Assistant/Associate Professor, Speech-Language Pathology
Communication Sciences and Disorders
University of South Florida
| Appointment: |
August, 2010. Full-time, 9-month tenure track faculty appointment, contingent upon funding. |
| Qualifications: |
Requirements: Expertise in adult neurogenic disorders. Ph. D. in Communication Sciences and Disorders, or other related discipline is required by the start date.
Preferred qualifications: CCC-SLP by start date. For consideration at the rank of Assistant Professor, the applicant must have potential for successful teaching, scholarly productivity, and acquiring external research funding. For consideration at the rank of Associate Professor, the applicant must have demonstrated success in these areas.
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| Responsibilities: |
Assistant/Associate Professor, Speech-Language Pathology. Full-time, 9-month tenure track faculty appointment. Develop and teach graduate and undergraduate courses in areas of specialty; advise Master's and Doctoral students. Conduct research, seek external funding, publish in areas of interest, and provide service to the department, college, university, and profession. Summer teaching possible. |
| Salary: |
Negotiable, depending upon qualifications. |
| Application Process: |
Applicants must apply for this position through the USF on-line employment application system Careers@USF.
View the position at the Careers@USF site, enter basic demographic information and upload: (1) letter of interest which describes research agenda and teaching philosophy, (2) curriculum vita, (3) graduate transcripts, and (4) sample publications.
Submit three letters of recommendation to:
Stefan A. Frisch, Ph.D., Search Committee Chair
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders
University of South Florida
4202 East Fowler Avenue, PCD 1017
Tampa, Florida 33620-8150
Inquiries at (813) 974-6563, email: frisch@cas.usf.edu
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| Deadline: |
Review of applications begins December 1, 2009. Applications will be accepted until the position is filled. |
The University of South Florida is one of the nation's top 63 public research universities and one of 39 community-engaged, four-year public universities as designated by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. USF was awarded more than $360 million in research contracts and grants in FY 2007/2008. The university offers 219 degree programs at the undergraduate, graduate, specialist and doctoral levels, including the doctor of medicine. The university has a $1.8 billion annual budget, an annual economic impact of $3.2 billion, and serves more than 46,000 students on campuses in Tampa, St. Petersburg, Sarasota-Manatee and Lakeland. USF is a member of the Big East Athletic Conference.
The Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders at the University of South Florida is the largest in the State of Florida. It offers a variety of fully accredited programs for baccalaureate, master's and doctoral degrees. The undergraduate student may major in Communication Sciences and Disorders, American Sign Language, or Educational Interpreting. On the graduate level, students may elect to pursue a master's degree (M.S.) in Speech-Language Pathology, a clinical doctorate (Au.D.) in Audiology, or a research doctorate (Ph.D.) in Speech and Language, Hearing Science, or Neurocommunicative Science. In addition, graduate students with a research interest may pursue collaborative doctoral studies with the departments of Psychology or Education.
The Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders is located in the new College of Behavioral and Community Sciences which focuses on multidisciplinary collaborations and a strong research continuum. Faculty interests represent depth and breadth in areas from basic behavioral science to clinical and service interventions to community-partnered participatory approaches and policy analysis, as well as implementation of evidence-based and best practices within human service systems. The College enrolls nearly 2,200 students and includes the Departments of Aging and Mental Health, Child and Family Studies, Communication Sciences and Disorders, Criminology, Mental Health Law and Policy, and Rehabilitation and Mental Health Counseling as well as the School of Aging Studies and School of Social Work. In addition, the College includes the Louis de la Parte Florida Mental Health Institute, a research, knowledge dissemination, and policy institute with a special focus on mental health and substance abuse.