Academic Rank.doc
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Academic Rank
Academic organizations typically have a rather rigid set of ranks. Those listed below refer specifically to universities, although colleges and other institutions may follow a similar schema.
Australia
Academic ranks
? Professor
? Associate Professor
? Senior Lecturer
? Lecturer
? Associate Lecturer
Administrative ranks
? Chancellor
? Vice-Chancellor
? Pro-Vice Chancellor
? Dean
? Head of School
Brazil
At the University of Sao Paulo the academic rank system is:
? Titular Professor (Professor Titular)
? Associate Professor (Professor Associado): must hold a Livre Docente title
? Doctor Professor (Professor Doutor): must hold an PhD or equivalent degree
? Assistant Professor (Professor Assistente): must hold an MSc or equivalent degree
? Teaching Assistant (Auxiliar de Ensino): bachelor degree
In the Federal Universities the academic ranks receive other names:
? Professor Titular
? Professor Adjunto
? Professor Doutor or Professor
Canada
Academic ranks
Faculty (Professors):
? Distinguished Professor or University Professor
? Professor (or Full Professor)
? Associate Professor
? Assistant Professor
Non-faculty and/or temporary
? Adjunct faculty member
? Sessional lecturer, Instructor, Research Associate, and miscellaneous other ranks holding a Ph.D.
? Postdoctoral fellow (sometimes including lecturing experience).
? Research and/or teaching staff not holding a Ph.D. (e.g., research technicians, lab managers, etc.)
? Graduate student or professional student (law, medicine, music, nursing, accounting, etc.). Graduate students often serve as teaching assistants (TAs) and/or research assistants (RAs). In Canada, graduate students are further ranked by degree, with Ph.D. students outranking Masters students (unlike in the U.S., a Masters degree is commonly completed before beginning a Ph.D. program).
? Undergraduate student. Undergraduate students are ranked simply as 1st Year (Frosh), 2nd Year, 3rd Year, and 4th Year students.
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