Hi,
I should get my (french) PhD in biology in one year from now, and after that I would like to teach biology at university without doing research.
Do someone know if such "teaching-only-positions" are offered by universities and accessible for a freshly-graduated PhD, and in which country? (I would be interested in the first place by a teaching position in the USA or UK)
Thank you.
Alb
Hi, these are becoming increasingly common in the UK due to the increases in student numbers recently and things like the TEF. They are relatively new to my biology department, hence I've been able to get one. I have a feeling they will be more competitive as time goes on. They are less secure than going the traditional lectureship route though, since many of the roles are fixed-term contracts only, although there's a few people in my team on open-ended contracts now. Basically, you are easier to cut loose than someone on a lectureship as you cost money, but don't bring in money. If student numbers fall, or there's no money for you, then it's goodbye. Also bear in mind chances of progression in the future. My role is currently non-progressable, so it's great now but may not be so great in 5 years time. I'm hoping this will change though so there's a clearer progression route like lecturer to senior lecturer etc.
Look out for jobs advertised like "teaching assistant", "teaching associate", "senior teaching associate", "teaching fellow" etc on jobs.ac.uk. Get as much teaching experience as you can now (demonstrating, lecturing, tutorials etc) because you will probably be chucked in the deep end and told to create new lecture units or field course from scratch, like I have been.
In the US I think these positions are common in the more teaching focused liberal arts places but I don't think they pay that well compared to lectureships at research intensive unis.
In both the UK and USA student numbers are in fact falling at the moment, so unfortunately a lot of the wholly teaching focused jobs are rather insecure, and unions in both countries are fighting to try to stop casualisation. You have to really be very careful about considering whether it's viable as a long-term career. I know a couple of people who have had to move city most years for some time now chasing one year teaching fellowships - it's not a life I'd fancy myself.
How resistant are you to research? In both countries there are teaching focused institutions, where the majority of a role for a permanent contract would be teaching and admin but there would be some expectations of research (but much less than the more prestigious universities). If you for example don't want to do lab research, could you consider researching teaching biology and publishing on that? Or perhaps something very applied rather than blue skies research? One other possibility are jobs that involve you running degree programmes or another large administrative role alongside teaching - they tend though not to be entry level jobs but worth checking adverts to see what sort of experience they look for.
If teaching itself is what really excites you, you could also try qualifying to teach in secondary schools or colleges?
The same thing is happening in my UK university. While some people are losing their jobs, others are having their contracts changed to "teaching only", and new teaching only posts are being advertised. I think it is to do with the Teaching Excellence Framework (TEF) and it is probably somehow saving money too, if my uni has anything to do with it!
They're becoming more and more common. I've just been awarded a lectureship on an open ended "Teaching and Scholarship" contract - which basically means I have 60% of my time allocated to teaching, 20% to academic citizenship (i.e. administration) and 20% is mine to do what I like with - in my case, I'll probably use it for research and/or outreach. This contrasts with an Academic Research and Teaching contract (ART) which would be 40% teaching, 20% citizenship and 40% research time.
I think my university is fairly progressive in this manner (and it's a Russell group institution). My uni genuinely seems to value teaching-focused as a career route, e.g. you can be promoted to Professor on a T&S contract and there is no difference in the job titles or salary ranges between the ART and T&S staff. I.e. I can call myself a lecturer, because I am one, even though I am not required to do research on my current contract.
So, I think these roles are available but they are not yet commonplace. It seems to be going that way though.
Mind you, London Met has had its own particularly idiosyncratic problems to face recently hasn't it.
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