Visiting Lecturer in Bioarchaeology/Human Biology
- Employer
- Indiana University Academic Positions
- Location
- Bloomington, Indiana
- Closing date
- Feb 20, 2025
View more categoriesView less categories
- Position Type
- Faculty
- Discipline
- Archaeology
- Hours
- Full Time
- Organization Type
- Academic
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Position Summary
Visiting Lecturer position in Bioarchaeology and Human Biology Indiana University Department of Anthropology and Human Biology Program The Department of Anthropology and The Human Biology Program in the College of Arts and Sciences at Indiana University invite applications for a one-year full-time non-tenure track Visiting Lecturer position with teaching responsibilities split between the two units. The Department of Anthropology is among the oldest and largest four field departments in the United States, offering B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees. Human Biology is a large, successful undergraduate program that models a liberal arts education and offers an interdisciplinary approach to scientific issues related to the biology of human beings. Faculty within Human Biology are drawn from numerous academic departments across the College of Arts and Sciences. The candidate is expected to complement and strengthen Anthropology's archaeology curriculum and contribute effectively to the Human Biology Program. A successful candidate will teach 5 courses (3-2), including ANTH A107 Becoming Human and ANTH P200 Introduction to Archaeology in Anthropology and three sections of the same upper division course in Human Biology.
Visiting Lecturer position in Bioarchaeology and Human Biology Indiana University Department of Anthropology and Human Biology Program The Department of Anthropology and The Human Biology Program in the College of Arts and Sciences at Indiana University invite applications for a one-year full-time non-tenure track Visiting Lecturer position with teaching responsibilities split between the two units. The Department of Anthropology is among the oldest and largest four field departments in the United States, offering B.A., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees. Human Biology is a large, successful undergraduate program that models a liberal arts education and offers an interdisciplinary approach to scientific issues related to the biology of human beings. Faculty within Human Biology are drawn from numerous academic departments across the College of Arts and Sciences. The candidate is expected to complement and strengthen Anthropology's archaeology curriculum and contribute effectively to the Human Biology Program. A successful candidate will teach 5 courses (3-2), including ANTH A107 Becoming Human and ANTH P200 Introduction to Archaeology in Anthropology and three sections of the same upper division course in Human Biology.
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