Tenure in a sentence as a noun

Especially for young scientists trying to make tenure, also the group most likely to write good code.

>Taking this into account, it's silly to argue that since they have tenure, too, tenure isn't the problem here.

The author seems to have particular ax to grind against tenured faculty.

He or she gets tenure and builds a bigger empire, and spends an inordinate amount of time chasing funding.

You've got to sacrifice your 20s and much of your 30s in a haze of work, and the odds are still very slim that you'll win the tenure lottery.

A faculty member starts building his empire, with insane focus on getting tenure.

Denmark also has mandatory severance of up to 6 months wages depending on tenure.

Anyone who was an engineer during his brief tenure is well aware of just how much he self-destructed and how much he's living in a fantasy world.

The SOX rules have a short history and securities laws go back to the 1930s, more or less ably protecting investors during their long tenure before SOX took effect.

Tenure in a sentence as a verb

Unless somebody can provide actual numbers demonstrating that tenure is a problem, I'm inclined to look elsewhere.

During my tenure at NetApp I got to see all sorts of really really interesting disk problems and the lengths software had to go to reliably store data on them.

But tenure, ironically, seems to be one of the things holding down salaries at elite universities, in the same way that big chunks of equity hold down startup wages.

* Quotes because it is becoming less and less common to work for a company for decades, so the traditional system of awarding vacation based on length of tenure is becoming more and more insane.

How is that not feudal in nature?NDAs/confidentiality, contracts while being paid for work, that is understandable, non-competes should never be signed unless you are paid during that tenure at a premium, opportunity cost is huge.

I saw tenure and social capital deciding issues by default.> It's easy to fall into the mindset that you don't know everything, > everyone around you is smarter and more experienced, and that if you > say something incorrect you'll be judged by your peers.

Ireland, at the top of the list, has an Unfair Dismissal act that allows employees with a year of tenure to file claims not only if they're dismissed, but if they're "constructively" dismissed --- that is to say, if their role in the company is substantially altered in a way that allows them to claim that they're being "managed out" of the company.

Here's the flipside:--most people working in Amazon warehouses are employed by temporary staffing firms, not Amazon--most people working in Amazon warehouses don't come anywhere near 3 years of tenure before quitting or being fired--reimbursement is limited to $2,000/year for four years, while $5,000/year is pretty much the minimum direct cost to take such programs--the program is limited to full-time workers, so only those who can take classes while working full-time and mandatory-or-you-get-fired overtime can partakeThe number of warehouse workers eligible for this is nearly zero.

Tenure definitions

noun

the term during which some position is held

See also: incumbency

noun

the right to hold property; part of an ancient hierarchical system of holding lands

verb

give life-time employment to; "She was tenured after she published her book"