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Life as an Adjunct - Smith, James
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  • Gebundenes Buch

Teaching college students can be deeply fulfilling-and brutally unsustainable. For the tens of thousands of adjunct instructors navigating semester-to-semester contracts, erratic schedules, and minimal institutional support, the classroom is just one piece of a much larger balancing act. This book is a guide and companion for anyone trying to build a meaningful teaching life in the margins of higher education. Drawing from lived experience, candid insights, and practical strategies, it addresses the emotional, professional, and financial realities of contingent academic work. It doesn't shy…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Teaching college students can be deeply fulfilling-and brutally unsustainable. For the tens of thousands of adjunct instructors navigating semester-to-semester contracts, erratic schedules, and minimal institutional support, the classroom is just one piece of a much larger balancing act. This book is a guide and companion for anyone trying to build a meaningful teaching life in the margins of higher education. Drawing from lived experience, candid insights, and practical strategies, it addresses the emotional, professional, and financial realities of contingent academic work. It doesn't shy away from the frustrations: the unpaid prep time, the last-minute assignments, the struggle to find office space or secure healthcare. But it also highlights what makes the work matter-student stories, creative autonomy, intellectual connection, and the quiet power of persistence. Whether you're trying to make adjunct life sustainable, thinking about transitioning into-or out of-the academy, or simply looking to teach with more clarity and less burnout, this book offers both validation and direction. It's built for educators who care deeply, even when the system doesn't seem to care back. Because while the contracts may be temporary, the impact of good teaching never is.