Volume 31, Number 2 (Spring) 1996
Singell, Jr., Larry D., Jane H. Lillydahl, and Larry D. Singell, Sr. 1996. "Will Changing Times Change the Allocation of Faculty Time?" Journal of Human Resources 31(2):429-449.
This
paper examines faculty time allocation decisions that are fundamental to the
functioning of a university A random-utility approach yields a grouped-data,
multinomial logit model and predicts that time
allocation
decisions depend systematically on both personal and institutional attributes.
The empirical results for a random sample of U.S. arts and sciences faculty
indicate that structural differences between universities with different
research orientations account for most of the significant differences in faculty
time allocations. Faculty characteristics reinforce institutional missions,
however, and thus condition university policies for change (for example,
attempts to mandate greater time to teaching in research universities).
Larry D. Singell, Jr., is a professor of economics at the University of Oregon; Jane H. Lillydahl and Larry D. Singell, Sr., are professors of economics at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Anyone interested in obtaining the National Survey of Postsecondary Faculty data should contact the Office of Educational Research and Improvement of the U.S. Department of Education. Permission from that department is required for use of the data.
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