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c FROM THE MAGAZINE


Only selected articles from the current issue of the magazine are available online. Complete contents of past issues are available for a small fee by visiting our archive (free registration required) or by searching the Adjunct Advocate magazine using the search box above. Adjunct Advocate subscribers receive each issue first--before it appears on the Web. Join us as a subscriber today.

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IN THIS ISSUE

  • By doing a bit of homework and shopping around adjuncts can find comprehensive private health insurance that is not a budget buster.
  • Clifford A. Lynch, Executive Director of the Coalition for Networked Information talks about the future of digital publishing and how it will impact higher education.
  • Are you ready to go paperless and learn how to put your course on CD?
  • Reviewer Mark Drozdowski takes a look at Language Magazine
  • and more...

FEATURES

COVER STORY
Contrary to popular opinion, by doing a bit of homework and shopping around adjuncts can find comprehensive private health insurance that is not a budget buster. Our writer hunts up the facts and evaluates the options available to part-time faculty in need of medical insurance.

INTERVIEW
Clifford A. Lynch, Executive Director of the Coalition for Networked Information talks about the future of digital publishing and how it will impact higher education.

NEWS

LETTERS

TECHNICALLY SPEAKING
Are you tired of standing in line for the copier, or paying out of pocket to duplicate course materials? Maybe you’re ready to go paperless and put your course on CD. Our writer shows you just how easy it is to do.

DESK DRAWER

REVIEWS

FOURTH ESTATE
Language Magazine, the Journal of Education and Communication is a good bet for faculty who teach foreign languages or who are involved in bilingual education programs.

OPINION

FIRST PERSON
When a retired brigadier general lands in the classroom as an adjunct, he discovers that his student troops are woefully unprepared for the study of history, or much of anything else for that matter.

UNCONVENTIONAL WISDOM
When supplies and equipment go missing, we’re quick to blame students. Turns out faculty should be added to the list of usual suspects, as well.

LAST WORD
Why using graded work to penalize students is never the answer.


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