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Job Description

The Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering (ECE) in the Charles V. Schaefer, Jr. School of Engineering and Science at Stevens Institute of Technology (Stevens) invites applications for Adjunct Instructor positions for the Spring Semester of 2026 and potentially the Fall Semester of 2026. The Adjunct ​ Instructor will teach the in-person courses of Wireless Communications and GPU & Multicore Programming

Responsibilities:

Teach Wireless Communications, EE 583 Teach GPU & Multicore Programming, CPE 810 Evaluate student performance and foster an open, inclusive class atmosphere Communicate with the department regarding student learning performance and outcomes

Required Education and Experience:

Applicants should have earned a Ph.D. in Electrical Engineering, Computer Engineering, or a closely related discipline at the time of appointment. Successful candidates should have a demonstrated interest and commitment to excellence in graduate education. Prior college teaching experience in ECE is preferred.

Academic Submission Guidelines: 

To apply, please submit the following items:

Cover Letter Teaching philosophy Curriculum Vitae Contact info for three references

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Lecturer Pool- Nuclear Engineering- College of Engineering

Position overview
Salary range: The UC academic salary scales set the minimum pay at appointment. See the following table for the current salary scale for this position: https://www.ucop.edu/academic-personnel-programs/_files/2025-26/represented-july-2025-scales/t15.pdf. The current full-time salary range for this position is $75,301 – $199,722. Starting salary will be commensurate with highest degree, past college-level teaching experience, relevant industry experience and equity within the department.

Percent time: Lecturers: 11% – 100%
TSP: Hourly (4-40 hours per week)
The percentage of the appointment will vary, depending on the number of courses taught.

Anticipated start: Positions usually start in January, various times throughout the summer and August This pool will remain open until the final date to accommodate upcoming course needs and new applicants. Applicants are considered for positions as needs arise; the existence of this pool does not guarantee that a position is available

Review

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In-brief analysis

August 21, 2025

Alaska has the highest per capita energy expenditures of any state at $12,100, according to our recently published State Energy Data System information for 2023. Wyoming and North Dakota spent the next most on energy at $10,100 and $9,300 per capita, respectively. All three states spent twice as much as the national average of $4,700. Florida had the lowest per capita energy expenditures at $3,700, followed by New York and Maryland at $3,800 each.

Differences in economy-wide per capita energy expenditures across states are attributable to weather conditions, economic composition, industrial energy consumption, and other factors. Alaska, Wyoming, and North Dakota have cold winters that require more energy for heating, and their state economies have more energy-intensive industrial sectors such as mining and oil and natural gas extraction.

Florida has warm

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In-brief analysis

August 20, 2025

Developers added 12 gigawatts (GW) of new utility-scale solar electric generating capacity in the United States during the first half of 2025, and they plan to add another 21 GW in the second half of the year, according to our latest survey of electric generating capacity changes. If those plans are realized, solar would account for more than half of the 64 GW that developers plan to bring online this year. Battery storage, wind, and natural gas power plants account for virtually all of the remaining capacity additions for 2025.

Developers could set a record for capacity additions if all 64 GW come online this year. The previous record for U.S. generating capacity additions was set in 2002, when developers added 58 GW to the grid, 57 GW of which was fueled

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