Dear all, Please share with colleagues and newly minted PhDs, it's a nice opportunity to gain some teaching experience at a growing program in a liberal arts college situated close to New York, Philadelphia, and Washington DC. Lancaster PA is
As mentioned in the ad, we definitely need them to be able to teach intro to environmental studies and US environmental policy - they will also have some freedom to teach elective(s) in their area of specialty. We're starting to review applications on *7 January 2019*. You're welcome to direct them to me with questions ([email protected]). Thank you! Best, Elizabeth --- Elizabeth M. De Santo, Ph.D. Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies Franklin & Marshall College Department of Earth and Environment [email protected] www.emdesanto.com *Visiting Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies * The Franklin & Marshall Department of Earth and Environment invites applications for a visiting faculty position in Environmental Studies, beginning Fall Semester 2019. The rank will be Visiting Assistant Professor or Visiting Instructor depending on qualifications. The position may be renewable for a second year pending administrative approval, the needs of the department, and evidence of good teaching. The successful candidate will join a department comprised of both natural and social scientists in an interdisciplinary teaching and research environment. Teaching responsibilities will include undergraduate courses in the Environmental Studies major: a core introductory course in Environmental Studies (ENE 117), Environmental Policy (ENE 216), and mid- or upper-level courses in the applicant's specialty. The candidate should have an active research program in an area of broad interest in a liberal arts college environment, for example, in land use, energy policy, water resources, air quality, climate policy or agricultural policy, environmental justice, sustainability studies, and environmental health; but the department is seeking the strongest candidate in any environmental studies specialty that supplements departmental strengths. We are particularly interested in applicants from environmentally relevant social science fields, including geography, anthropology, sociology, history, political science, or other closely related disciplines. Teaching load is 3/2. A Ph.D. is required. Teaching experience is required. An ongoing program of scholarly research involving undergraduates, where this is possible and appropriate, is desirable. Candidates must submit the following items through Interfolio, http//apply.interfolio.com/57975 <https://apply.interfolio.com/57975>: a letter of application, curriculum vitae, graduate transcripts, (undergraduate transcript optional), teaching statement, research statement and teaching evaluations. Applicants must arrange for three letters of recommendation to be submitted directly to Interfolio by their recommenders. Pursuant to cultivating an inclusive college community, the search committee will holistically assess the qualifications of each applicant. We will consider an individual's record working with students and colleagues with diverse perspectives, experiences, and backgrounds. We will also consider experience overcoming or helping others overcome barriers to academic success. Direct any questions to Andrew P. de Wet, Chair, Department of Earth and Environment at [email protected]. Review of applications will begin on January 7th, 2019. -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "gep-ed" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
