Senior Lecturer

Senior lecturer is an academic rank. In the United Kingdom and Australia, lecturer is a faculty position at a university or similar institution. Especially in research-intensive universities, lecturers lead research groups and supervise research students, as well as teach. After a number of years, lecturers might be promoted to senior lecturers with increasing research, leadership, and administrative responsibilities.

In most research-intensive universities (such as those that are part of the Russell Group and 1994 Group), a senior lecturer position is between a lecturer and a reader, with a strong focus on research. At the same time, in some universities (for instance Leeds University), the rank of Reader is no longer used for new appointments. A senior lecturer position can be a parallel position to reader in other universities, senior lecturers typically concentrating more on teaching and readers concentrating more on research with a view to promotion to a full professor position.

In most UK universities, Senior Lecturer is equivalent to the level of "associate professor" in North American universities, and "Lecturer" is roughly equivalent to the North American "assistant professor". Some British Universities (for instance, Nottingham and Warwick) have recently decided to adopt the North American ranks of assistant and associate professor instead of lecturer and senior lecturer/reader.

However, in the United States, Canada, and other countries influenced by their educational systems, the term is used differently, generally denoting academics without tenure who teach full or part-time but have few or no research responsibilities.

Famous quotes containing the word senior:

    Adolescents have the right to be themselves. The fact that you were the belle of the ball, the captain of the lacrosse team, the president of your senior class, Phi Beta Kappa, or a political activist doesn’t mean that your teenager will be or should be the same....Likewise, the fact that you were a wallflower, uncoordinated, and a C student shouldn’t mean that you push your child to be everything you were not.
    Laurence Steinberg (20th century)