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My former teacher, who had done her PhD in a top-10 university in the UK in 2009, is an assistant professor in my former school. On the day when I visited my former school, I saw her at the school canteen unexpectedly. I smiled and nodded to her before I said "Good afternoon, Professor Aiko." We were talking for a few minutes before she went back to her office. When I was sitting on a subway train on my way home, however, I was wondering if it was impolite for me to call her that. Can I call an assistant professor a professor, and say "Hello Prof. Nickname"?

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    The practice depends on the country and to a certain extent, on the custom of a particular institution. In the United States, someone who holds the doctorate us usually called "doctor" even if they also hold the rank of professor. No matter, what you did is OK.
    – Bob Brown
    Commented Jan 18, 2015 at 19:36
  • 14
    @BobBrown: Even within the US, this varies from place to place, and at some places (perhaps more often at major universities) "Professor" is preferred to "Doctor" when both apply. See also my answer here and its comments. Commented Jan 18, 2015 at 19:40
  • 16
    "In the United States, someone who holds the doctorate us usually called "doctor" even if they also hold the rank of professor." That is very subtle and institution-dependent. Paul Halmos has a really nice passage about it in his autobiography. At some schools "professor" is more honorific because there are lots of other people around with doctorates. In fact I feel that way, and even though I agree that what you describe is the standard practice at my school (we're in the same region, after all), I prefer students to call me "Professor Clark" or "Pete" and many of them do figure this out. Commented Jan 18, 2015 at 19:42
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    @kitty: Neither, but it's not as cute as you think. If you did it more than once or twice, I would ask you as nicely as I could to please just call me Pete. Commented Jan 18, 2015 at 19:53
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    To those who might be slightly offended by such address (i.e. 'Prof Firstname') please do keep in mind that many exchange students, or students who have not been in the host country long enough and belong to different ethnicity might be having a hard time figuring out first name from last name. Also there are cultures where addressing someone by their first name (especially a teacher, mentor, 'guru') is taboo, as it is considered disrespectful. Overall, in today's time and day, if you wish to be addressed a certain way, consider it your own responsibility state it clearly & without ambiguity.
    – bdutta74
    Commented Jan 20, 2015 at 6:14

14 Answers 14

42

Yes you can.

The "Assistant Professor" still teaches. The word Assistant is there to denote the rank within the academic system. Some have taught longer and are more accomplished and are rewarded accordingly.

Actually, calling the person "Assistant Professor Jones" would be very awkward and cumbersome. It should be avoided.

56

Yes, you can call any kind of professor a professor, and you should. Addressing someone as "assistant professor" or "associate professor" would be...well, it's simply not done, so I can't say if it would be rude or just weird.

It is similar to military protocol, actually: e.g. if someone is a rear or vice admiral, you call them admiral. In contrast to the above example, I'm sure some knowledgeable party could be specific about what bad thing could happen to you if you screw that up!

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    similarly you wouldn't call a special endowed professor "Otis E. Randall University Professor" in an informal conversation or email. I feel that "assistant" is a similar modifier. Commented Jan 18, 2015 at 20:06
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    But in the UK, at least historically, there are not assistant and associate professors but rather lecturers and readers.
    – StrongBad
    Commented Jan 18, 2015 at 20:14
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    "Rear Admiral (lower half) Associate Professor Grace Hooper". I would go for just verbosely weird.
    – Davidmh
    Commented Jan 19, 2015 at 0:28
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    @Davidmh: Hopefully you'd at least spell her last name properly... Commented Jan 19, 2015 at 1:39
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    @StrongBad: indeed, all across the UK, professors are experiencing a devaluation of the "Professor" title. I assume without proof that there's at least a little resistance therefore to calling newly-minted associate professors by the title (and not just from full professors) on the basis that it's the end of civilisation. One should check Debrett's if it really matters, or a particular university's own internal guidelines :-) Commented Jan 20, 2015 at 13:03
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Yes, you can call an assistant or associate professor "Professor." That's completely normal practice. The only time it might be inappropriate is if you are writing them in a formal context. "Prof. Smith" is always OK, but saying "Mary Smith, Professor of Unusual Studies" isn't really appropriate if Smith is an assistant or associate professor.

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This is not an answer but an anecdote about my current university. For whatever reason, someone decided that the faculty with Ph.D.'s should be addressed as Dr., whereas those with only a masters degree should be called Professor. There are some Ph.D.'s on the faculty who are offended if you call them Professor, despite the fact that they hold the rank of Professor. To me, this is much ado about nothing. I always caution my own students to be aware of our peculiar situation. However, I tell them to call me Mr., Professor, or Dr., whichever they feel most comfortable with.

(I had experience with two graduate schools in the US. In one the facuty were all addressed as Dr., in the other, all were addressed as Professor. Local norms and customs are hard to figure out!)

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    "Whereas those with only a masters degree should be called Professor" - weirdest one I ever heard.
    – smci
    Commented Jan 19, 2015 at 4:19
  • Interesting. Which country is this? It sounds like Mediterranean influence. Commented Oct 31, 2017 at 13:20
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    @henning - This is the US. You wold have to know the institution to appreciate how bizarre this situation is. Commented Nov 1, 2017 at 2:18
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In Hungarian, we address only full professors as "professor". [Professzor úr! /Professzor asszony!]

"Mister/Ms teacher" would be the universal addressing for educators. [Tanár úr! / Tanárnő!]

(The exclamation mark goes with addressing in writing in Hungarian.)

"Mister Assistant Professor" would be awkward.

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My impression is that, when someone is a professor and holds a doctorate, it's appropriate to use the "higher" of the two titles when addressing him or her. Which title that is depends on the institution. At some institutions, the people with doctorates are a proper subset of the professors; there "doctor" is the higher title. At other institutions, all the professors and some other people as well have doctorates; there "professor" is the higher title.

Of course, to follow this advice, you have to know who has a doctorate, and you have to know people's ranks, and you have to know what sort of institution is involved. In the absence of that knowledge, just use a title that seems appropriate. As Chris said, some people can be offended if you guess wrong, but I expect that those people are not very numerous. And, as far as I'm concerned, their being offended is their problem, not yours.

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I am a visiting professor and this is not my primary role. I have asked the human resources department at the university how I should be addressed. They suggested that the verbal title professor is appropriate. However, when written, I should state that I am a visiting professor ie Professor Nickname, Primary role details, Visiting professor, University details. Actually I always invite people to use my first name anyway!

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I would just go to the sports analogy. You have head coaches (professors) and assistant coaches (assistant professors). I can't imagine calling any assistant coach who has coached me "assistant coach". Just saying it is a bit demeaning and basically reminding them that they are just an assistant. I think at best if used you would seem a bit naive and at worst a jerk.

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Yes, You can.

Hello Professor Nickname and Hello Assistant Professor Nickname: Simply compare these two and you will see that the first one seems more polite and normal. (However, culture of calling people and it's etiquette may vary in different countries and universities.)

However, I think that Hello Doctor Nickname or Hello Mrs./Mr. Nickname are good choices if you are in doubt about the politeness/correctness of using a specific title.


PS: This may be too pessimistic (and not so true) but I afraid, using Hello Assistant Professor Nickname may cause the person to feel that the student wants to remind that professor her level of profession (something like: you are an assistant professor not a professor) and this may cause her to be annoyed.

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Another quirk: Here at a large Austrian university, my official German job title is "Universitätsassistent (postdoc)", which directly translates to "University Assistant (postdoc)". The official translation, however, is "Assistant Professor". And yet I don't have the rank of an Austrian Professor (neither "ordinary" nor "extraordinary"), and so German speakers would in fact be wrong to address me as "Professor so-and-so".

This is of course not only confusing to me. Since I also have a somewhat foreign name, students address me in all kinds of ways. I just got use to it as a fact of life.

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    Oh here in Austria you'll sometimes even get called Professor while beeing Univ.Ass. prä-doc. We love our titles and we got some strange ones. I was a "Kollegiat" during my PhD since I was part of a Doktoratskolleg (PhD school) which was abbreviated in the system as "Kolleg.". Students wrote me mails with "Sehr geehrter Kollege DSVA" (dear colleague DSVA.)...
    – user64845
    Commented Nov 1, 2017 at 15:32
3

Yes, being a Professor is a profession, the Assistant, Associate, or Full Professor just denotes rank.

At my school students also address lecturers as Professor in recognition of their role (and a sign of respect) which is perfectly fine and appropriate.

I'm in the US, and a professor (with rank of Associate).

The best thing is to just ask the person in question, some of my colleagues are rather informal, my cultural background is more formal. Consequently, different people will feel differently - you can't go wrong if you ask.

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In Finland, in most fields, anyone would be immensely confused by any titles beside their names, usually their first name or a nickname, outside some extraordinarily official circumstances. Just to give further indication of how country-dependent this really is.

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In our country, Prof holds a higher value when you are in the academe. We have many PhDs but only few becomes a full Professor. And nobody calls you a Prof until you become a Full Professor. You are not even considered a Prof if you are an associate or an assistant Prof. Come to think of it, You can earn your PhD by completing a program (4-5yrs) but to become a full Professor, you need decades and decades (minimum # of researh, min # of Publications in ISI journal, Min Number of Community Work, Min # of teaching experience, Min Number of presentationa, etc). Its very difficult to become a Full Professor that it holds more value than any position in the academe.

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    What country might that be?
    – cag51
    Commented Nov 29, 2018 at 22:27
-1

In Australia the convention seems to be the opposite of that described in most of these answers --- it is usual here to reserve the title of "Professor" only to someone who is a fully professor. It is certainly not offensive to call someone "Professor" if they are at a lower level, but it might feel unearned to the recipient.

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  • I assume the last column pertains to writing only (while this question seems to be mostly about speaking face-to-face). Or do you really say "G'day, Assoc Prof Ben" in Australia? :) Commented Nov 30, 2018 at 21:45
  • Yeah, it's only writing - in person you'd just directly say, "G'day ya ugly bastard!"
    – Ben
    Commented Nov 30, 2018 at 22:25

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