Continuing Education


The adjunct crisis and archaeology

Depending on your sources, between 49 and 66% of all college professors are adjuncts. Full-time, untenured faculty composes 19 percent of professors, which means, at most, only a third of professors are on the tenure track. As a PhD student, I’ve been steadily encouraged to keep up hope about becoming […]

At least half of university professors are overworked adjuncts

Paychecks will do much to increase minorities in archaeology

How to get more minorities involved in archaeology

I’m writing this blog post from the Denver International Airport, en route back to Tucson after spending a fruitful July working on archaeological excavations in Glacier National Park. This project came close on the heels of a fruitful dissertation research trip to Boise, Idaho. Needless to say, this summer has […]


How archaeologists can enjoy the fruits of travel hacking 1

I’m sitting in a coffee shop in Boise, Idaho (Java Coffee and Café to be exact) enjoying Boise’s best coffee drink— the Bowl of Soul. This coffee didn’t come easily though. I’m coming off a 3-hour-long scanning binge that has resulted in the digitization of a huge amount of archival […]

Travel hacking for archaeology graduate students

Recap of my first year of archaeology PhD studies

Recap of My First year of an Archaeology PhD 2

“School has become the world religion of a modernized proletariat, and makes futile promises of salvation to the poor of the technological age.” Ivan Illich, Deschooling Society (1971) I’ve decided to take some time to write a short summary of my PhD at the University of Arizona. Sometime in 2012, […]


Addressing the Archaeology Professor Myth: Is it Possible to Realize Tenure Track Position? 2

Sometimes you read the obvious, but it doesn’t really sink in. Sometimes the obvious sinks right in to your core. I just finished reading two blog posts this week about the travails of post-PhD life. In 2011, Roderick asked “Is your PhD Worthless?” Partially answering his own question, Roderick mentions […]

is it possible to get a tenure track archaeology professor position?

Financial independence is the key to ending the poverty mentality in archaeology

NSF Archaeology grant success and the University of Arizona

Last week, Doug Rocks-MacQueen posted an article on his blog Doug’s Archaeology titled “Top Organizations Receiving NSF Archaeology Funds.” I was surprised to see my current grad school at the top of the list by a long shot. The University of Arizona dominated the list of National Science Foundation (NSF) […]


How to travel to archaeology conferences for free

Keywords: travel, archaeology research, conferences, archaeology job tips Hashtags: #SHA2014, #SAA2014, @succinctbill, @chrisguillebeau “As for study, did not our wise teacher teach us that learning was of two kinds: the one kind being the things we learned and knew, and the other being the training that taught us how to […]


Is degree inflation in archaeology bad?

Keywords: cultural resource management, archaeology, higher education, Doug’s Archaeology Hashtags: #archaeology, #CRMarch, #higherlearning, @succinctbill, In November, Doug Rocks-MacQueen wrote the post, “With each passing year your degree means less and less and less and less……..” This post analyzes data collected for the report “Archaeology Labour Market Intelligence: Profiling the Profession, […]

is it possible to get a tenure track archaeology professor position?

First annual archaeology diversity field school photo competition

Last month, the Gender and Minority Affairs Committee (GMAC) of the Society for Historical Archaeology (SHA) announced its first ever Diversity Field School Competition. I am honored to be judge in this competition. The photo competition was established to recognize archaeological projects that demonstrate a commitment to diversity and increase […]