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The phrase "an associate instructor" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to refer to a teaching position that is typically subordinate to a full instructor or professor, often in an academic setting. Example: "She was hired as an associate instructor in the English department to assist with introductory courses."
Exact(3)
She was until June an associate instructor of art education at the University of Texas at Austin, where she received a master's degree in that subject.
"If you look at a natural hairline, it's very soft, like baby hair," said Dr. Sanusi Umar, an associate instructor of dermatology at the medical school of the University of California, Los Angeles, and author of the new report.
Rick Brunson is an associate instructor of journalism in UCF's Nicholson School of Communication.
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At Berkeley he was, successively, research associate, instructor, and assistant professor (1937 45), becoming professor of chemistry in 1946.
Most institutions have a shorter list of possible titles, but you still might find yourself termed a postdoctoral scholar, a research associate, a laboratory instructor, a contract employee, a research fellow, a visiting scholar... or any of a number of other titles.
Her mother, Patricia H. Glynn, is a sales associate and instructor at the Needle Nook, a needlepoint shop in La Jolla.
Returning to Boston in 1984, she worked first as a research associate and instructor in the cardiology department at Children's Hospital and then, starting in 1988, as an assistant professor at Boston University.
Instructor A was an associate professor with 6 yr of college teaching experience who had received specialized pedagogical training at both the graduate and postdoctoral level and who was teaching this course for the second time.
From 1926 until 1930 he taught physics at University of California, Berkeley as an instructor, and then as an associate professor.
In September, she is to become a clinical instructor of dermatology at Harvard Medical School and an associate physician in the dermatology department at Brigham and Women's Hospital.
He was appointed an instructor in 1924, an assistant professor in 1925, an associate professor in 1929, and a full professor in 1936.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com