- imskpwr
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"In response to concerns that professors at many prestigious universities spend too much time publishing and not enough time educating their students, some of these schools are propagating rules that set strict limits on the amount of material that a full-time professor may publish over a certain time period. This policy will come back to haunt these schools because, faced with the loss of any outside income, many excellent prospective candidates will opt not to accept fulltime positions, which will lead to a shortage of qualified full-time professors.
The author's conclusion logically depends on which of the following?
Universities generally receive a large percentage of the royalties from works published by their full-time professors.
Most professors do not allow their outside work to infringe on time that should be spent on classroom preparation and teaching.
Restrictions on outside publishing do not apply to part-time or adjunct professors.
Publishing is the significant source of outside income for full-time professors.
All professors at prestigious universities currently publish more material than is permitted under the new rules."
The author's conclusion logically depends on which of the following?
Universities generally receive a large percentage of the royalties from works published by their full-time professors.
Most professors do not allow their outside work to infringe on time that should be spent on classroom preparation and teaching.
Restrictions on outside publishing do not apply to part-time or adjunct professors.
Publishing is the significant source of outside income for full-time professors.
All professors at prestigious universities currently publish more material than is permitted under the new rules."












