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Salary.sg 20-09-2007 10:44 PM

Salaries of Professors
 
Someone left a comment asking about the pay of university dons. Here's what I got (based on a thread in Expat Singapore Forum):
Quote:

Professor S$178,750 - S$270,875
Associate Professor S$108,625 - S$204,875
Assistant Professor S$71,500 - S$121,690
If you think the numbers look high, recall that NTU Professor Bryan Ngoi Kok Ann, who was found guilty of lying to CPIB, could afford to give his mainland Chinese mistress a $7,000-a-month allowance and expensive gifts like a $11,000 Chopard watch. (ST, 26 September 2006)

And remember Chua Choong Tze? He was the youngest assistant professor in Singapore at the time he joined SMU to teach and research in finance. It was said that a person with his credentials can "earn at least US$100,000 at any good American university for a nine-month contract." And he was just 23. (ST, 20 July 2003)

In comparison, an R&D manager makes only $7,890.

http://www.salary.sg/2007/salaries-of-professors/

looks right--- 22-09-2007 03:37 PM

410
 
Your numbers look quite right <b>when</b> compared with the salaries from the Ivy League universities:
http://www.yale.edu/oir/open/pdf_public/W061_Fac_Sal_Ivys.pdf
(the numbers there are in U.S. dollars)

MJ--- 25-11-2007 10:10 AM

590
 
hi,
thanks for the info..
I'm wondering however, if the stated salaries for profs are annual salaries, i.e. you're comparing annual salaries of profs with the monthly salary of the r&d manager? Because the pdf showing yale salaries do seem like annual ones =)

cheers

admin--- 25-11-2007 07:05 PM

591
 
MJ, you are spot on. The comparison is perhaps not fair, given that $7,890 x 12 = $94,680 and it does not include performance bonuses. But it's already the 75th-percentile research manager's salary. Maybe what I should drive at is that a researcher working as a professor has better opportunities (in salary) than just a research manager.

MJ--- 26-11-2007 10:04 PM

604
 
thanks for your clarification! =)

I know both professions are not easy, but hmm... maybe an r&d manager is 'easier' to become compared to an A/P, Prof, etc., hence the higher pay for the latter, i.e. not all r&d managers may be qualified to be professors.

MK--- 05-01-2008 05:09 AM

711
 
The Assist Prof (AP) salary has a big varation. how about a person joining as AP from top 5 universities in US and has 3+ years post PhD experience?

Unregistered 18-10-2018 04:27 PM

It's been 10 years. Can anyone share the current job grades, titles for professorial faculty of Singapore's universities?

Unregistered 20-01-2019 11:08 PM

Assistant professors 7-12k

Associate professors 12-17k

Professors salary can be anything.

Bonus about 3 months (performance bonus plus 13th month).

Unregistered 27-01-2019 08:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Unregistered (Post 113268)
Assistant professors 7-12k

Associate professors 12-17k

Professors salary can be anything.

Bonus about 3 months (performance bonus plus 13th month).


Thanks.

Hmmm.... then i received a rather low ball offer for Assoc Prof...

Another question... for Unis in Singapore, is ‘open contract’ the equivalent of tenure contract?

Unregistered 27-01-2019 09:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Unregistered (Post 113441)
Thanks.

Hmmm.... then i received a rather low ball offer for Assoc Prof...

Another question... for Unis in Singapore, is ‘open contract’ the equivalent of tenure contract?

no, it is different. Tenure is Tenure. it is job for life.
they cannot sack you unless you commit "personal indiscretion" with a student.
for open contract, they can fire you anytime.

just curious are you already an associate prof at the university of your home country?

Unregistered 27-01-2019 09:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Unregistered (Post 113441)
Thanks.

Hmmm.... then i received a rather low ball offer for Assoc Prof...

Another question... for Unis in Singapore, is ‘open contract’ the equivalent of tenure contract?

my gut feel is for SIT, they might not have tenure tracks positions. if you want a traditional tenure with a competitive salary, you should go for NUS/NTU which then require a much higher academic requirement.

either you start from asst prof again and compete for their tenured associate prof position or you are already rather distinguished professor in your field and can join them as a visiting professor.

Unregistered 28-01-2019 11:08 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Unregistered (Post 113445)
no, it is different. Tenure is Tenure. it is job for life.
they cannot sack you unless you commit "personal indiscretion" with a student.
for open contract, they can fire you anytime.

just curious are you already an associate prof at the university of your home country?

Thanks for the info.

No, not already an assoc prof...

Unregistered 28-01-2019 11:10 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Unregistered (Post 113446)
my gut feel is for SIT, they might not have tenure tracks positions. if you want a traditional tenure with a competitive salary, you should go for NUS/NTU which then require a much higher academic requirement.

either you start from asst prof again and compete for their tenured associate prof position or you are already rather distinguished professor in your field and can join them as a visiting professor.

Your gut feel is very good.

Unregistered 07-05-2019 01:54 PM

Professor Salary
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by Unregistered (Post 113268)
Assistant professors 7-12k

Associate professors 12-17k

Professors salary can be anything.

Bonus about 3 months (performance bonus plus 13th month).

The figures you provided is it for NTU or NUS? Is those figures the base salary?


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