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Salaries vary by field of study (business professors higher than humanities because they could make more money in the private sector), by geography (cost of living is higher in cities than in rural areas), by rank (instructors make much less than assistant professors, who make less than associate professors, who make less than full professors), and by length of service (annual raises).

There are also other factors, like the prestige of the university, the university's endowment, the ranking of the particular department, the ability of the particular professor to negotiate raises, etc.

In a rural area, an instructor in the humanities (without PhD) might make as little as 30,000. A full professor in the field of business in a city might make as much as 250,000.

For an English professor with a PhD, the average is about 35,000 to start, 52,000 mid-career, and topping out at about 80,000.

An English professor with only a Master's degree would be limited to teaching at the community college level, and would probably begin at about 30,000 and top out at about 50,000. Many more community colleges hire candidates with PhDs these days, because many PhDs are having difficulty getting jobs at four-year colleges.

It is extremely difficult to get a job with only a Master's degree, and it is also difficult to get a job with a PhD. There are many more qualified PhDs in English than there are job openings.

2006-11-13 13:43:53 · answer #1 · answered by X 7 · 2 0

English is the hardest field in which to find a professorship. Seriously, you can't even get a professorship in most places without a PhD and several years of adjuncting, and adjuncts barely scrape by -- some of them are part-time baristas just to afford food. Check out the Chronicle of Higher Education's Careers and Forums sections to hear more about all of this.

2006-11-13 14:21:47 · answer #2 · answered by Amanda 3 · 0 0

Depends on the college. A professor or instructor at a state school is a state employee, and their salaries should be easily obtained.

BTW, my mother-in-law teaches at a state university in Ohio, and says that the instructors don't make much at all -- but I'm not sure about Phd's.

2006-11-13 13:26:40 · answer #3 · answered by bibliophile31 6 · 0 0

In united statesa., you get a diploma in steps, the longer you bypass to college, you will have the potential to get extra tiers... despite the fact that it expenses further and further. they're all spoke of as college tiers, beginning with the 1st you will get. one million. 4-6 years of faculty: Bachelors diploma 2. 5-8 years or college: Masters diploma 3. 7-10 years of faculty: Doctorate diploma (Ph.D.) once you get a Doctorate diploma, you're formally spoke of as physician, and you mostly could desire to take an oath. The years I gave you indexed here are all very popular. It relies upon on how rapid you end your instructions, and with a bit of luck in case you do not flunk any. It merely seems such as you have a Bachelors diploma with some very short Masters point training.

2016-10-17 06:07:02 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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