Vous êtes sur la page 1sur 8

Essay on what new faculty members need to know about salaries 10/23/17, 2)06 PM

« Back to Career Advice (/advice) Print This (/print/advice/2012/09/05/essay-what-new-faculty-members-need-know-about-salaries?width=775&height=500&iframe=true)

Tyro Tracts (/career-advice/tyro-tracts) Tyro Tracts

Salary Realities
Graduate students and new faculty members need to know more about how compensation works, writes Nate Kreuter.

By Nate Kreuter // September 5, 2012 8 COMMENTS


(/ADVICE/2012/09/05/ESSAY-
WHAT-NEW-FACULTY-
MEMBERS-NEED-KNOW-
ABOUT-
SALARIES#DISQUS_THREAD)

For some reason that I don’t really understand, I get the sense that it’s often considered crass to openly discuss academic
salaries. Certainly there are crass ways of talking about salaries. Even though most of us enter academe for reasons other
than money, I hope, there is nothing untoward about looking after your own and your family’s Bnancial well-being. On the
contrary, it would be irresponsible not to.

It’s astounding to me, though, how little most graduate students are taught about the nature of academic compensation,
and how little even some advanced graduate students know about academic salaries. Consider this my effort to demystify
things.

If you are fortunate enough to land a job after securing your degree (not something that can be taken for granted in today’s
academic job market), there are two primary factors that will determine the salary available to you when you receive that
Brst job offer: 1) your discipline; 2) the nature of the institution where you are eventually employed. These two factors,
more than anything else, will set the upper and lower bounds of what salaries are possible. (A third factor will affect

https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2012/09/05/essay-what-new-faculty-members-need-know-about-salaries Page 1 of 8
Essay on what new faculty members need to know about salaries 10/23/17, 2)06 PM

salaries as well, which is whether or not the teaching job is tenure-track. While the bulk of my discussion here is devoted to
tenure-track positions, the long and short of it is that non-tenure-track teaching jobs carry with them signiBcantly lower
salaries than tenure-track teaching jobs, but the salaries are still affected by discipline and institution type.)

Starting salaries for assistant professors vary dramatically from discipline to discipline. A beginning assistant professor of
English (my Beld) makes a very different salary than a beginning assistant professor of business administration, even at
the same institution. The disparities between salaries in different disciplines may not seem rational or fair in some cases,
but they are what they are. If your discipline is a particular strength at a given university, in which the institution is
committed to maintaining excellence, or, inversely, if the university offering you a job has a desperate need to shore up a
weakness in your discipline, you may be able to get a somewhat higher salary than is typical for your discipline, but in
neither case would the salary be substantially higher than the norm. No matter the institution, salaries in humanities
disciplines will substantially lag behind the salaries of faculty in the sciences, business, and other Belds.

There isn’t space here to go into the salary norms of every discipline, but you should inquire among faculty mentors and
more advanced graduate students in your Beld as to what the norms for your own discipline are, and keep the number in
mind. Salary surveys, like the one that CUPA-HR conducts, can give you a very rough estimate of salaries by faculty rank
and discipline, (https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2012/03/12/faculty-salaries-are-19-percent-study-bnds) and can
further help you to triangulate an idea of a reasonable salary expectation. Research and gossip will be the primary avenues
to your knowledge.

Graduate students who have recently been on the job market or have recently landed a job typically have the most current,
reliable information on salaries, as do the faculty advisers and dissertation directors who help to place successful
applicants. Additionally, salaries for faculty members at public institutions are usually a matter of public record, which
means that with a little internet digging, you can often Bnd out what faculty members employed at state institutions are
making. States vary widely in terms of how easy they make it to access such information, but for public universities, it’s
out there. The American Association of University Professors’ annual report on institutional salaries,
(http://www.aaup.org/AAUP/newsroom/2012PRs/salarysurvey.htm) especially when combined with other data, like the
CUPA-HR reports, provides additional perspective, and can help you to understand the differences between different types
of academic institutions. More than likely, your research into salaries won’t lead you to a single number that represents a
typical starting salary in your Beld, but instead will lead to a range of numbers.

You’ll learn of a range of salaries because the next biggest variable that drives faculty salaries is the nature of the
employing institution. So-called “state Yagship” universities, for example, tend to offer the highest salaries in each
discipline, when it comes to public universities. As a general rule, there is an inverse relationship between the number of
classes you will have to teach and the salary you will make. Universities that emphasize research the most, and thus
require less teaching, offer the highest salaries. Universities that prioritize teaching more, and expect less in terms of
research, tend to offer lower salaries. There may be a cynical observation in there about what academic compensation
says, literally, about the relative values placed on teaching versus research. But these are the ways of our world, at least for
now.

With public universities, you can more or less count on this inverse relationship to hold true, but it is less consistently
applicable when the employer is a private college or university. Private colleges and universities are more of a wild card
when it comes to salaries. Some may routinely pay at the high end of what is typical for a discipline, and others at the low
end. And, if you’re fortunate enough to receive a job offer from a private college, your negotiations may be somewhat more
opaque or less informed since the salaries of your colleagues will not be a matter of public record, as they usually are at
public universities.

In some states, the professorial ranks are unionized. I have never worked in such a state, but my understanding is that
unionized states have stricter upper and lower salary bounds. While information on academic salaries may be easier to
discover in such states, deans may have less negotiating room due to restrictions imposed by collective bargaining
agreements. Whether or not you are going to work at a unionized institution will affect not only your initial salary, but also
the nature and timing of raises. It is one more angle for you to research as you seek to inform yourself about a given

https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2012/09/05/essay-what-new-faculty-members-need-know-about-salaries Page 2 of 8
Essay on what new faculty members need to know about salaries 10/23/17, 2)06 PM

institution.

One reason (of many) that academic salaries may seem low in many disciplines, relative to a faculty member’s high level
of education and the sacriBces required to obtain that education, is that compensation for faculty members is usually
based on what’s called a 9-month contract, meaning that a faculty member is paid for three-fourths of a year’s worth of
labor. You won’t be paid, essentially, for the summer (unless you contract to engage in summer teaching, more on which in
a moment), even though you will likely have to spend your summer months conducting research and writing on your own
time if you hope to win tenure. In terms of logistics, pay for a 9-month contract may be distributed to a faculty member
over the actual 9 months of the appointment, or spread out over 12 months, depending upon the university and the
relevant state laws.

One of the most important things to realize about academic salaries is how few opportunities there are for raises. There
are only a few mechanisms by which academic salaries increase:

1. Cost of living raises — incremental raises given each year or every couple of years to faculty and staff across the board
to account for inYation. These raises areNEWS
typically reduced or even eliminated
OPINION during bad economic
SURVEYS WEBCASTS times, likeJOBS
our current
ones. The percentages are usually set at the state level (for public universities) or university level (for private universities).
Equity raises intended to correct salary inversion (a common phenomenon wherein junior faculty come in at higher
salaries than some of their more senior colleagues) also falls into this category. Merit raises, which are increasing rare in
the current economy, also typically come out of these same allocations, and are usually quite modest.

2) Promotion — promotion raises are the increases in salary that are pegged to promotions in rank from assistant
professor to associate professor or from associate professor to professor. These raises are typically much more modest
than most graduate students realize. Even at large, relatively a_uent universities the raise between ranks may only be a
few thousand dollars, which isn’t much considering how hard a faculty member has to work for the promotion. In
advancing from assistant to associate professor the real reward is the security of tenure, not the increase in salary.

WANT TO ADVERTISE? CLICK HERE


3) Administration — sometimes a faculty member, usually only associate professors and “full” professors, will take on a (HTTPS://WWW.INSIDEHIGHERED.COM/ADVERTISE)

new academic position with administrative responsibilities. Often this means moving from a 9-month appointment to a 12-
month appointment, with a commensurate raise in salary. If the faculty member eventually transitions back to a 9-month
appointment (remember, the standard for teaching faculty), then they typically are allowed to keep some, but not all, of the
increase. Administrative positions, while they can be relatively lucrative, entail a serious change in both job responsibilities
(https://careers.insidehighered.com/?
and lifestyle, and are generally not available to or even appropriate for junior faculty.
utm_source=ihe&utm_medium=editorial-
site&utm_content=sidebar-
4) Summer Teaching — faculty can increase their salaries by taking on summer teaching. Of course, this means more link&utm_campaign=jobs)
Browse Jobs by Category
work, and less time for research, as well. Many tenured faculty members recommend resisting the lure of summer
teaching until after achieving tenure. Better to get your publishing done during the summer months. Adjuncts and other Faculty Jobs
(https://careers.insidehighered.com/searchjobs
term faculty frequently take on summer teaching because their salaries are so criminally low to begin with that they need Keywords=&radialtown=&LocationId=&RadialLoc
the income (one of many unfortunate institutional mechanisms that can trap faculty in the adjunct ranks, virtually assuring site&utm_content=sidebar-
link&utm_campaign=jobs)
that even adjuncts with terminal degrees will not be able to publish their way into a tenure-track position).
Arts & Humanities
(https://careers.insidehighered.com/jobs/arts-
and-humanities/?
5) Grants — many grants allow faculty to pay themselves a summer salary while they are actively pursuing research in the
utm_source=ihe&utm_medium=editorial-
summer months, essentially Blling out the remaining 3 months of their salary that is not contracted through their site&utm_content=sidebar-
employing institution with grant funds. The corporation, government agency, or foundation awarding the grant typically link&utm_campaign=jobs)
Education
regulates the rules and rates for such compensation, in tandem with university rules or state law. (https://careers.insidehighered.com/jobs/educ
utm_source=ihe&utm_medium=editorial-
site&utm_content=sidebar-
6) Competing Offers — many faculty members, especially junior faculty members, will at some point seek out a competing link&utm_campaign=jobs)
job offer, in hopes of either leveraging a raise from their current employer or landing a more lucrative new position. The Engineering & Mathematics
(https://careers.insidehighered.com/jobs/engin
game is simple: having a higher offer from another institution is a way to say to your university, essentially, “The discipline
and-mathematics/?
values me — do you?” In many ways, using a competing offer from another institution to negotiate a higher salary is a utm_source=ihe&utm_medium=editorial-
site&utm_content=sidebar-
game of chicken between you and your dean (or several deans, depending on how many offers you have). The drawback
link&utm_campaign=jobs)
of using a competing offer to try to drag a higher salary out of your current employer is that your university may not be able Health & Medical
(https://careers.insidehighered.com/jobs/healt

https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2012/09/05/essay-what-new-faculty-members-need-know-about-salaries Page 3 of 8
Essay on what new faculty members need to know about salaries 10/23/17, 2)06 PM

or willing to match or outbid the offer. Your choice then is to remain at your current employer as a bit of a lame duck, or and-medical/?
utm_source=ihe&utm_medium=editorial-
take the other job. So, you have to be willing on some level to take the other job in order to play this game. site&utm_content=sidebar-
link&utm_campaign=jobs)
Professional Fields
Unlike the private sector, good or even excellent job performance will not by itself raise your salary in the academic world,
(https://careers.insidehighered.com/jobs/profe
except perhaps under the rarest of circumstances. You will never be able to go into your department chair or dean’s oece belds/?
utm_source=ihe&utm_medium=editorial-
and ask for a raise without some sort of leverage. But trying to use the leverage you have to pry more money out of your
site&utm_content=sidebar-
university, no matter how much you may deserve the increase, always entails a certain degree of risk. And it isn’t the sort link&utm_campaign=jobs)
of thing you’ll be able to do very often. Because there are so few opportunities, typically, to increase one’s salary, your initial Science & Technology
(https://careers.insidehighered.com/jobs/scien
salary will be one of the most important of your career. The higher your initial salary, the higher your lifetime earnings, and and-technology/?
the stronger your position will be in later career negotiations, which is why it is important to be as informed as possible utm_source=ihe&utm_medium=editorial-
site&utm_content=sidebar-
about salaries when you Brst enter the job market. link&utm_campaign=jobs)
Social Sciences
(https://careers.insidehighered.com/jobs/socia
And while the subject probably merits its own column, I’ll just say that when you’re offered a job, always negotiate. Always.
sciences/?
Always. Always. They’ve made an offer. They want you. You won’t sour the deal by asking for more, so long as what you utm_source=ihe&utm_medium=editorial-
site&utm_content=sidebar-
ask for is within reason. The worst that can happen is that you get nothing additional, but you still have the original job
link&utm_campaign=jobs)
offer. Technical & Vocational Fields
(https://careers.insidehighered.com/jobs/techn
and-vocational-belds/?
Salary is not the whole story when it comes to your compensation package. What, for example, is the university going to utm_source=ihe&utm_medium=editorial-
pay into your retirement account? How long does it take to become vested in the university’s or state’s retirement system? site&utm_content=sidebar-
link&utm_campaign=jobs)
Is the retirement account portable if you take another job down the road? And then there’s insurance. How high are
Administrative Jobs
premiums? How much will it cost you to buy coverage for any dependents? What about ancillary fees or expenses, like (https://careers.insidehighered.com/searchjobs
transportation and parking costs? How much will state and local taxes cut into your take-home pay? Finally, if you have Keywords=&radialtown=&LocationId=&RadialLoc
site&utm_content=sidebar-
children, or plan to have children, you might be interested to know whether or not your future employer offers tuition
link&utm_campaign=jobs)
discounts for the children of faculty. Some institutions offer extremely generous tuition breaks, up to 50 percent, while
Executive Administration Jobs
other institutions offer no discounts at all. When comparing compensation packages, don’t just look at the numbers in the (https://careers.insidehighered.com/searchjobs
Keywords=&radialtown=&LocationId=&RadialLoc
salary, but try to gauge the big-picture of total compensation.
site&utm_content=sidebar-
link&utm_campaign=jobs)
In my experience, Bnalists who are invited to campus for the Bnal round of interviews for an academic position will receive Jobs Outside Higher Education
information about beneBts and compensation. Usually, salary numbers are not speciBed unless or until a formal offer of (https://careers.insidehighered.com/searchjobs
Keywords=&radialtown=&LocationId=&RadialLoc
employment is made. But at some point during the campus visit a Bnalist for a job is likely to have a glossy folder of site&utm_content=sidebar-
beneBts information thrust into their hand by an all-too-cheery and fast-talking human resources oecer. While you are on link&utm_campaign=jobs)

your campus visit this information will likely seem overwhelming. And it is, because you have even bigger things to worry
about during a campus visit -- like getting a job offer. So, the nitty-gritty beneBts information is not for you to digest
immediately, but when you return home, while you wait anxiously for a job offer or contemplate the offer that has already
been made to you.

Often those job candidates who are fortunate enough to have multiple job offers will receive offers from institutions in
different states. Regardless of whether the institutions are public or private, one difference in the take-home of the salaries
will be state taxes. Some states, like Texas and Florida, have no state income taxes (but, in compensation, relatively higher
property taxes, which makes owning a home potentially more diecult than in other states). A simple tax calculator can
give you a back-of-the-envelope estimate of state income taxes and help you to compare offers across state lines. Cost-of-
living differences should be considered as well — the same salary that can buy you a house in the Midwest may only afford
you an eeciency apartment in some cities. Similarly, it is diecult to compare offers from different types of institutions. A
regional-comprehensive university, where teaching loads are higher and research expectations are lower, will generally not
be able to match the numbers offered by a state Yagship. But the jobs, and the lifestyles associated with each, are quite
different.

When it comes to non-tenure-track jobs, there is even less negotiating leverage available to job candidates than there is for
tenure-tracks candidates. Adjunct and other Bxed-term teaching positions typically are yoked to rigid, essentially non-
negotiable pay rates. They tend to be take-it-or-leave it sorts of gigs. However, the beneBts packages for non-tenure track
positions tend to vary dramatically between institutions, and so, again, money may not tell the whole compensation story.
People accepting term positions should look very closely at indirect compensation beneBts like health insurance and

https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2012/09/05/essay-what-new-faculty-members-need-know-about-salaries Page 4 of 8
Essay on what new faculty members need to know about salaries 10/23/17, 2)06 PM

retirement beneBts when deciding whether or not to accept a position.

It would be a grave mistake to only consider the salaries when deciding between multiple job offers. However, well before
even applying for jobs, graduate students need to understand the realities of earnings in their own discipline. Once a
candidate is in the happy position of weighing job offers, information becomes power.

Read more by Nate Kreuter

(/print/advice/2012/09/05/essay-
what-new-faculty-members-need-
know-about-salaries?
width=775&height=500&iframe=true)

Be the ?rst to know. (https://www.insidehighered.com/content/sign-inside-


higher-eds-newsletters)
Get our free daily newsletter.
(https://www.insidehighered.com/content/sign-inside-higher-eds-
newsletters)

Work/School Email Yes, please!

- Hide comments
WHAT OTHERS ARE READING

University of Wisconsin ‘Considering


Future’ of M.B.A. Program
(https://www.insidehighered.com/news/201
wisconsin-%E2%80%98considering-
future%E2%80%99-mba-program)

Emory revamps chemistry curriculum


(https://www.insidehighered.com/news/201
revamps-chemistry-curriculum)
Nursing textbook pulled over
stereotypes
(https://www.insidehighered.com/news/201
textbook-pulled-over-stereotypes)

Nine lessons learned after Richard


Spencer's talk at University of Florida
(https://www.insidehighered.com/news/201
lessons-learned-after-richard-spencers-
talk-university-morida)

Rand Paul's New Target: Peer Review


(https://www.insidehighered.com/quicktake
pauls-new-target-peer-review)

Whistle-Blowers Charge That TIAA


Misleads Clients
(https://www.insidehighered.com/quicktake
blowers-charge-tiaa-misleads-clients)

Admissions oocials consider impact


of erosion of SAT subject tests
(https://www.insidehighered.com/admission

https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2012/09/05/essay-what-new-faculty-members-need-know-about-salaries Page 5 of 8
Essay on what new faculty members need to know about salaries 10/23/17, 2)06 PM

oocials-consider-impact-erosion-sat-
subject-tests)

Donor Revokes $6 Million Pledge to


Louisville
(https://www.insidehighered.com/quicktake
revokes-6-million-pledge-louisville)

https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2012/09/05/essay-what-new-faculty-members-need-know-about-salaries Page 6 of 8
Essay on what new faculty members need to know about salaries 10/23/17, 2)06 PM

You may also be interested in...


Tips for new faculty members on negotiating terms of their positions (/advice/2013/11/25/tips-new-faculty-
members-negotiating-terms-their-positions)

A university tries to deal with salary compression among faculty members (/news/2013/02/11/university-tries-
deal-salary-compression-among-faculty-members)

New CUPA-HR study looks at faculty hiring, pay for chairs and adjuncts, and more (/news/2017/04/06/new-
cupa-hr-study-looks-faculty-hiring-pay-chairs-and-adjuncts-and-more)

Opinions on Inside Higher Ed

(/views/2017/10/23/claiming- (/views/2017/10/20/our- (/views/2017/10/19/importance-


academics-arent-engaging- university-should-drop-football- institutional-support-animal-
public-wrongheaded-essay) protect-our-students-brain-injury- research-essay)
Public Engagement Is a Two-Way essay) More Institutional Support for
Street Why We Should Drop Football Animal Research Is Needed
(/views/2017/10/23/claiming- (/views/2017/10/20/our- (/views/2017/10/19/importance-
academics-arent-engaging- university-should-drop-football- institutional-support-animal-
public-wrongheaded-essay) protect-our-students-brain-injury- research-essay)
essay)

Inside Higher Ed’s Blog U


Confessions of a Community College Dean (/blogs/confessions-community-college-dean)
Student-Centered Transfer (/blogs/confessions-community-college-dean/student-centered-transfer)

Technology and Learning (/blogs/technology-and-learning)


Zoom Is Hot in Higher Ed (/blogs/technology-and-learning/zoom-hot-higher-ed)

GradHacker (/blogs/gradhacker)
Disabled in Grad School: Augmentative and Alternative Communication Awareness Month
(/blogs/gradhacker/disabled-grad-school-augmentative-and-alternative-communication-awareness-month)

The World View (/blogs/world-view)


The Shifting Sands of University Management in Ethiopia (/blogs/world-view/shifting-sands-university-
management-ethiopia)

https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2012/09/05/essay-what-new-faculty-members-need-know-about-salaries Page 7 of 8
Essay on what new faculty members need to know about salaries 10/23/17, 2)06 PM

Confessions of a Community College Dean (/blogs/confessions-community-college-dean)


BOGO (/blogs/confessions-community-college-dean/bogo)

GradHacker (/blogs/gradhacker)
Getting Rid of “Monkey Mind”: Focusing and Getting Work Done in Graduate School (/blogs/gradhacker/getting-
rid-%E2%80%9Cmonkey-mind%E2%80%9D-focusing-and-getting-work-done-graduate-school)

Back to Top

https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2012/09/05/essay-what-new-faculty-members-need-know-about-salaries Page 8 of 8

Vous aimerez peut-être aussi