Job Details Job Location Oglethorpe University - Atlanta, GA
Position Type Full-Time Faculty
Education Level Graduate Degree
Job Category Education
Description Oglethorpe University invites applications for a Physics Lecturer and Lab Coordinator beginning fall 2025. This position is a three-year, non-tenure track, renewable position, with the potential for eventual promotion to Senior Lecturer.
The chosen candidate will primarily teach lecture and lab courses in the calculus-based College Physics sequence, which serves Physics, Chemistry, and Dual-Degree Engineering majors. The successful candidate will demonstrate familiarity with, and an ability to implement, research-based pedagogical practices for both lecture and laboratory instruction. The successful candidate will be charged with, in collaboration with program faculty, reimagining and revising the College Physics laboratory courses so that these courses better promote student engagement and successful attainment of programmatic student learning outcomes. Additional duties related to the title of Lab Coordinator include maintenance and repair of laboratory equipment, oversight of the student-run Physics Workshop, and management of one student worker. Lab Coordinator duties that fall outside the scope of instruction and curriculum development are expected to take no more than five hours per week, on average.
Qualifications High-quality teaching is the expectation at Oglethorpe. The ideal candidate will be able to actively engage a diverse classroom of students using pedagogical techniques and methods appropriate for a teaching-oriented liberal arts college. Candidates with expertise in Physics, Engineering-Physics, Applied Physics, and related fields are encouraged to apply. The candidate should be prepared to teach multiple sections of College Physics (lecture and laboratory). The teaching load for this position is 3.5 lecture courses per semester, so that a typical semester will include teaching 2 lecture courses and 3 lab courses.
Minimum Qualifications Ph.D. in Physics or a closely-related field.
About Oglethorpe University Founded in 1835, Oglethorpe University is a liberal arts college that unites a close-knit campus community with the big city culture and opportunities of Atlanta, Georgia. Today, the university enrolls over 1,400 students, representing 33 states and 31 countries, and offers students Atlanta's premiere undergraduate learning experience. Students at Oglethorpe benefit from small classes and close connections to our outstanding faculty. Oglethorpe University is committed to having a workforce which reflects the diversity of the students we serve. Recently, the university has made strides in advancing our commitment to institutional diversity and establishing a university-wide diversity taskforce.
Oglethorpe University is proud to be an equal opportunity employer committed to achieving a diverse workforce. Oglethorpe prohibits discrimination against all applicants and employees based on race; age; color; religion; national origin or ancestry; sex; sexual orientation; gender; gender identity or gender expression; marital status; pregnancy; childbirth or related medical conditions; disability; genetic information; citizenship status; veteran status; or any other category protected by federal, state or local law.
Application Instructions Candidates should submit to the application portal:
- A cover letter describing your interest in Oglethorpe University, which should speak to a demonstrated commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion and address all qualifications stated above
- Current curriculum vitae
- A statement of your philosophy and practice of teaching, outlining how you will implement that philosophy in undergraduate courses, particularly within the laboratory classroom
- Contact information for 3 professional references
To assure full consideration, please submit all required materials via the application portal. Review of applications will begin on January 6th, 2025. Specific questions about the position may be sent directly to the chair of the search committee, Dr. Mariel Meier ( ).