Make Money Teaching Online: How to Land Your First Academic Job, Build Credibility, and Earn a Six-Figure Salary
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Average customer review:Product Description
Did you know you could teach from home and earn a six-figure salary? Thousands of people make a great living teaching online courses from home, and the more classes they teach the more they earn! If you want into this exciting profession, this guide will show you how to get started, find great jobs, and earn more than you thought possible.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #57996 in Books
- Published on: 2007-02-09
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Hardcover
- 256 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9780470100875
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
- Click here to view our Condition Guide and Shipping Prices
Editorial Reviews
From the Inside Flap
Two adjunct professors explain how theydiscovered great pay, flexible hours, and rewarding work
You may not consider teaching a very exciting profession, or at least not a lucrative one. But what if you could teach from home—or anywhere in the world—and earn a six-figure salary doing it? Tens of thousands of people make a great living teaching online courses from wherever they happen to be. And the more courses they teach, the more money they can make.
Online universities are sprouting up around the country and revolutionizing the way we teach and learn, and enterprising educators are cashing in. Traditional universities are offering more courses online—and they need growing numbers of adjunct faculty to teach them. In Make Money Teaching Online, online educators Danielle Babb and Jim Mirabella explain how to get the education you need, find high-paying teaching jobs, and increase workloads and income.
Today, more than eighty percent of learners have taken at least one online course, and those numbers continue to rise. But rather than hire tenure-track professors, institutions are increasingly looking for part-time, remote educators to teach online courses. By teaching multiple classes, you can make much more money than most full-time tenured professors.
Step by step, the authors show you how to:
- Find legitimate online universities and opportunities
- Discover what universities look for in online educators
- Manage and master the technology you need to teach
- Maintain professional relationships and grow your business like a consultancy
- Balance your workload to minimize effort and maximize income
- And much more
Make Money Teaching Online is the only guide you need to get started, find great teaching jobs, and earn more than you thought possible. If you want a personally and monetarily rewarding career in this revolutionary new industry, get online and get teaching.
From the Back Cover
Find out how the authors earn $175,000-a-year each, teaching online—and why they love it!
"If you love to teach and understand the power and exploding force of online education, you will want to read this book."
—Dr. Claudia Santin President, Northcentral University
"At a time when online teaching is becoming a popular vocation, the authors provide important insight into what it really takes to be successful in an online teaching career."
—Maria Puzziferro, PhDDirector of Continuing Education, Colorado State University, Denver Campus
"A prospective faculty member embracing the guidance of this book will become a highly valued online faculty member."
—Martha Hollis, PhD Online Dean, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
"If your goal is to become an online instructor, then my suggestion would be to purchase the book, read it, and put the techniques to work."
—Joseph F. Ackerman III PhD candidate, Campus College Chair, University of Phoenix
"When two dedicated educators come together to write a how-to guide, the entire teaching community learns. The standards and ethics of the authors come through on every page. What a wonderful foundation for America's new love affair with distance education."
—E. Stone Shiflet, PhDDirector, Northcentral University Writing Program
"By following the tips outlined in this book, I was successful in procuring an online teaching position. This is a must-read for anyone serious about finding financial independence through teaching."
—Ronald E. Monard, Esq.Attorney at Law, Online Faculty, Northcentral University
"I strongly recommend this insightful, comprehensive primer for teaching online."
—Arlene Blix, DPhil, RNProfessor, California State University at Fullerton
About the Author
Danielle Babb, PhD, teaches approximately eighty online courses yearly with thirteen different universities, including traditional universities that offer online programs. She also works as a technology consultant to the real estate industry.
Jim Mirabella, dba, is an educator with nineteen years of university teaching experience at all levels. As an adjunct professor, he teaches fifty online courses each year. He also works as a consultant in survey design, research, and analysis.
Customer Reviews
a good introduction
The authors provide a nice overview of online teaching, including a lot of important considerations for job seekers (many of which apply equally well to those looking for jobs outside the realm of online education). The advice seems honest, and the authors admit that, unfortunately, there is no single source, website or service that will provide you with access to all the job listings/opportunities that are available. I didn't find anything new among the websites they suggest monitoring for job opportunities, but this doesn't mean that you won't...it may depend on how much research you've already done. Their advice on strategies for making inquiries, even when no opportunities are listed, seems reasonable and should be helpful to many.
There was a good deal of emphasis on how to use and maximize current technologies, along with accounts of the authors preferences. I had hoped there would be more focus on the actual online teaching process...e.g., tips for addressing common problems students encounter in adapting to discussion forum-based learning, etc. Granted, the advice may help you to be more organized and efficient, and therefore give you more time to think about how to manage e-classroom issues and improve your teaching techniques. Nevertheless, managing relationships with institutions, administrators and other online-teachers is covered reasonably well, but not so extensively for the online student/teacher relationship. I can't fault the book too much for these issues however, as the title is "Make Money Teaching Online," and not "How to Teach Online."
This brings up another aspect that I found troubling, in the subtitle implication that the book will show you how to "earn a six-figure salary" from online teaching. Although I don't doubt that it is possible for those who manage their time exceptionally well, I have my doubts as to whether this is realistic for all but the most committed and hardworking teachers, as well as some others who may likely be precariously overextended and therefore of little utility to their students. The advice in this book may well help online teachers to be more organized and maximize their time, possibly allowing them to take on extra work. However, is it really necessary or advisable to promote online teaching in this way? Overall, the book does makes a pretty nice guide for career exploration, especially for those who already have a little bit of classroom-based teaching experience and are interested in pursuing online opportunities. I wouldn't recommend going into this field if extremely high earnings are your primary motivator however.
I Teach Adjunct and Online
I teach for both a state university and for an online university. I cannot imagine what this author is trying to sell. The money in teaching adjunct and online is notoriously low in most cases. I suspect that if the author is making six figures, it is from book sales. I have never encountered a legitimate teaching institution that would accept less than a master's degree. After viewing the Today show interview, I was convinced that the author was not being wholly honest. Beware.
What a con
A list of registrar's -- oh please - easy to find out WITHOUT this book or the seminar as is a pay scale. The only people who are getting anything from this book and the seminars are the authors.
This falls under the same category as make millions in real estate, make millions buying and selling on e-bay.
A con




