref name="lsa.umich.edu"/>


An emerging alternative to using full-time lecturers at research institutions is to create a parallel professorship track that is focused on teaching. It may offer tenure, and typically has a title series such as teaching professor. (This is analogous to the ''research-only'' faculty tracks at some universities, which typically have title series such as research professor/scientist/scholar.) A related concept—at least in professional fields—is the [[clinical professor]] or professor of practice, which in addition to a teaching focus (vs. research), also tend to have a practical/professional/skills oriented focus (vs. theory and scholarship, etc.).


In some institutions, the position of lecturer, especially "distinguished lecturer", may also refer to a position somewhat similar to ''emeritus professor'' or a temporary post used for visiting academics of considerable prominence—e.g. a famous writer may serve for a term or a year, for instance. When confusion arose about President [[Barack Obama]]'s status on the faculty at the [[University of Chicago Law School]], the institution stated that although his title was "senior lecturer", the university considered him to be a "professor" and further noted that it uses that title for notable people, such as federal judges and politicians, who are deemed of high prestige but lack the time to commit to a traditional tenure-track position.<ref>[http://www.factcheck.org/askfactcheck/was_barack_obama_really_a_constitutional_law.html "Was Barack Obama really a constitutional law lecturer?"] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080617230454/http://www.factcheck.org/askfactcheck/was_barack_obama_really_a_constitutional_law.html |date=17 June 2008 }}, Fact Check</ref> Other universities instead use the term "senior" in that context as simply a matter of rank or promotion. In any case, references to lecturers of any rank as "professors" are consistent with the normal U.S. practice of using ''lower-case p'' "professor" as a common noun for anyone who teaches college, as well as a ''pre-nominal'' title of address (e.g. "Professor Smith") without necessarily referring to ''job'' title or position ''rank'' (e.g. "John Smith, Assistant/Associate/Full Professor of X").


===Other countries===

{{Further|List of academic ranks}}

[[File:Iranian lecturer sample 2014.jpg|thumb|right|An [[Iranian peoples|Iranian]] young [[associate professor]], teaching [[C (programming language)|C language]] [[Computer programming|programming]] and [[microcontroller]]s in [[Mohajer Technical And Vocational College of Isfahan]].]]

In other countries, usage varies.


In [[Israel]], the term has a meaning in academia similar to that in the UK.


In [[Academic ranks in France|France]], the title ''maître de conférences'' ("lecture master") is a permanent position that covers research and teaching (and usually administrative responsibilities). It is the lower of the two permanent faculty ranks (the other being ''professeur des universités'' or "university professor").<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do?cidTexte=LEGITEXT000006064492|title=Décret n°84-431 du 6 juin 1984 fixant les dispositions statutaires communes applicables aux enseignants-chercheurs et portant statut particulier du corps des professeurs des universités et du corps des maîtres de conférences|website=legifrance.gouv.fr|access-date=2018-11-02}}</ref> The title of ''lecteur'' is used for teachers of foreign languages with no research responsibilities.<ref>{{Citation|title=Décret n°87-754 du 14 septembre 1987 relatif au recrutement de lecteurs de langue étrangère et de maîtres de langue étrangère dans les établissements publics d'enseignement supérieur relevant du ministre chargé de l'enseignement supérieur|date=14 September 1987|url=https://www.legifrance.gouv.fr/affichTexte.do?cidTexte=JORFTEXT000000867627|access-date=2018-11-02}}</ref>



In German-speaking countries, the term ''lektor'' historically denoted a teaching position below a professor, primarily responsible for delivering and organizing lectures. The contemporary equivalent is ''dozent'' or . Nowadays, the German term ''lektor'' exists only in philology or modern-language departments at German-speaking universities for positions that primarily involve teaching a foreign language. The equivalent rank within the German university system is something like ''Juniorprofessor'', ''Dozent'', ''Hochschuldozent'', ''Juniordozent'', ''Akademischer Rat'' or ''-Oberrat'', ''Lehrkraft für besondere Aufgaben'', and the like.

In German-speaking countries, the term ''lektor'' historically denoted a teaching position below a professor, primarily responsible for delivering and organizing lectures. The contemporary equivalent is ''dozent'' or . Nowadays, the German term ''lektor'' exists only in philology or modern-language departments at German-speaking universities for positions that primarily involve teaching a foreign language. The equivalent rank within the German university system is something like ''Juniorprofessor'', ''Dozent'', ''Hochschuldozent'', ''Juniordozent'', ''Akademischer Rat'' or ''-Oberrat'', ''Lehrkraft für besondere Aufgaben'', and the like.

Line 104: Line 105:

In [[Russia]], a ''lektor'' is not an academic rank or a position name, but simply a description of an educator who delivers a set of lectures on a specific course. The title doesn't carry any particular teaching or research obligations and is simply a technical description. While lektors tend to be senior educators (such as professors or associate professors), any member of the faculty from an associate up can deliver lectures.

In [[Russia]], a ''lektor'' is not an academic rank or a position name, but simply a description of an educator who delivers a set of lectures on a specific course. The title doesn't carry any particular teaching or research obligations and is simply a technical description. While lektors tend to be senior educators (such as professors or associate professors), any member of the faculty from an associate up can deliver lectures.



In [[Norway]], a ''lektor'', University Lektor and University College Lektor are academic ranks at universities and university colleges in Norway. The requirements for such position is a combination of relevant degree on master level (five years master or bachelor plus two years master) or higher, research experience, teaching experience and pedagogic education and training. The rank is similar to Lecturer in Great Britain.

In [[Norway]], a ''lektor'', University Lektor and University College Lektor are academic ranks at universities and university colleges in Norway. The requirements for such position is a combination of relevant degree on master level (five years master or bachelor plus two years master) or higher, research experience, teaching experience and pedagogic education and training. The rank is similar to lecturer in Great Britain.

The Rank is also an academic rank which enables a teacher to lecture at [[Ungdomsskole]] (secondary school) on specialized fields and [[Videregående skole]] (high school) level. All teacher students in Norway are now required to reach a master's degree in order to be able to teach at all levels up to universities and university colleges.

The rank is also an academic rank which enables a teacher to lecture at [[Ungdomsskole]] (secondary school) on specialized fields and [[Videregående skole]] (high school) level. All teacher students in Norway are now required to reach a master's degree in order to be able to teach at all levels up to universities and university colleges.


[[File:Mathematics lecture at the Helsinki University of Technology.jpg|thumb|right|A [[mathematics]] [[lecture]], apparently about [[linear algebra]], at [[Helsinki University of Technology]], [[Finland]].]]

In [[Sweden]] and [[Denmark]], a ''lektor'' or ''universitetslektor'' is an academic rank similar to that of senior lecturer in Great Britain and associate professor in USA. The ''lektor'' holds the position below professor in rank.

In [[Sweden]] and [[Denmark]], a ''lektor'' or ''universitetslektor'' is an academic rank similar to that of senior lecturer in Great Britain and associate professor in USA. The ''lektor'' holds the position below professor in rank.



In [[Estonia]], lektor (lecturer) is an academic rank equivalent to Associate Professor in the US and Senior Lecturer in Great Britain. Lecturers in Estonia usually hold PhD degree and are engaged in lecturing and research.

In [[Estonia]], lektor (lecturer) is an academic rank equivalent to associate professor in the US and senior lecturer in Great Britain. Lecturers in Estonia usually hold PhD degree and are engaged in lecturing and research.



In [[Singapore]], a lecturer at the [[National University of Singapore]] is a full-time and renewable position that includes both the opportunities for research funding and for promotion to Associate Professor on the [[Educator Track]]. It is equivalent to [[Teaching Assistant Professor]] at a US university.

In [[Singapore]], a lecturer at the [[National University of Singapore]] is a full-time and renewable position that includes both the opportunities for research funding and for promotion to associate professor on the [[Educator Track]]. It is equivalent to [[assistant professor]] at a US university.



In [[South Korea]], the term ''gangsa'' is the literal translation of "part-time lecturer". A gangsa is usually part-time, paid by the number of hours of teaching. No research or administrative obligation is attached. In most disciplines, gangsa is regarded as a first step in one's academic career. In Korea, the tenure position started from "full-time lecturer". The tenure track positions in South Korea are "full-time lecturer (JunImGangSa)", "assistant professor (JoKyoSu)", "associate professor (BuKyosu)", and "professor (KyoSu)". Therefore, "full-time lecturer" is the same position as "assistant professor" in other countries, including the USA.

In [[South Korea]], the term ''gangsa'' is the literal translation of "part-time lecturer". A gangsa is usually part-time, paid by the number of hours of teaching. No research or administrative obligation is attached. In most disciplines, gangsa is regarded as a first step in one's academic career. In Korea, the tenure position started from "full-time lecturer". The tenure track positions in South Korea are "full-time lecturer (JunImGangSa)", "assistant professor (JoKyoSu)", "associate professor (BuKyosu)", and "professor (KyoSu)". Therefore, "full-time lecturer" is the same position as "assistant professor" in other countries, including the US.



In the Netherlands, a "lector" used to be equivalent to the rank of associate professor at universities. Nowadays, it is the highest rank at so-called "applied universities" (i.e., school providing higher vocational/professional training to their students). At regular universities, this rank does not exist anymore.

In the Netherlands, a "lector" used to be equivalent to the rank of associate professor at universities. Nowadays, it is the highest academic rank at [[vocational university|universities of applied sciences]]. At regular universities, this rank does not exist anymore.



==See also==

<gallery widths="200px" heights="200px">

*[[Teaching fellow]]

File:Mathematics lecture at the Helsinki University of Technology.jpg|A [[mathematics]] [[lecture]], apparently about [[linear algebra]], at [[Helsinki University of Technology]], [[Finland]].

File:Iranian lecturer sample 2014.jpg|An [[Iranian peoples|Iranian]] young [[associate professor]], teaching [[C (programming language)|C language]] [[Computer programming|programming]] and [[microcontroller]]s in [[Mohajer Technical And Vocational College of Isfahan]].

</gallery>



==References==

==References==

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{{Academic positions}}

{{Academic positions}}

{{Authority control}}



[[Category:Lecturers| ]]

[[Category:Lecturers| ]]

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[[Category:Ecclesiastical titles]]

[[Category:Ecclesiastical titles]]

[[Category:Education and training occupations]]

[[Category:Education and training occupations]]

[[Category:Education terminology]]

[[Category:Educational personnel]]

[[Category:Occupations]]


Latest revision as of 10:12, 5 May 2024

Lecturer is an academic rank within many universities, though the meaning of the term varies somewhat from country to country. It generally denotes an academic expert who is hired to teach on a full- or part-time basis. They may also conduct research.

Comparison[edit]

The table presents a broad overview of the traditional main systems, but there are universities which use a combination of those systems or other titles. Note that some universities in Commonwealth countries have adopted the American system in place of the Commonwealth system.

Commonwealth system American system German system
Professor (chair) Distinguished professor or equivalent Professor (ordinarius, W3 with Chair, C4 or C3 with Chair)
Reader or principal lecturer (mainly UK) or principal research scientist (mainly National institutes/laboratories) / associate professor (Australia, NZ, India, Southeast Asia, South Africa, Ireland) Full professor Professor (extraordinarius, W2, W3 without chair, C3)
Senior lecturer or senior research scientist (mainly National institutes/laboratories) Associate professor Hochschuldozent, Oberassistent, Akademischer Oberrat (W2, C2, A14)
Lecturer or Higher Research Scientist (mainly National institutes/laboratories) Assistant professor Juniorprofessor, Wissenschaftlicher Assistent, Akademischer Rat (W1, C1, A13)

Uses around the world[edit]

Australia[edit]

In Australia, the term lecturer may be used informally to refer to anyone who conducts lectures at a university or elsewhere, but formally refers to a specific academic rank. The academic ranks in Australia are similar to those in the UK, with the rank of associate professor roughly equivalent to reader in UK universities. The academic levels in Australia are (in ascending academic level): (A) associate lecturer, (B) lecturer, (C) senior lecturer, (D) associate professor, and (E) professor.[1]

India[edit]

In India, one can appear for interviews for a post of a lecturer after passing the combility Test conducted by the University Grants Commission.

The position is equivalent to assistant professor in the US system. The term is not universally applied, with some universities preferring the lecturer/reader/professor titles, while others work with the assistant professor/associate professor/professor title.

As such, most lecturers' position can be considered tenure track.

In many states of India, the term lecturer or Post Graduate Teacher (PGT)[2] is also used for the intermediate college teachers.[3] The intermediate colleges or Junior Colleges are equivalent to higher secondary schools. Such lecturers are subject experts specifically engaged to teach a particular subject in higher classes.[4]

United Kingdom[edit]

In the UK, the term lecturer is ambiguous and covers several academic ranks. The key distinction is between permanent/open-ended or temporary/fixed-term lectureships.

A permanent lecturer in UK universities usually holds an open-ended position that covers teaching, research, and administrative responsibilities. Permanent lectureships are tenure-track or tenured positions that are equivalent to an assistant or associate professorship in North America. After a number of years, a lecturer may be promoted based on their research record to become a senior lecturer. This position is below reader (principal lecturer in post-1992 universities) and professor.

In contrast, fixed-term or temporary lecturers are appointed for specific short-term teaching needs. These positions are often non-renewable and are common post-doctoral appointments. In North American terms, a fixed-term lecturer can hold an equivalent rank to non tenure-track (visiting) assistant professor. Typically, longer contracts denote greater seniority or higher rank. Teaching fellows may also sometimes be referred to as lecturers—for example, Exeter named some of that group as education and scholarship lecturers (E &S) to recognise the contribution of teaching, and elevate the titles of teaching fellows to lecturers. Some universities also refer to graduate students or others, who undertake ad-hoc teaching for a department sessional lecturers. Like adjunct professors and sessional lecturers in North America, these non-permanent teaching staff are often very poorly paid (as little as £6000 p.a. in 2011-12). These varying uses of the term lecturer cause confusion for non-UK academics.

As a proportion of UK academic staff, the proportion of permanent lectureships has fallen considerably. This is one reason why permanent lectureships are usually secured only after several years of post-doctoral experience. Data from the Higher Education Statistics Agency show that in 2013–14, 36 per cent of full- and part-time academic staff were on fixed-term contracts, down from 45 per cent a decade earlier. Over the same period, the proportion of academic staff on permanent contracts rose from 55 per cent to 64 per cent. Others were on contracts classed as "atypical".'[5]

Historical use[edit]

Historically in the UK, promotion to a senior lectureship reflected prowess in teaching or administration rather than research, and the position was much less likely to lead direct to promotion to professor.[6]

In contrast, promotion to senior lecturer nowadays is based on research achievements (for research-intensive universities), and is an integral part of the promotion path to a full chair. Promotion to reader (or principal lecturer in post-1992 universities) is sometimes still necessary before promotion to a full chair; however, some universities no longer make appointments at the level of reader (for instance, the University of Leeds and the University of Oxford). Senior lecturers and readers are sometimes paid on the same salary scale, although readers are recognized as more senior.

Many open-ended lecturers in the UK have a doctorate (50.1% in 2009-2010) and often have postdoctoral research experience.[7] In almost all fields, a doctorate is a prerequisite, although historically this was not the case. Some academic positions could have been held on the basis of research merit alone, without a higher degree.[8]

Current uses[edit]

The new universities (that is universities that were until 1992 termed polytechnics) have a slightly different ranking naming scheme from the older universities. Many pre-1992 universities use the grades: lecturer (A), lecturer (B), senior lecturer, reader, professor. Meanwhile, post-1992 grades are normally: lecturer, senior lecturer, principal lecturer (management-focused) or reader (research-focused), professor. Much confusion surrounds the differing use of the "senior lecturer" title. A senior lecturer in a post-1992 university is equivalent to a lecturer (B) in a pre-1992 university, whereas a senior lecturer in a pre-1992 university is most often equivalent to a principal lecturer in a post-1992 university.[9]

According to the Times Higher Education, the University of Warwick decided in 2006 "to break away from hundreds of years of academic tradition, renaming lecturers 'assistant professors', senior lecturers and readers 'associate professors' while still calling professors 'professors'. The radical move will horrify those who believe the "professor" title should be reserved for an academic elite."[10] Nottingham has a mixture of the standard UK system, and the system at Warwick, with both lecturers and assistant professors. At Reading, job advertisements and academic staff web pages use the title associate professor, but the ordinances of the university make no reference to these titles. They address only procedures for conferring the traditional UK academic ranks.[11]

Tenure and permanent lectureships[edit]

Since the Conservatives' 1988 Education Reform Act, the ironclad tenure that used to exist in the UK has given way to a less secure form of tenure.[12] Technically, university vice-chancellors can make individual faculty members redundant for poor performance or institute departmental redundancies, but in practice, this is rare. The most noted use of this policy happened in 2012 at Queen Mary University of London where lecturers on permanent contracts were fired. The institutions now has a stated policy of firing and replacing under-performing teaching staff members. This policy is complicated by the 2008 Ball v Aberdeen tribunal decision, the distinction between teaching and research faculty is blurring- with implications for who can and cannot be made redundant at UK universities, and under what conditions.

Despite this recent erosion of tenure in the UK, it is still practiced in most universities. Permanent contracts use the word "tenure" for lecturers who are "reappointed to the retiring age". This is equivalent to a US tenure decision—references are sought from world-leading academics and tenure and promotions committees meet to decide "tenure" cases. There is normally no title elevation in such instances—tenure and title are independent.

United States[edit]

As different US academic institutions use the term lecturer in various ways, there is sometimes confusion. On a generic level, the term broadly denotes college-level faculty who are not eligible for tenure and have no research obligations. At non-research colleges, the latter distinction is less meaningful, making the absence of tenure the main difference between lecturers and other academic faculty. Unlike the adjective "adjunct" (which can modify most academic titles, and generally refers to part-time status), the title of lecturer at most schools does not address the issue of full-time vs. part-time status.

Lecturers are almost always required to have at least a master's degree and quite often have earned doctorates. (For example, at Columbia University in New York, the title of lecturer actually requires a doctorate or its professional equivalent; they also use the term for "instructors in specialized programs."[13]) Sometimes the title is used as an equivalent alternative to instructor, but schools that use both titles tend to provide relatively more advancement potential (e.g. multiple ranks of progression, at least some of which entail faculty voting privileges or faculty committee service) to their lecturers.[14] The term "instructor" can be broad enough to cover certain non-faculty teaching roles, such as when graduate students teach undergraduates.[15]

Major research universities are more frequently hiring full-time lecturers, whose responsibilities tend to focus primarily in undergraduate education, especially for introductory/survey courses. In addition to the reason of higher-ranking faculty tending to prefer higher-level courses, part of the reason is also cost savings, as non-tenure-track faculty tend to have lower salaries.[16] When a lecturer is part-time, there is little practical distinction in the position from an adjunct professor/instructor/etc., since all non-tenure-track faculty by definition are not on the tenure track. However, for full-time lecturers (or those regularly salaried above some stated level, such as half-time[17]), many institutions now incorporate the role quite formally—managing it with performance reviews, promotional tracks, administrative service responsibilities, and many faculty privileges (e.g. voting, use of resources, etc.).[14]

An emerging alternative to using full-time lecturers at research institutions is to create a parallel professorship track that is focused on teaching. It may offer tenure, and typically has a title series such as teaching professor. (This is analogous to the research-only faculty tracks at some universities, which typically have title series such as research professor/scientist/scholar.) A related concept—at least in professional fields—is the clinical professor or professor of practice, which in addition to a teaching focus (vs. research), also tend to have a practical/professional/skills oriented focus (vs. theory and scholarship, etc.).

In some institutions, the position of lecturer, especially "distinguished lecturer", may also refer to a position somewhat similar to emeritus professor or a temporary post used for visiting academics of considerable prominence—e.g. a famous writer may serve for a term or a year, for instance. When confusion arose about President Barack Obama's status on the faculty at the University of Chicago Law School, the institution stated that although his title was "senior lecturer", the university considered him to be a "professor" and further noted that it uses that title for notable people, such as federal judges and politicians, who are deemed of high prestige but lack the time to commit to a traditional tenure-track position.[18] Other universities instead use the term "senior" in that context as simply a matter of rank or promotion. In any case, references to lecturers of any rank as "professors" are consistent with the normal U.S. practice of using lower-case p "professor" as a common noun for anyone who teaches college, as well as a pre-nominal title of address (e.g. "Professor Smith") without necessarily referring to job title or position rank (e.g. "John Smith, Assistant/Associate/Full Professor of X").

Other countries[edit]

AnIranian young associate professor, teaching C language programming and microcontrollersinMohajer Technical And Vocational College of Isfahan.

In other countries, usage varies.

InIsrael, the term has a meaning in academia similar to that in the UK.

InFrance, the title maître de conférences ("lecture master") is a permanent position that covers research and teaching (and usually administrative responsibilities). It is the lower of the two permanent faculty ranks (the other being professeur des universités or "university professor").[19] The title of lecteur is used for teachers of foreign languages with no research responsibilities.[20]

In German-speaking countries, the term lektor historically denoted a teaching position below a professor, primarily responsible for delivering and organizing lectures. The contemporary equivalent is dozent or . Nowadays, the German term lektor exists only in philology or modern-language departments at German-speaking universities for positions that primarily involve teaching a foreign language. The equivalent rank within the German university system is something like Juniorprofessor, Dozent, Hochschuldozent, Juniordozent, Akademischer Rator-Oberrat, Lehrkraft für besondere Aufgaben, and the like.

InPoland, the related term wykładowca is used for a teaching-only position.

InRussia, a lektor is not an academic rank or a position name, but simply a description of an educator who delivers a set of lectures on a specific course. The title doesn't carry any particular teaching or research obligations and is simply a technical description. While lektors tend to be senior educators (such as professors or associate professors), any member of the faculty from an associate up can deliver lectures.

InNorway, a lektor, University Lektor and University College Lektor are academic ranks at universities and university colleges in Norway. The requirements for such position is a combination of relevant degree on master level (five years master or bachelor plus two years master) or higher, research experience, teaching experience and pedagogic education and training. The rank is similar to lecturer in Great Britain. The rank is also an academic rank which enables a teacher to lecture at Ungdomsskole (secondary school) on specialized fields and Videregående skole (high school) level. All teacher students in Norway are now required to reach a master's degree in order to be able to teach at all levels up to universities and university colleges.

Amathematics lecture, apparently about linear algebra, at Helsinki University of Technology, Finland.

InSweden and Denmark, a lektororuniversitetslektor is an academic rank similar to that of senior lecturer in Great Britain and associate professor in USA. The lektor holds the position below professor in rank.

InEstonia, lektor (lecturer) is an academic rank equivalent to associate professor in the US and senior lecturer in Great Britain. Lecturers in Estonia usually hold PhD degree and are engaged in lecturing and research.

InSingapore, a lecturer at the National University of Singapore is a full-time and renewable position that includes both the opportunities for research funding and for promotion to associate professor on the Educator Track. It is equivalent to assistant professor at a US university.

InSouth Korea, the term gangsa is the literal translation of "part-time lecturer". A gangsa is usually part-time, paid by the number of hours of teaching. No research or administrative obligation is attached. In most disciplines, gangsa is regarded as a first step in one's academic career. In Korea, the tenure position started from "full-time lecturer". The tenure track positions in South Korea are "full-time lecturer (JunImGangSa)", "assistant professor (JoKyoSu)", "associate professor (BuKyosu)", and "professor (KyoSu)". Therefore, "full-time lecturer" is the same position as "assistant professor" in other countries, including the US.

In the Netherlands, a "lector" used to be equivalent to the rank of associate professor at universities. Nowadays, it is the highest academic rank at universities of applied sciences. At regular universities, this rank does not exist anymore.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Australia, Academic Career Structure". eui.eu. Archived from the original on 28 June 2017. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  • ^ "KENDRIYA VIDYALAYA SANGATHAN". kvsangathan.nic.in. Archived from the original on 9 May 2016. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  • ^ Alam, Shah Manzoor (2011). Urban Growth Theories and Settlement Systems of India. Concept Publishing Company. p. xii. ISBN 9788180697395. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  • ^ Gore, C. S. (17 January 2010). Professional Preparation in Physical Education and Sports. Pinnacle Technology. ISBN 9781618205803. Retrieved 27 April 2016.
  • ^ Else, Holly (4 June 2015). "Zero Points: the persistence of temporary measures". Times Higher Education. Archived from the original on 1 February 2016. Retrieved 22 January 2016.
  • ^ "Policies". University of London.
  • ^ "The rise and rise of PhDs as standard". Times Higher Education. timeshighereducation.co.uk. 17 February 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2011.
  • ^ For example, David Fowler retired as a senior lecturer in mathematics at Warwick in 1990 without having obtained a doctorate. See "Obituary: David Fowler" Archived 14 March 2011 at the Wayback Machine, The Independent
  • ^ Graham Webb, Making the Most of Appraisal: Career and Professional Development Planning for Lecturers, Routledge, 1994, p. 30, ISBN 0-7494-1256-9
  • ^ Lee Elliot Major, "Get the drinks. It's professor all round", Times Higher Education, 31 March 2006
  • ^ "Section XI Election and Appointment to Professorships or Readerships or Senior Lecturerships" (PDF). Ordinances of the University of Reading (2010-11). pp. 23–25. Archived (PDF) from the original on 16 April 2014. Retrieved 18 December 2011.
  • ^ Court, Stephen (5 December 1997). "Memories of jobs for life". Times Higher Education (THE). Archived from the original on 1 February 2016.
  • ^ "Officers of Instruction". www.columbia.edu. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  • ^ a b "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 March 2014. Retrieved 13 March 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  • ^ GSI Teaching & Resource Center
  • ^ Wayback Machine
  • ^ "Chapter V. The Faculties and Academic Staff - Regents of the University of Michigan". www.regents.umich.edu. Archived from the original on 2 May 2018. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
  • ^ "Was Barack Obama really a constitutional law lecturer?" Archived 17 June 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Fact Check
  • ^ "Décret n°84-431 du 6 juin 1984 fixant les dispositions statutaires communes applicables aux enseignants-chercheurs et portant statut particulier du corps des professeurs des universités et du corps des maîtres de conférences". legifrance.gouv.fr. Retrieved 2 November 2018.
  • ^ Décret n°87-754 du 14 septembre 1987 relatif au recrutement de lecteurs de langue étrangère et de maîtres de langue étrangère dans les établissements publics d'enseignement supérieur relevant du ministre chargé de l'enseignement supérieur, 14 September 1987, retrieved 2 November 2018
  • External links[edit]


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