Position Title |
Critical Disability Studies – Non-Tenure Track Faculty Vacancy Pool |
About the University |
Western Washington University, with over 15,000 students in seven colleges and the graduate school, is nationally recognized for its educational programs, students and faculty. The campus is located in Bellingham, Washington, a coastal community of 90,000 overlooking Bellingham Bay, the San Juan Islands and the North Cascades Mountain range. The city lies 90 miles north of Seattle and 60 miles south of Vancouver, British Columbia. Western has additional sites in Anacortes, Bremerton, Everett, Port Angeles, and Poulsbo. Western is recognized nationally for its successes, such as being named one of the top public master's-granting institutions in the Pacific Northwest for 25 years in a row by U.S. News & World Report. Western Washington University is committed to achieving excellence through advancing inclusive success, increasing our Washington impact, and focusing on transformational education grounded in the liberal arts and sciences and based on innovative scholarship, research, and creative activity. Western's greatest strength is the outstanding students, faculty, staff, and alumni/ae who make up its community. Western supports an inclusive governance structure for all and provides a learning and working environment in which everyone can thrive. In pursuit of this excellence, individual employees are expected to establish and maintain productive and effective inclusive working relationships amongst diverse populations including staff, faculty, administration, student, and external constituents. Further, individual employees are expected to have the ability to operationalize sustainability concepts (economic, societal, environmental) into all aspects of performing their job duties.
Western Washington Univeristy’ Bellingham Campus sits upon the unceded ancestral lands of the Lummi Nation and Nooksack Tribe. We affirm that indigenous communities are still here and still provide leadership in our shared communities.
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About the Department |
The Institute for Critical Disability Studies (ICDS) was established in spring 2022. It is a cross-disciplinary initiative, drawing faculty from across the humanities, sciences, performing arts, and beyond. The ICDS offers a minor in Critical Disability Studies, which consists of three core courses and electives from across the university. We are committed to an ethos of disability justice, which means we are devoted to social justice and leadership of those most impacted by disability issues, meaning disabled, d/Deaf, queer, and BIPOC people themselves. We encourage applications from women, trans and queer people, people of color, disabled people, veterans, and other candidates from underrepresented backgrounds and with diverse experiences interested in this opportunity.
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About the Position |
The Critical Disability Studies program maintains a vacancy pool of qualified persons interested in teaching with the program. In anticipation of possible openings throughout the academic year and summer sessions, applications are accepted continuously for temporary part-time non-tenure track teaching positions with occasional opportunities for temporary, full-time appointments. Positions may become available at any time and are typically filled on a quarterly basis.
The position is responsible for teaching a subset of courses in the Critical Disability Studies program, which currently consists of DISA 330 (Critical Disability Studies), DISA 350 (Topics in Critical Disability Studies), and DISA 450 (Capstone in Critical Disability Studies). Other courses may be added in the future. All courses require expertise in the field of critical disability studies, and in the case of DISA 350, expertise in a disability-related topic. The holder of this position will be responsible for:
- Teaching one or more DISA classes, bearing between 3 and 5 credits
- Utilizing online teaching technologies, including Canvas LMS
- Holding regular office hours
The position is open to face-to-face teaching or teaching in remote online, or hybrid formats.
The ICDS values teaching, and we expect you to be an excellent teacher; to be current in your discipline; to engage students actively in their own learning including discussion, writing, and analysis; and to set high standards regarding course content. You are expected to provide students with feedback on their coursework and examinations, and to be available to students through regularly scheduled office hours in keeping with department policy. You must have your students evaluate your course(s) using the standard University evaluation forms, or others approved by the provost, and you must make those evaluations available to the ICDS co-directors for annual review.
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Required Qualifications |
- Master’s Degree or higher in fields related to critical disability studies, accessibility, and/or disability culture and identity
- Demonstrated potential as a teacher
- Knowledge of critical disability studies and/or lived experience with disability culture
- Demonstrated ability to collaborate effectively with diverse students, faculty, and staff, including a commitment to cultivating learning environments that are equitable and inclusive of students with diverse social identities and backgrounds
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Preferred Qualifications |
- Experience teaching critical disability studies courses at the college level
- Experience developing critical disability studies coursework and curriculum at the college level
- Specialty in a discipline-specific topic related to disability (for instance disability applied to dance or disability applied to literature)
- Scholarly research and publication in the area of critical disability studies
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Conditions of Employment |
All employees must comply with our Immunization policies, including Proof of Rubeola Measles Immunity within 60-days of hire. Please reach out to HR@wwu.edu if you need information regarding medical or religious exemption and applicable accommodations. |
Salary
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$1,100-$2,200 per Credit, Commensurate with experience and qualifications
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Benefits Information |
Benefits Overview for Faculty Positions |
Bargaining Unit
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United Faculty of Western Washington
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Application Instructions
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A cover letter and curriculum vitae are required and should address your experience related to the position responsibilities and the required and preferred qualifications.
Also submit two additional documents:
- a 1-page statement explaining your commitments to Access, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion in your teaching, and
- a brief description of how you would approach the courses you intend to teach, including sample readings and assignments.
You will be asked to provide contact information of three references. They will receive an automatically-generated request to provide a reference letter as soon as your application is submitted through the PageUp hiring portal.
Applicants who have prior college teaching experience should submit evidence of effective teaching practices as supplemental information, one or more of the following: course syllabi, student course evaluations, and/or peer observation letters.
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Closing Date Notes |
While this pool is listed as "Open Continuously" please note this does not indicate there is a current opening. Applications are accepted continuously for potential NTT faculty openings; please apply at your earliest convenience. Applicant materials are reviewed on an as-needed basis, and you will only be contacted if an opportunity is available.
This vacancy pool is refreshed annually; please see applicable close date information below. Applicants who continue to remain interested in being considered for on-going opportunities should re-submit updated materials to the new pool, once posted. Vacancy pool closes no later than April 15, 2025.
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