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You are an instructor, not a professor. A professor has earned a PhD, and earns the appointment from the university, usually after serving as an assistant or associate professor.

2007-02-08 05:31:05 · answer #1 · answered by artemisaodc1 4 · 0 1

Well, let's see. I have a Master's degree, I do not have a Ph.D. My title is Assistant Professor - therefore I am a professor. Once I get my doctorate, I expect people to call me Doctor, not Professor.

This does vary from school to school, however. At my school, there are 3 ranks of professor: assistant professor (which is where you start), associate professor, and (full) professor (the highest rank you can get). If you only teach part time, then you're rank is that of instructor, but the students still call you professor. Someone who teaches at a college is never called a teacher (even though technically we are all teachers!).

2007-02-08 06:03:03 · answer #2 · answered by kris 6 · 0 0

Here's how it really works.

If you are hired to teach at a college or university, you are called "professor" by your students, no matter what your rank is. "Professor" is your title of address, even when it is not the actual job title on your contract with your college or university.

It does not matter whether you have a Masters degree or a PhD, you are still properly called a professor.

We do not call ourselves teachers, because usually, that is not our primary job. We are scholars and researchers. When we file our income taxes, we do not select "teacher" as our profession, because that term refers to elementary and secondary school educators. We select "professor."

But there are ranks within the professoriate. You can be an instructor, a lecturer, an assistant professor, an associate professor, or a professor. Tenure is usually awarded at the same time as promotion to associate professor.

To complicate things further, in some fields of study, a Masters degree is normally the highest degree a scholar holds. (Fine Arts, for instance.) In other fields, it is a doctorate, but this does not make professors with MFAs somehow "less" than other professors.

I hope this clarifies things. I assure you that it is the truth.

2007-02-08 17:42:27 · answer #3 · answered by X 7 · 1 0

Professors. Often, no instructor at the university level is referred to as a teacher. They may be a professor, instructor, associate instructor, teaching assistant, etc.

2007-02-08 05:25:48 · answer #4 · answered by Joy M 7 · 0 1

Professors are college teachers.

2007-02-08 05:24:33 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Usually with only a master's degree you are called instructor or lecturer. Professor is usually reserved for Ph.D.'s.

2007-02-08 05:29:10 · answer #6 · answered by jurydoc 7 · 1 0

I purely began my carry close's degree in music the following in Texas. you do not decide on to be qualified to educate at a college or a junior college, yet you do decide on a PhD or a minimum of your carry close's. regardless of the indisputable fact that, i imagine you ought to also get qualified to educate junior severe and severe college besides, because the interest market is much better aggressive at the same time as searching for a job as a college professor. in case you may not discover one immediately, you ought to educate at a severe college or junior severe contained in the mean time, and rack up some helpful journey. in case you ever do practice to grad college or search for a job as a professor, the individuals studying your application will decide on to confirm that you've had journey formerly. Thats what I did, even regardless of the reality that the concept-about preparation middle college band sends shivers up my backbone...i ought to if i extremely needed to, because I went ahead and were given qualified! solid success!

2016-12-03 21:56:15 · answer #7 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

You might be an assistant professor or something like that but not a teacher - thats a different profession.

2007-02-08 05:24:57 · answer #8 · answered by radiancia 6 · 0 1

Usually you are a teacher but a tenured intructor (even at the Master's level) may become a professor.

2007-02-08 05:25:38 · answer #9 · answered by bandit 6 · 0 2

I think Professor.

2007-02-08 05:24:49 · answer #10 · answered by knowssignlanguage 6 · 0 1

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