Press Release

For Immediate Release

 

NURSING FACULTY SALARIES CONTINUE MODEST RISE,
AACN SURVEY FINDS

WASHINGTON, D.C., March 14, 1997 -- Among all full-time faculty, doctorally prepared professors in nursing schools in the nation's universities and four-year colleges are earning an average of $62,281 in the current 1996-97 academic year, up 4.4 percent above a year ago, according to the latest salary survey by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN).

Although doctorally and nondoctorally prepared professors realized their highest salary gains in public institutions (up 4.8 percent and 7.5 percent, to $63,122 and $58,856, respectively) above a year ago, doctorally and nondoctorally prepared assistant professors fared best at private religious institutions (up 3.2 percent and 3.6 percent, to $42,990 and $36,412, respectively).

The survey, conducted in fall 1996, is AACN's 19th annual report of salaries for full-time nursing faculty and is based on responses by 509 (77.3 percent) of the nation's nursing schools with baccalaureate and graduate programs. It is also the first to break out salaries for all full-time faculty members into two separate categories: instructional and administrative faculty.

"Every year, educators and policymakers rely on AACN for the most comprehensive and most current salary information available for full-time nursing faculty in the nation's universities and senior colleges," says AACN President Carole A. Anderson, PhD, RN, FAAN. "By separating out instructional and administrative salaries, we can now provide users with data that more accurately reflects supplemental income for faculty who devote 50 percent or more of their time to administrative duties." Among all full-time nursing faculty (9,472) at responding institutions this year, 14 percent (or 1,328) carry out administrative responsibilities in such roles as associate and assistant dean or coordinator of an academic program, the AACN survey reports.

For all full-time faculty, average salaries this academic year range from a low of $14,875 for an instructor without a doctoral degree in a private secular school to a high of $126,029 for a doctorally prepared professor in a public institution.

On average, all ranks of full-time faculty saw salary gains this academic year ranging from 0.1 percent to 9.7 percent above a year ago. Nondoctorally prepared professors received the largest increase (9.7 percent, to $57,375), followed by doctorally prepared professors, and associate professors who hold the doctorate (3.4 percent, to $51,098). Nondoctorally prepared instructors experienced the smallest gain (0.1 percent, to $35,183).

However, when categorized by type of institution, salaries for some nondoctorally prepared faculty in private secular schools saw decreases compared to a year ago. Among these faculty, average earnings for instructors fell by 6.1 percent, to $38,108.

Among instructional faculty with doctoral degrees, salaries this academic year range from $21,476 for an associate professor in a private religious institution to $125,400 for a professor in a private secular institution. On average, however, doctorally prepared professors who are instructional faculty are earning $60,579, followed by doctorally prepared associate professors ($49,741), assistant professors ($43,762), and instructors ($40,187). For instructional faculty without the doctorate, salaries range from $14,875 for an instructor in a private secular school to $96,000 for an assistant professor in a private religious institution.

Regionally, average earnings for doctorally-prepared professors on instructional faculty range from $66,202 at schools in North Atlantic states to $58,390 at Southern institutions.

Among administrative faculty, doctorally prepared associate deans who also hold the rank of professor and associate professor, respectively, are earning an average of $68,908 and $62,572 this academic year. Doctorally prepared program coordinators are earning an average of $57,306 and $48,534, respectively, when also holding the rank of professor and associate professor.

"Although we welcome even the modest salary increases realized by faculty this year, particularly in light of the mounting fiscal constraints in higher education, key concerns remain," Dr. Anderson cautions.

"Schools of nursing not only supply the largest health care profession with needed clinicians, educators, researchers, and administrators, but must do so now in higher numbers as health planners look to nursing to bear expanded responsibility in delivering vital primary and preventive care, addressing the needs of an increasingly older population, and providing high-quality treatment for persons living with chronic illness. Our ability to accomplish this task will be eroded unless schools can offer salaries that keep education an attractive career option for nurses nationwide."

"Increasingly," Dr. Anderson explains, "schools in need of talented educators must contend with competition from private-sector employers, where opportunities are fast expanding for master's-prepared, advanced practice clinicians and for doctorally prepared nurses to fill such posts as director of research."

Sixty-five percent of all full-time faculty at schools responding to the AACN survey teach in public institutions, followed by faculty in private religious schools (21.8 percent), private secular institutions (11.8 percent), and consortia (0.9 percent).

Of full-time faculty at responding schools, 81.9 percent are working at universities, with 16.5 percent based at four-year colleges. Thirty-seven percent of schools responding to the AACN survey are part of an academic health center. The majority of full-time faculty at responding schools are assistant professors (39.7 percent), followed by associate professors (27.5 percent), instructors (16.2 percent), professors (10.5 percent), and some 6 percent classified as "other," such as lecturers, visiting professors, and adjunct faculty.

Copies of the AACN survey, 1996-1997 Salaries of Instructional and Administrative Nursing Faculty in Baccalaureate and Graduate Programs in Nursing, are available for $45.00 (plus $3.00 postage), prepaid orders only, from AACN, Dept. 178, Washington, DC 20055-0178; (202) 463-6930, or order your copy here.

The American Association of Colleges of Nursing is the national voice for university and four-year-college education programs in nursing. Representing more than 580 member schools of nursing at public and private institutions nationwide, AACN's educational, research, governmental advocacy, data collection, publications, and other programs work to establish quality standards for bachelor's- and graduate-degree nursing education, assist deans and directors to implement those standards, influence the nursing profession to improve health care, and promote public support of baccalaureate and graduate nursing education, research, and practice.

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CONTACT: Robert Rosseter
(202) 463-6930, x231
rrosseter@aacn.nche.edu

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