* Freelance Opportunity *
The Outside Guest Lecturer (OGL) Program at Educational Testing Service (ETS) 
is seeking academics to produce audio recordings of themselves giving short 
academic lectures on topics appropriate for first-year university students. 
Candidates can be professors or advanced postgraduate students with teaching 
experience, but must have U.S. work authorization.

Please note that we do not need lectures in linguistics or languages, 
mathematics, statistics, or computer science.

* Payment *
ETS pays $1000 USD for every accepted lecture. Payment will be disbursed in 
check form or by direct deposit.

* Background *
The lectures produced for the OGL Program will serve as a basis for scripts 
prepared for the Listening Comprehension section of the TOEFL iBT® test. The 
purpose of the TOEFL® test is to provide a measure of the academic English 
language ability of non-native English speakers who wish to study at an 
English-medium university. Accordingly, the language in the TOEFL test needs to 
be representative of that which is encountered in academic settings. In the 
Listening Comprehension section of TOEFL test, for example, we ask test takers 
to listen to excerpts of academic lectures and then answer questions about 
those lectures. To help us create authentic materials, we have professors 
record themselves talking on subjects in their fields of expertise then we use 
the transcripts as a basis for our lecture scripts.

* The Tryout Process *
Candidates may send a CV and any relevant teaching syllabi to Emily Paull at 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> by Friday, April 28. If selected to 
try out, candidates will receive a training packet and will be asked to produce 
a work sample. The work sample will be a list of 4-6 potential lecture topics. 
The candidate will write one or two paragraphs (called a “kernel”) per topic, 
giving the main idea and key points for each potential lecture. In considering 
lecture topics, please be aware that the final lecture will be 5 to 10 minutes 
in length; therefore, each project might more accurately be thought of not as a 
full lecture, but as a self-contained portion excerpted from a larger lecture.

If selected for a second round, candidates will be asked to submit an outline 
based on one of their approved kernels, along with source materials. Sources 
should be marked to indicate what information from them is relevant to the 
project.

If the outline is accepted, candidates will produce a 5- to 10-minute recorded 
lecture based on the approved outline. Lectures should reflect natural speech 
patterns and must not be, or sound like, recorded versions of lectures that 
have been written out in their entirety.
ETS may request revisions to the project at the kernel stage, the outline 
stage, or the lecture stage. The tryout process generally takes around 4 to 8 
weeks.

If ETS accepts the lecture, the lecturer will be offered a contract to continue 
submitting work regularly. Once the contract is signed, the lecturer will be 
paid for the accepted tryout lecture. The process for submitting subsequent 
work is the same as the tryout process. We can accept up to 12 lectures per 
lecturer per year.

* Lecture Topics *

Though the OGL Program is looking for material that would be taught to first- 
or second-year university students, we cannot use material that is common 
knowledge or that would be the central part of a core lesson in an introductory 
course. Such material would unfairly advantage test takers who have even a 
basic level of background knowledge.

We are interested in projects that do one or more of the following:

* introduce a novel topic and its significance
* cover a common topic in an uncommon way
* cover an extended example
* describe a complex process or procedure
* compare and/or contrast two methods, objects, or situations

In addition, projects for our program must avoid:

* sensitive topics such as war, serious illness, disaster, human evolution, 
abortion, religion, etc.
* topics that people in a particular non-U.S. culture would likely have much 
more familiarity with than people in other cultures (e.g., modern Chinese 
characters)

An example of the type of kernel that would be appropriate for a work sample is 
as follows:


* The Nature of Archaeological Interpretation *

The Neolithic site of Dimini (Greece) was excavated by Christos Tsountas in 
1903. Based on the works of Homer, which say that the early Greek palaces were 
built around a large central throne-room, Tsountas interpreted the large 
central structure at Dimini as a palace where the rulers of Dimini lived, with 
their subjects occupying the dwellings around and below this throne room. 
Dimini was re-excavated by George Chourmouziadis in 1977. His interpretation 
was that the settlement at Dimini was a cooperative system of households all 
contributing to the welfare of the community... that is, it was essentially a 
commune; and at some point, someone with substantial personal wealth built the 
large structure in the middle of the settlement, thus breaking with communal 
tradition by instituting the notion of private property. It is no accident that 
Tsountas’ 1903 interpretation incorporates a monarchical model, while 
Chourmouziadis’ 1977 interpretation incorporates a socialist/capitalist model: 
when archaeologists interpret the past, they invariably do so through the lens 
of the era in which they themselves live. This is something to keep in mind 
whenever you read or listen to what archaeologists have to say about ancient 
societies.

* Where to Send Tryout Materials *
Candidates may send a CV and any relevant teaching syllabi to Emily Paull at 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> by Friday, April 28. It may take our 
team up to 4 weeks to respond after we receive your materials.

Thank you for your interest in working with ETS!


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