[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] Three Teaching Assistant Professor position in UNC Chapel Hill's Department of Communication
Fri Sep 15 15:30:53 GMT 2023
The Department of Communication at The University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill invites applications for three Teaching Assistant Professors
(non-tenure track) in *Interpersonal Communication or Organizational
Communication, Performance Studies, and Rhetoric*. These positions are
full-time and eligible for promotion in rank. We are looking to hire for
a January 1, 2024, start date, but will consider applicants who can only
begin July 1, 2024. Details for each position are below,
_*Interpersonal and/or Organizational Communication*_
We are seeking an innovative and dynamic teacher to teach courses that
reflect our program’s investments in interpersonal and organizational
communication as part of everyday life and as critical components of
advocacy and social influence. Candidates will teach a 3/3 load (six
total), five of which must be undergraduate courses that meet the
Communication Beyond Carolina
<https://ideasinaction.unc.edu/reflection-integration/communication-beyond-carolina/>degree
requirement. Such courses must meet a minimum threshold of 2/3 course
content and/or assignments that include the practice of “oral
communication” (broadly defined). The department currently offers
multiple courses with this designation (e.g., Small Group Communication,
Persuasion) and is currently adding the designation to more of our
current Interpersonal Communication and Organizational Communication
course offerings. Candidates will also have the opportunity to develop
new courses based on their own teaching and research expertise.
Faculty in Interpersonal Communication focus on the relational
dimensions of social problems. Faculty in the area use critical and
historical analysis, ethnography, discourse analysis, and conversational
analysis, among others. Major areas of teaching include interpersonal
communication, persuasion, gender communication, family communication,
race and social discourse, and identity and communication.
Faculty in Organizational Communication use a critically informed,
engaged approach to understand everyday organizational life from a
communication perspective. Faculty in the area employ multi-level,
multi-method analyses of organizing across work, community, and social
change contexts, with a sustained focus on communication as constitutive
of organizing. Major areas of teaching include globalization, labor,
work and identity, power and resistance, ethics, leadership, democracy
and citizenship, and gender, race and class to create constructive
organizational change.
Qualifications include the following: Ph.D. (or conferral during the
2023-2024 academic year) in Communication or a related discipline with a
specialization in Interpersonal Communication or Organizational
Communication is required. Candidates should have a record of, or
demonstrated potential for, outstanding teaching at the undergraduate
level, preferably with experience incorporating oral practices into
their teaching/. /
Interest in teaching courses related to small group communication,
persuasion, dialogue and deliberation, democracy and democratic
decision-making, civic participation, multi-stakeholder decision-making,
community collaboration, or public participative processes preferred.
The successful candidate will have the opportunity to be affiliated with
the Program for Public Discourse <https://publicdiscourse.unc.edu/>and
will work with other faculty around campus who are also addressing the
Communication Beyond Carolina needs.
*Review of applications will begin on October 2.*
To apply, please follow this link:
https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/264871
<https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/264871>
Applicants should submit a *cover letter, CV, teaching philosophy, and
the names of three references*. Amongst those materials, applicants
should discuss their experience, investment in and approaches to
teaching courses that focus on oral forms of communication and practice
with an eye toward addressing contentious societal issues (broadly
defined). Other materials may also be included in the application packet
including evidence of teaching effectiveness, published works on
pedagogical practice, and/or public engagement work that highlights the
candidate’s investment in oral practices.
For questions, please email Dr. Steve May at (skmay /at/ unc.edu)
The Department of Communication is one of 44 departments and curricula
in the College of Arts & Sciences. As the largest unit on campus, the
College of Arts & Sciences forms the academic core of the Carolina
experience. Through teaching, research, and service, the Department of
Communication addresses how communication functions to create, sustain,
and transform personal life, social relations, political institutions,
economic organizations, and cultural and aesthetic conventions in
society. Recognized for significant contributions to the profession,
University, state, and nation, the Department houses a PhD program, a
major in Communication, an interdisciplinary major in Cultural Studies,
and a minor in Writing for the Screen and Stage. It serves as the
intellectual home for 28 faculty members, 45 graduate students, and over
700 undergraduates. The Department’s doctoral program offers a
theoretically rich, interdisciplinary, problem-based approach to
education and research that enables graduate students to define their
own research in response to the changing demands of a constantly
evolving communicative and cultural world. The Department’s
undergraduate major features four structured concentrations:
interpersonal and organizational communication; media and technology
studies and production; performance studies; and rhetoric. Each
concentration offers the Department’s majors, as well as the hundreds of
pan-University non-majors who seek out our classes, a set of critical
capacities that contribute to an engaged, creative, and critical 21st
century citizen.
*_Performance Studies_*
*
We are seeking an innovative and dynamic teacher to teach
practice-centered courses that reflect our program’s investments in
embodied scholarship, artistic practice and the diverse field of
performance studies. Candidates will teach a 3/3 load (six total), five
of which must be undergraduate courses that meet the Communication
Beyond Carolina
<https://ideasinaction.unc.edu/reflection-integration/communication-beyond-carolina/>degree
requirement. Such courses must meet a minimum threshold of 2/3 course
content and/or assignments that include the practice of “oral
communication” (broadly defined). The department currently offers
multiple courses with this designation (e.g., Introduction to
Performance Studies, Performance and Social Change) and is currently
adding the designation to more of our current Performance Studies course
offerings. Candidates will also have the opportunity to develop new
courses based on their own teaching and research expertise.
In performance studies, we use performance as a means to critically
engage with identity, technology, social structures, and everyday life.
We teach students how to create original performance works, use
performance as a framework for analysis, and mobilize it in the service
of community engagement and social justice. Performance Studies offers
students a series of interrelated courses in textual study; oral history
and ethnography; and the theory of and practice in writing, designing,
and directing performative events.
Requirements:
-PhD or MFA in Performance Studies, Communication Studies or relevant
field conferred prior to January 2024.
* Demonstrated excellence teaching practice-based classes in
performance at the undergraduate level.
* Expertise in contemporary performance studies scholarship and
performance practices.
Preferred:
Demonstrated excellence in Performance Studies scholarship and/or
artistic practice.
Research, practice and/or in artistic practice-as-research
Experience mentoring students in creating original performance works
The successful candidate will have the opportunity to be affiliated with
the Program for Public Discourse <https://publicdiscourse.unc.edu/>and
will work with other faculty around campus who are also addressing the
Communication Beyond Carolina needs.
*Review of applications will begin on October 2.*
To apply, please follow this link:
https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/264861
<https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/264861>
Applicants should submit a *cover letter, CV, teaching philosophy, and
the names of three references*. Amongst those materials, applicants
should discuss their experience, investment in and approaches to
teaching courses that focus on oral forms of communication and practice
with an eye toward addressing contentious societal issues (broadly
defined). Other materials may also be included in the application packet
including evidence of teaching effectiveness, published works on
pedagogical practice, and/or public engagement work that highlights the
candidate’s investment in oral practices.
For questions, please email Dr. Tony Perucci at (perucci /at/ unc.edu)
The Department of Communication is one of 44 departments and curricula
in the College of Arts & Sciences. As the largest unit on campus, the
College of Arts & Sciences forms the academic core of the Carolina
experience. Through teaching, research, and service, the Department of
Communication addresses how communication functions to create, sustain,
and transform personal life, social relations, political institutions,
economic organizations, and cultural and aesthetic conventions in
society. Recognized for significant contributions to the profession,
University, state, and nation, the Department houses a PhD program, a
major in Communication, an interdisciplinary major in Cultural Studies,
and a minor in Writing for the Screen and Stage. It serves as the
intellectual home for 28 faculty members, 45 graduate students, and over
700 undergraduates. The Department’s doctoral program offers a
theoretically rich, interdisciplinary, problem-based approach to
education and research that enables graduate students to define their
own research in response to the changing demands of a constantly
evolving communicative and cultural world. The Department’s
undergraduate major features four structured concentrations:
interpersonal and organizational communication; media and technology
studies and production; performance studies; and rhetoric. Each
concentration offers the Department’s majors, as well as the hundreds of
pan-University non-majors who seek out our classes, a set of critical
capacities that contribute to an engaged, creative, and critical 21st
century citizen.
_Rhetoric:_
We are seeking an innovative and dynamic teacher to teachin the Rhetoric
unit, which offers courses focusing on the practice, theory, and
criticism of public discourse across different contexts and media. The
faculty member will teach primarily practice-oriented,
oral-communication courses, designated Communication Beyond Carolina
<https://ideasinaction.unc.edu/reflection-integration/communication-beyond-carolina/>,
outlined above. Typical courses might include Public Speaking,
Argumentation and Debate, and Public Policy Argument. The faculty member
will also have the opportunity to design new courses related to their
area of expertise.Candidates will teach a 3/3 load (six total), five of
which must be undergraduate courses that meet the Communication Beyond
Carolina
<https://ideasinaction.unc.edu/reflection-integration/communication-beyond-carolina/>degree
requirement.
Rhetorical Studies, a cornerstone of the liberal arts tradition, aspires
to understand precisely how rhetoric shapes public life, while also
inviting scholars to reimagine the possibilities of both. Students
concentrating in Rhetorical Studies can pursue an array of courses in
rhetorical production, theory, and criticism. Over their course of
study, students learn how to speak and write ethically with rhetorical
dexterity; analyze and evaluate the discursive phenomena circulating
across public culture; and reason through challenging issues with
argumentative rigor. The concentration prepares students for numerous
career paths including law, speechwriting, public advocacy, community
organizing, business leadership, political consulting, marketing, and
advertising. Rhetorical Studies prepares students to thrive
intellectually in whichever situations they might encounter, while also
expanding their capacities to reflect on the human condition and serve
the public good.
Required qualifications
* Ph.D. in communication or related field, focusing on rhetoric,
awarded no later than 2023.
* Strong record of teaching excellence.
Preferred qualifications
* Experience facilitating robust discursive practices in the classroom
and beyond.
* Background in speech and debate.
The successful candidate will have the opportunity to be affiliated with
the Program for Public Discourse <https://publicdiscourse.unc.edu/>and
will work with other faculty around campus who are also addressing the
Communication Beyond Carolina needs.
*Review of applications will begin on October 2.*
To apply, please follow this link:
https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/264860
<https://unc.peopleadmin.com/postings/264860>
Applicants should submit a *cover letter, CV, teaching philosophy, and
the names of three references*. Amongst those materials, applicants
should discuss their experience, investment in and approaches to
teaching courses that focus on oral forms of communication and practice
with an eye toward addressing contentious societal issues (broadly
defined). Other materials may also be included in the application packet
including evidence of teaching effectiveness, published works on
pedagogical practice, and/or public engagement work that highlights the
candidate’s investment in oral practices.
For questions, please email Dr. Kevin Marinelli at (kmarinelli /at/ unc.edu)
The Department of Communication is one of 44 departments and curricula
in the College of Arts & Sciences. As the largest unit on campus, the
College of Arts & Sciences forms the academic core of the Carolina
experience. Through teaching, research, and service, the Department of
Communication addresses how communication functions to create, sustain,
and transform personal life, social relations, political institutions,
economic organizations, and cultural and aesthetic conventions in
society. Recognized for significant contributions to the profession,
University, state, and nation, the Department houses a PhD program, a
major in Communication, an interdisciplinary major in Cultural Studies,
and a minor in Writing for the Screen and Stage. It serves as the
intellectual home for 28 faculty members, 45 graduate students, and over
700 undergraduates. The Department’s doctoral program offers a
theoretically rich, interdisciplinary, problem-based approach to
education and research that enables graduate students to define their
own research in response to the changing demands of a constantly
evolving communicative and cultural world. The Department’s
undergraduate major features four structured concentrations:
interpersonal and organizational communication; media and technology
studies and production; performance studies; and rhetoric. Each
concentration offers the Department’s majors, as well as the hundreds of
pan-University non-majors who seek out our classes, a set of critical
capacities that contribute to an engaged, creative, and critical 21st
century citizen.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ commlist.org)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]