You’re marvelous! What a smart idea!
Do you believe such prospects (conservatives) would be rejected, particularly in community or junior colleges, at the same astonishing rate they are rejected at the university level. I see you probably answered that obvious question, by naming the risk, being that it may prove a short lived opportunity.
Thanks for posting.
PS: Wonder if Obama had a Master Degree when he was popping off to be a prof of the Constitution at Chicago.
Many community colleges are desperate for adjuncts, particularly people who can teach during the day, as the pay is generally miserable and most people who adjunct have regular 8-5 jobs. Until you teach the same course for the third time and have figured out how to teach it well and can reuse prior lesson plans, expect to earn no more than ten dollars an hour given all the time to prep your lessons and grade.
A lot of adjuncts do not find the effort worth it and do not sign up to teach again.
I do not think any one of us would have any difficulty getting through the short perfunctory interview for an adjunct position. As long as you don’t have a social media presence that identifies your conservative stances in connection with your legal name, you need only show in an interview a love of your subject matter and desire to share it. I doubt many questions about politics would come up in an interview and they can be easily deflected by saying you are not into politics.
He had a law degree when he taught Constitutional law. A law degree is a doctorate, a JD, which stands for Juris Doctor, doctor of laws. Having a law degree, even from Harvard, did not make him smart.