{"schemaVersion":"1.0","exportedAt":"2026-05-15T12:38:27.906Z","occupation":{"soc":"25-1065.00","title":"Political Science Teachers, Postsecondary","group":"Educational Instruction & Library","sector":"61","jobZone":5,"jobZoneInferred":false},"framework":{"version":"v.26.05","description":"","contextCovered":"This framework covers postsecondary political science instruction, research, and academic leadership across undergraduate and graduate settings in research universities, encompassing course delivery, curriculum design, scholarly publication, and departmental governance.","levels":{"emerging":{"label":"Emerging","statements":["Undergraduate lecture content on classical political thought — prepare and deliver using provided course templates under faculty mentor supervision in a university classroom setting.","Current political science literature — read and summarize to stay abreast of field developments as part of a structured onboarding or graduate teaching fellowship.","Student assignments and short papers — evaluate and grade using established rubrics provided by the supervising faculty member in an undergraduate course.","Introductory classroom discussions on democracy and citizenship — initiate and facilitate with guidance from a senior instructor in a postsecondary instructional environment.","Course syllabi and homework assignments — prepare using departmental templates and standard formatting tools such as word processing software under faculty review.","Research data and academic sources — locate and retrieve using information retrieval and data mining software to support assigned scholarly tasks in a university library or lab setting.","Course examinations — compile and administer following protocols established by the supervising professor for an undergraduate political science course.","Student performance data — monitor and record using spreadsheet software to track progress across assignments in a postsecondary academic department.","Electronic mail and calendar scheduling software — use to coordinate office hours, student meetings, and course logistics within a departmental administrative framework.","Political science concepts such as international relations — explain orally with clarity to undergraduate students during recitation or lab sections led under faculty supervision."]},"developing":{"label":"Developing","statements":["Undergraduate and graduate lectures on topics including international relations and comparative politics — prepare and deliver independently using multimedia instructional tools in a semester-long postsecondary course.","Professional journals, conference proceedings, and colleague networks — engage routinely to stay current with developments across multiple subfields of political science.","Student class work, papers, and examinations — evaluate and grade consistently and fairly, providing substantive written feedback that supports learning in a university course.","Seminar and discussion-based classroom environments — facilitate and moderate with reduced oversight, applying active listening and social perceptiveness to guide productive student dialogue.","Course content and instructional methods — plan and revise each semester in response to student performance data and emerging disciplinary developments within an established departmental curriculum.","Original research in a defined area of political science — conduct and submit findings for peer review in professional journals or edited volumes.","Examination design and administration — manage across multiple course sections, delegating grading tasks to teaching assistants and verifying consistency of evaluation.","Course materials including syllabi, handouts, and reading packets — develop and refine using word processing and course management software to meet departmental learning outcomes.","Analytical and scientific software tools — apply to analyze political data sets and incorporate quantitative findings into lectures and research papers for postsecondary audiences.","Instructional strategies — select and adapt to accommodate diverse graduate and undergraduate learner needs in law, government, and political theory courses."]},"proficient":{"label":"Proficient","statements":["Advanced graduate seminars and undergraduate survey courses on classical political thought, democracy, and international relations — design and deliver autonomously, integrating current scholarship and primary sources in a research university environment.","Developments across multiple subfields of political science — synthesize through systematic literature review, conference participation, and peer collaboration to inform both teaching and original research agendas.","Complex student writing including dissertations, theses, and graduate seminar papers — evaluate with expert critical judgment, offering detailed developmental feedback that advances scholarly argumentation.","Non-routine classroom situations including contested political topics and interdisciplinary inquiries — handle with skilled facilitation, persuasion, and conflict-sensitive moderation in a graduate seminar context.","Full curriculum design and periodic program-level review — lead independently, aligning course sequencing, learning objectives, and assessment methods with disciplinary standards and accreditation expectations.","Book-length manuscripts and peer-reviewed journal articles — produce and publish through sustained independent research in a specialized area of political science, contributing original knowledge to the field.","Comprehensive examination programs including qualifying and final exams — design, administer, and evaluate for graduate students within a doctoral or master's degree program.","Pedagogical approaches integrating computer-based training, OCR tools, and digital archives — deploy to enhance student research competency and engagement across law, government, and history-oriented coursework.","Complex problem solving in research design — apply inductive and deductive reasoning to develop theoretically rigorous frameworks for studying comparative politics or political behavior.","Time management across teaching, research, and service obligations — exercise with high dependability to fulfill the full scope of faculty responsibilities in a research-intensive postsecondary institution."]},"advanced":{"label":"Advanced","statements":["Departmental curriculum vision and long-term instructional strategy — set and champion across undergraduate and graduate programs, aligning political science education with institutional mission and disciplinary evolution.","Junior faculty, lecturers, and graduate teaching assistants — mentor and develop by modeling exemplary pedagogy, providing structured observation feedback, and guiding professional development in a research university.","Field-defining research agendas — lead by securing grant funding, directing research teams, and publishing influential work that shapes discourse in international relations, political theory, or comparative politics.","Interdisciplinary academic initiatives spanning philosophy, sociology, law, and geography — coordinate and lead at the college or university level to advance integrative scholarly programs.","Program accreditation, external review, and curricular reform — direct at organizational scale, synthesizing faculty input, assessment data, and external benchmarks to sustain program excellence.","Scholarly reputation of the department — advance through keynote addresses at professional conferences, editorial roles in leading journals, and invited participation in policy advisory bodies.","Institutional academic governance including curriculum committees and faculty senates — lead with integrity and sound judgment, advocating for evidence-based instructional policy across the postsecondary institution.","Complex organizational decisions regarding hiring, tenure, and promotion — make and advise on using deep subject-matter expertise, social perceptiveness, and commitment to equity in a research department.","Knowledge transfer to public audiences including policymakers and civic organizations — orchestrate through university outreach, media engagement, and applied policy writing rooted in rigorous political science scholarship.","Next-generation pedagogical frameworks integrating emerging educational technology and data tools — envision and implement institution-wide, preparing political science programs to meet the intellectual demands of a changing global landscape."]}}},"sources":{"onet":"v30.2 (CC BY 4.0)","crosswalk":"https://skillscrosswalk.com","generator":"LER.me"},"attribution":"© EBSCOed"}