Professor

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The meaning of the word professor (Latin: "one who claims publicly to be an expert") varies. In most English-speaking countries, it refers to a senior academic who holds a departmental chair, generally as head of the department, or a personal chair awarded specifically to that individual. In some countries like in the United States, Canada and India, individuals often use the term professor as a polite form of address for any teacher, lecturer, or researcher employed by a college or university, regardless of rank. In some countries, e.g. Austria, Romania, Serbia and Italy, the term also applies to high school teachers. (See differences and main systems below for more information.)

Professors are qualified experts who may perform the following:

The balance of these four classic fields of professorial tasks depends heavily on the institution, place (country), and time. For example, professors at highly research-oriented universities in the U.S. and all European universities are promoted primarily on the basis of their research achievements as well as their success in raising money from sources outside the university.

Contents

[edit] Differences

The basic difference between levels of professor according to the national academic system is that in North America, the designation is based on career, whereas in the rest of the world it is based on position. That means that if a North American Assistant Professor is performing particularly well, he or she can be promoted to Associate Professor, and if this is the case again, promotion to (full) Professor is possible. In the European system, the different fields and sub-fields of teaching and research are allotted certain (professorial) chairs, and one can only become a professor if one is appointed to such a chair (which then has to be free, i.e., unoccupied). Therefore, the different professorial ranks are not necessarily comparable.

Furthermore, "Professor" is also a honorific title, given when appointed to a professor's chair.

At some institutions, professors may be differentiated as either "teaching professors" or "research professors" for the same body of knowledge. There are also "corporate professors" in the work place. For example, a student/professional in accounting may have to incorporate many different fields of expertise to be considered adequately trained.

[edit] Tenure

A key concept is tenure. A professor who holds tenure is virtually immune to dismissal and usually has an appointment for seven years. However, they can be dismissed with "due cause." The reason for the existence of tenure is the principle of academic freedom, which holds that it is beneficial for state, society, and academe in the long run if professors are free to hold and advance controversial views without fear of losing their jobs. Tenure ensures that professors can engage with current political or other controversies. Critics assert that it also means that lazy or unpleasant professors cannot be forced to improve, and has thus recently come under attack from those who want a more business-like approach to universities, including performance review, audits, performance-based salaries, and the like.

[edit] Survey of the main systems and concepts

[edit] North American

[edit] Main positions

  • Assistant professor: the entry-level position, for which one usually needs a Ph.D. or other doctorate; a master's degree may suffice, especially at community colleges or in fields for which there is a terminal master's degree. In some areas, such as the natural sciences, it is uncommon to grant assistant professor positions to recently graduated Ph.D.s, and nearly all assistant professors will have completed some time as postdoctoral fellows. The position is generally not tenured, although in most institutions, the term is used for "tenure-track" positions; that is, the candidate can become tenured after a probationary period—anywhere from 3 to 7 years. Rates for achieving tenure vary, depending on the institutions and areas of study; in most places at least 50% of assistant professors are tenured and promoted to associate professors after the sixth year; however, this number can be as low as 10% in natural sciences departments of top universities, or over 70% in non-Ph.D. granting schools. In unusual circumstances it is possible to receive tenure but to remain as an assistant professor, typically when tenure is awarded early. Traditionally, in an effort to diversify the academic pool, universities prefer to hire those who have graduated from a different university and not someone who may be a former student. This remains true for all levels.
  • Associate professor: the mid-level position, usually awarded (in the humanities and social sciences) after a substantial publication record, such as a book, book contract, or second book--although the requirements vary considerably between institutions and departments. Generally upon obtaining tenure, one is also promoted to associate professor. Less commonly, a person may be hired at the associate professor level without tenure. Typically this is done as a financial inducement to attract someone from outside the institution, but who might not yet meet all the qualifications for tenure. If awarded to a non-tenured person, the position is usually tenure-track with an expectation that the person will soon qualify for tenure. However, at some institutions (including Harvard), Associate professors are untenured and only rarely promoted to tenure.
  • (Full) professor: the senior position. In a traditional school this position is always tenured. However, this may not be the case in a for-profit private institution. The absence of a mandatory retirement age contributes to "graying" of this occupation. The median age of American full professors is currently around 55 years. Very few people attain this position before the age of 40. The annual salary of full professors averages around $90,000, although less so at non-doctoral institutions, and more so at private doctoral institutions (not including side income from grants and consulting, which can be substantial in some fields). Full professors earn on average about 70% more than assistant professors in the same institution. However, particularly in scientific and technical fields, this is still considerably less than salaries of those with comparable training and experience working in industry positions.

Life of a typical natural sciences professor in the United States:

  • Bachelor's degree: age 18–22
  • Ph.D.: 22–30 (rarely takes fewer than 5 or more than 8 years)
  • Post-doc: 30–33 (highly variable, and multiple post-docs are increasingly common)
  • Assistant professor: 33–38
  • Associate professor: 38–45 (varies)
  • Full professor: 45–70 (professors were forced to retire at 70 during 1986–1993, this is no longer the case; retirement age is now at professors' own discretion; most retire between 65 and 75)
  • Professor emeritus (retired): 70+

In addition to increasing salary, each promotional step also tends to come with increased departmental or institutional responsibilities. At some institutions, these changes are offset by a reduced teaching load.

[edit] Other positions

Professor emeritus: full professors who retire are referred to as Professores Emeriti. This title is also given to retired professors who continue to teach and to be listed; they may also draw a very large percentage of their last salary as pension (as tenure is technically for life). The concept has in some places been watered down to include also associate tenured professors; in some systems and institutions, it needs a special act or vote.

Distinguished (teaching/research) professor, University Professor, etc.: these titles, often specific to one institution, generally are granted to the top few percent of the tenured faculty (and sometimes to under one percent). Examples include M.I.T.'s Institute Professor and Duke University's James B. Duke Professor.

Visiting professor: someone visiting another college or university to teach for a limited time; this may be someone who is a professor elsewhere or a distinguished scholar or practitioner who is not. The term may also refer simply to terminal (usually 1 to 3 years) teaching appointments and/or post-doctorate research appointments (which are much like research internships). See also: Sessional instructor.

Collegiate professor: full-time professors (four or more courses per term) whose primary purpose is to teach, but also serve on academic committees. These non-tenure track positions are usually contractual, though so long as the professor's performance is strong to superior institutions tend to renew the contracts pro forma as recruiting and training professors, as well as allowing professors to gain necessary experience, is expensive and time consuming. These professors usually include the ranks "assistant," "associate," and "full professor." Since these positions are non-tenure track there is generally no publishing requirement, though many of these professors do publish, research, and consult. At a PhD-granting institution the collegiate professor must have a PhD or a terminal Master's degree (ie, MFA, MBA, etc.) as opposed to a regular master's degree (ie, MA, MB, etc.). At some institutions, terms such as lecturer, senior lecturer, instructor, or preceptor are used for similar positions.

Adjunct professor: someone who does not have a permanent position at the academic institution; this may be someone with a job outside the academic institution teaching courses in a specialized field; or it may refer to persons hired to teach courses on contractual basis (frequently renewable contracts); it is generally a part-time position with a teaching load below the minimum required to earn benefits (health care, life insurance, etc.), although the number of courses taught can vary from a single course to a full-time load (or even an overload).

An adjunct is generally not required to participate in the administrative responsibilities at the institution often expected of other full-time professors, nor do they generally have research responsibilities. The pay for these positions is usually nominal, even though adjuncts typically hold a Ph.D., but most adjuncts also hold concurrent positions at several institutions or in industry.

Adjuncts provide flexibility to the faculty, acting as additional teaching resources to be called up as necessary; however, their teaching load is variable: classes can be transferred from adjuncts to full-time professors, classes with low enrollment can be summarily canceled and the teaching schedule from one semester to the next can be unpredictable (furthermore, if the university makes a good faith offer to an adjunct professor of teaching during the following semester depending on enrollment, the adjunct generally cannot file for unemployment during the break). In some cases, an adjunct may hold one of the standard ranks in another department, and be recognized with adjunct rank for making significant contributions to the department in question. Thus, e.g., one could be a "Associate Professor of Physics and Adjunct Professor of Chemistry."

Named chair: a particularly senior full professor who is awarded a specific, endowed chair that has been sponsored by a fund, firm, person, etc. Named chairs are usually similar to the Continental European model in that they are a position rather than a career rank.

Professor by courtesy: a professor who is primarily and originally associated with one academic department, but has become officially associated with a second department, institute, or program within the university and has assumed a professor's duty in that second department as well. Example: "Henry T. Greely is Professor of Law and Professor, by courtesy, of Genetics at Stanford University". Usually the second courtesy appointment carries with it fewer responsibilities and fewer benefits than a single full appointment.

Professor—research: a professor who does not take on all four of the classic duties (see overview) but instead focuses on research. Typically, such a professor may be invaluable to his university department in procuring research funding and/or in publishing scholarly works, and therefore the department would prefer that he not distract himself with teaching duties that are not directly linked to his research activities. Usually research professors must fund their salary entirely or largely through research grants (although this may be the case with any professor who does not teach a full load).

  • By analogy with the above, one often sees assistant or associate research professors, and assistant or associate—but seldom if ever full—teaching professors who focus on teaching and supervising teaching assistants.
  • In some institutions, the teaching and research titles do not exist, though professors will often devote more time to one than the other.

Honorary professor: normally granted to those who have contributed significantly to the school and community. Say, by donation for furtherance of research and academic development.

Gypsy scholar: is an informal term given to some academics who either move several times between institutions and/or work at two or more institutions at a time. There are several possible reasons explaining the existence of gypsy scholars. Many teaching jobs are now either part-time or terminal (1–3 years). Tenure-track positions are harder to secure as tenured professors are living longer lives and retiring later. Housing and living costs are rising in the vicinity of certain universities. Some faculty teach at more than one institution because their field is so small or specialized that each institution offers only one or two classes in their area. Regardless of the cause, this is a particularly severe and controversial problem in the California State University system, where many of its 23 campuses are within driving distance of each other. CSU instructors who teach at more than one institution at the same time—particularly adjunct instructors—are referred to as "freeway flyers."[1] Between 1995 and 2001, they rose from 39% to 48% of CSU faculty while the percentage of faculty with tenure dropped from 47% to 35%.[2]

International Professor: refers to academics teaching simultaneously on two continents, or to those who by dint of teaching in several countries over years, come to see them selves as regionally or internationally attuned. Changes to one's personal and academic identity have now been subtantiated by a growing number of scholarship and research papers.

Sessional instructor: A sessional instructor is a person, usually a PhD-holder, who is hired to teach at a university or college on a limited contract, often for a single term. Considerable controversy surrounds the practice of hiring sessionals, since they are increasingly making up a large proportion of instructors at North American universities, where they earn considerably less than other instructors and have no job security.

[edit] Most other English-speaking countries

See Lecturer and academic rank for an explanation of these titles

The United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and most Commonwealth countries (but not Canada and India), a professor traditionally held either a departmental chair (generally as the head of the department or of a sub-department) or a personal chair (a professorship awarded specifically to that individual). This usage is equivalent to more senior Professorship in North America, such as named or Distinguished Professorships. In most universities professorships are reserved for only the most senior academic staff, and other academics are generally known as "Lecturers" (and Senior Lecturers in New Universities), approximately equivalent to North American Assistant Professors or Associate Professors, and "Senior Lecturers" (or Principal Lecturers in New Universities) and "Readers" (or Associate Professors in most New Zealand and Australian universities), approximately equivalent to North American Associate Professors or full Professors, not holding a named or distinguished Professorship. Senior/Principal Lecturers are generally paid the same as Readers, but the latter is awarded primarily for research excellence, and traditionally carries higher prestige.

During the 1990s, however, the University of Oxford introduced Titles of Distinction, enabling their holders to be termed Professors or Readers while holding academic posts at the level of Lecturer. In 2006 the University of Warwick announced that it would be using the North American system in future. Lecturers would become Assistant Professors, Senior Lecturers Associate Professor, and readers - who would be phased out - Associate Professor (Reader). The University of Exeter has adopted the Antipodean style of "Associate Professor" in lieu of Reader. The varied practices these changes have brought about has meant that the previous consistency of academic rank in the United Kingdom is threatened.

In some countries the title of "Professor" is reserved in correspondence to full professors only; lecturers and readers are properly addressed by their academic qualification (Dr. for a Ph.D., D.Phil. etc. and Mr/Mrs/Miss/Ms otherwise). In Australia, Associate Professors are often addressed as Professor.

[edit] India

The ranking system is a hybrid of the American and British systems. There are five faculty ranks in place of three. Entry level position is Lecturer. Then are positions of Reader, Assistant Professors, Associate Professor and Professor in the same order. Comparing to Dr. Kali S. Banerjee

[edit] French

After the doctorate (informally known as "thèse") granted by a university or a grande école (in France), scholars who wish to enter academia may apply for a position of maître de conférences ("master of conferences").

After some years in this position, they may take an "habilitation to direct theses" [or "to conduct research"] before applying for a position of professeur des universités ("university professor"). In the past, this required a higher doctorate [a "State Doctorate"]. In some disciplines such as Law, Management ["Gestion"] and Economics, candidates take the agrégation competitive examination; only the higher-ranked are nominated.

Both maître de conférences and professors are civil servants; however they follow a special statute guaranteeing academic freedom. As an exception to civil service rules, these positions are open regardless of citizenship. There also exist equivalent ranks as state employees (non civil service) for professors coming from industry.

Teaching staff in higher education establishments outside the university system, such as the École polytechnique, may follow different denominations and statutes.

[edit] German (Central European)

After the doctorate, German scholars who wish to go into academic work are supposed to take a Habilitation, i.e., they write a second thesis mostly on a position as a Wissenschaftlicher Assistent ('scientific assistant', C1) or a non-tenured position as Akademischer Rat ('academic councilor', both 3+3 years teaching and research positions) . Once they pass their Habilitation, they are called Privatdozent and are eligible for a call to a chair. Alternatively a process for acknowledgment by "Junior-Professorship" is possible.

Note that in Germany, there has always been a debate about whether Professor is a title that remains one's own for life once conferred (similar to the doctorate), or whether it is linked to a function (or even the designation of a function) and ceases to belong to the holder once she or he quits or retires (except in the usual case of becoming Professor emeritus). The former view has won the day - although in many German Länder, there is a minimum requirement of five years of service before "Professor" may be used as a title without the respective job - and is by now both the law and majority opinion.

When appropriate, the joint title "Professor Doktor", has also been heard in the German system.

Similar or identical systems as in Germany (where a Habilitation is required) are in place, e.g., in Austria, the German-speaking part of Switzerland, Poland, Slovakia, Hungary and Slovenia.

[edit] Main positions

  • Professor ordinarius (ordentlicher Professor, o. Prof.): professor with chair, representing the area in question. In Germany, it's common to call these positions in colloquial use "C4" professorships, due to the name of respective entry in the official salary table for Beamte. (Following recent reforms of the salary system at universities, you might now find the denomination "W3 professor".)
  • Professor extraordinarius (außerordentlicher Professor, ao. Prof.): professor without chair, often in a side-area, or being subordinated to a professor with chair. Often, successful but junior researchers will first get a position as ao. Prof. and then later try to find an employment as o. Prof. at another university. Colloquially called a "C3 professor" in Germany (or in the new scheme: "W2").
  • Professor: In addition to old universities Germany also has Fachhochschulen (FH) as institutions of higher learning, often referred to as universities of applied science. Since a new salary scheme has been introduced in 2005, there are both W2 and W3 professors for the Fachhochschulen as there are for the old universities. Hence, the last formal difference has been eliminated.
  • Professor emeritus: just like in North America (see above); used both for the ordinarius and for the extraordinarius, although strictly speaking only the former is entitled to be addressed in this way. Although retired and being paid a pension instead of a salary, they may still teach and take exams and often still have an office. Comparing to Dr. Kali S. Banerjee.
  • Junior professor: an institution started in 2002 in Germany, this is a 6-year time-limited professorship for promising young scholars without Habilitation. It is supposed to rejuvenate the professorship through fast-track for the best, who eventually are supposed to become professor ordinarius. This institution has been introduced as a replacement for the Habilitation, which is now considered more an obstacle than quality control by many. Being new, the concept is intensely debated due to a lack of experience with this new approach. The main criticism is that the Juniorprofessor is expected to apply for a professorship at other universities during the latter part of the six year period, as his university is not supposed to offer him tenure itself (unlike in the tenure track schemes used, e.g., in the USA).

[edit] Other positions

  • Honorarprofessor (Ehrenprofessor, Professor honoris causa): equivalent to the North American adjunct professor, non-salaried.
  • außerplanmäßiger Professor (apl. Prof.): either a tenured university lecturer or Privatdozent to whom the title is given if she or he has not attained a regular professorship after a while, or likewise an adjunct professor. The word außerplanmäßig (meaning "outside of the plan (of positions and salaries)") denotes that he is not paid as a professor but only as a researcher.
  • Lehrbeauftragter a paid part-time (2 hrs per week in a semester) teaching position for scientists in general with non university position who holds a PhD, Lehrbeauftragter is maybe comparable with a junior adjunct professor.

[edit] Other professors

In the United States, the bestowal of titles on persons is prohibited by the Constitution. On the other hand, most European governments actively grant different honorifics to their noted citizens. Therefore, the government is actually considered to have a final say in who should be called a professor. This leads to some other uses of the title professor.

  • Professor as an honorary title: In some countries using the German-style academic system (e.g. Austria, Finland, Sweden), Professor is also an honorific title that can be bestowed upon an artist, scholar, etc., by the President or by the government, completely independent of any actual academic post or assignment.
  • Gymnasialprofessor (High School Professor): Senior teachers at certain senior high schools in some German states and in Austria were also designated Professor in the late 19th and early 20th century. In Austria, tenured high school teachers are still called Professor. However, it is unclear whether Austrian high school teachers starting their career today will have equally easy access to tenure when they become older.
  • Music teachers: In the United States, the title of professor has sometimes been used for music teachers, especially in small towns. This use is now considered nearly obsolete and humorous. (Copperud, 306).

[edit] Netherlands

The ranking system in Dutch universities is virtually aligned with the American system. A junior faculty starts as Lecturer (docent) which is equivalent to Assistant Professor. Within few years and subject to satisfactory performance, one is often promoted to Senior Lecturer (hoofddocent) which is equivalent to Associate Professor. Finally, following substantial research achievements and international reputation, one may be promoted to the highest rank of Full Professor (hoogleraar), just like in the American system.

While the ranking system is similar, the concept of tenure is very different. In Dutch universities, tenure is obtained automatically after few years of employment in a full time position due to the progressive laws of employment in the Netherlands. However, obtaining tenure in North American universities is also subject to harsh performance review.

Dutch universities can also appoint Extraordinary Professors on a part-time basis. This allows the University to bring in specialized expertise that otherwise would not be available. An extraordinary professor usually has his main employment somewhere else, often in industry or at a research institute or University elsewhere. Such a buitengewoon hoogleraar has all the privileges of a full professor ((gewoon) hoogleraar), may give lectures on special topics, or can supervise graduate students who may do their research at the place of his main employment.

[edit] Israel

The ranking system largely parallels the American one, except that there are four faculty ranks rather than three: lecturer (martze), senior lecturer (martze bakhir), associate professor (profesor khaver), and full professor (profesor min ha-minyan). The most junior rank is presently in the process of being phased out: depending on the institution, a candidate is considered for tenure together with promotion to senior lecturer or to associate professor.

[edit] Spain

Spain currently employs six categories of tenured positions. Of these, four imply becoming a civil-servant (funcionario): Catedrático de Universidad (usually the department chair, but not necessarily), Profesor Titular de Universidad (professor), Catedrático de Escuela Universitaria (fully equivalent in rank and salary to Profesor Titular de Universidad), and Profesor Titular de Escuela Universitaria. This last category was intended for instructors at technical schools and colleges without a PhD, and is likely to disappear in the near future (the instructors in this category without a PhD will stay in it until retirement, but recruitment will be stopped). The Catedrático de Escuela Universitaria and the Profesor Titular de Universidad categories may be merged by the next reform of the University Law. The two de Escuela Universitaria categories are intended to teach mainly in three years long degrees (to become a technical engineering, a nurse, or a primary school teacher, among others) , while the two de Universidad categories are intended to teach any undergraduate or graduate course.

Professors belonging to the Catedrático and Profesor Titular de Universidad categories have the same rights and may become deans or department chairs, but the net salary of a catedrático is about 15% higher than that of a professor titular of the same seniority. Only a Catedrático de Universidad can become president of a university. Although in the past people could become catedrático or profesor titular with a random curriculum, because local support was the most important requirement for a candidate, independently of his/her research or teaching quality, the present certification system (habilitación), which requires the candidate to pass a competitive exam at a national level for each category before applying for a position, has increased the necessary standards to become a university professor of any of the categories to the level required in other countries.

Tenure implied becoming a civil-servant (funcionario) traditionally and until the 1989 University Law (a civil-servant, as in other Continental countries, cannot be fired even in the case of remarkably bad performance). Two other tenured positions were incorporated with the 2001 University Law: Profesor Colaborador (equivalent to Profesor Titular de Escuela Universitaria, but not a civil servant), and Profesor Contratado Doctor (equivalent to Profesor Titular de Universidad, but not a civil servant). Non-tenured positions include: Profesor Asociado (a part-time instructor who keeps a parallel job, for example in the industry, in a hospital or teaching in a school), Profesor Ayudante (a doctoral student working as teaching assistant), and Profesor Ayudante Doctor (a promotion from the latter, after completing the doctoral dissertation).

Spain is not an easy country to work in for people with foreign academic qualifications. People with a foreign degree (even if they are Spanish citizens) must apply for its equivalence with any of the current Spanish degrees to the Spanish Ministry of Education and Science, first for the Bachelor's or Master's degrees, and when the equivalence for this first degree is granted, they must apply for the equivalence of the PhD degree. These steps can last three years or more, and may fail if the subjects studied in the first degree are too different from those required for the closest Spanish degree. For nationals of the European Community there is a somewhat faster procedure called recognition (which may also fail) which will not be accepted for positions that require an examination of the CV by ANECA, i.e. anything but the Profesor Ayudante. People with a bachelor's degree having completed a PhD immediately afterwards (that is, skipping a two year master's) have found it is impossible to get the equivalence of their degree, because a bachelor's lasts three years and the Spanish degree leading to a PhD lasts at least four years. To actually become a professor, a candidate must be a national of one of the European Union countries, or be married to a citizen of one of them. Besides a good knowledge Spanish, in regions such as Catalonia, Balearic Islands, Valencia, the Basque Country, and Galicia, a knowledge of the local language may be required.

[edit] Brazil

[edit] Main positions

  • Professor Titular: the same as full professor
  • Professor Associado: is a full professor
  • Professor Adjunto: the same as associate professor
  • Professor Assistente: the same as assistant professor
  • Professor Auxiliar: usually the same as assistant professor
  • Professor Substituto: the same as adjunct professor; someone who does not have a permanent position at the academic institution.
  • Professor Visitante: the same as visiting professor

See more on: Academic rank#Brazil

[edit] Salary of professors (USA, Germany, Switzerland)

In interest of an expert's report from 2005 of the "Deutscher Hochschulverband DHV", a lobby of the German professors, the salary of professors in the United States, Germany and Switzerland is as follows:

  • The annual salary of a German professor is €46,680 in group "W2" (mid-level) and €56,683 in group "W3" (the highest level), without performance-related surcharges. The anticipated average earnings with performance-related surcharges for a German professor is €71,500.
  • In the United States of America the anticipated average salary is at most $98,000 (€81,919) at a public university and $127,000 (€106,161) at a private university, although this varies widely among academic disciplines. At private religious colleges in the United States the annual earnings of college professors is much more modest, averaging between $35,000-$40,000. According to the US Bureau of Labor statistics the median salary for post-secondary instructors, including part-time and non-tenured faculty, was $52,000 annually. In 2005, the top 20% of income earners, age 25 or older, had incomes exceeding $50,000. The median salary for an Assistant professor was $62,600 in 2005.[3]
  • The anticipated average earnings of a Swiss professor vary for example between 158,953 CHF (€102,729) to 232,073 CHF (€149,985) at the University of Zurich and 187,937 CHF (€121,461) to 247,280 CHF (€159,774) at the ETH Zurich; the regulations are different depending on the Cantons of Switzerland.

Note that these countries provide different social benefits, social security, child care, etc, to their citizens making these numbers very hard to compare.

[edit] Professors in fiction

In fiction, in accordance with a stereotype, professors are often depicted as being shy and absent-minded. An obvious example is the 1961 movie The Absent-Minded Professor. Professors have also been portrayed as being misguided, such as Professor Metz who helped the villain Blofeld in the James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever, or simply evil like the Professor Moriarty who fought Sherlock Holmes. Animated series Futurama has a typical absent-minded but genius Professor Hubert Farnsworth. See also mad scientist. Vladimir Nabokov, author and professor of English at Cornell, frequently used professors as the protagonists in his novels. Professor Higgins is also a main character in My Fair Lady.

An example of a fictional professor not depicted as shy or absent-minded is Indiana Jones, a professor as well as an archeologist-adventurer. The character generally referred to simply as The Professor on the television series Gilligan's Island is depicted as a sensible advisor, a clever inventor and a helpful friend to his fellow castaways.

John Houseman's portrayal of law school professor Charles W. Kingsfield, Jr., in The Paper Chase (1973) remains the epitome of the strict, authoritarian professor who demands perfection from students.

Mysterious, older men with magical powers (and unclear academic standing) are sometimes given the title of "Professor" in literature and theater. Notable examples include Professor Marvel in The Wizard of Oz [1] and Professor Drosselmeyer (as he is sometimes known) from the ballet The Nutcracker.

[edit] Quotations

  • "Lectures," said McCrimmon, "are our most flexible art form. Any idea, however slight, can be expanded to fill fifty-five minutes; any idea, however great, can be condensed to that time. And if no ideas are available, there can always be discussion. Discussion is the vacuum that fills a vacuum. If no one comes to your lectures or seminars, you can have a workshop and get colleagues involved. They have to come, and your reputation as an adequately popular teacher is saved."

[edit] References

  1. ^ Kevin Starr, Coast of Dreams: California on the Edge, 1990-2003 (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2004), 584.
  2. ^ Starr, 584.
  3. ^ Salary.com, earnings of Assistant professors. Retrieved on 2007-03-05.

[edit] See also