In some universities in North America, preceptors are student volunteers who assist the professor and teaching assistants of a large lecture class by helping to design lessons, and holding office hours and review sessions. In some cases, volunteers are required to take outside classes focused on "leadership development", where the final grade is determined by both the professor and a leadership development teacher. The term "preceptor" can also refer to a paid student grader. At some universities, including
Harvard,
Cambridge and
Oxford, "preceptors" are not students but faculty members teaching courses in
writing,
music,
mathematics,
languages or
life sciences. In some departments, they are not tenured faculty but rather non-ladder faculty, generally PhDs, who help to administer courses. Harvard preceptors, who teach introductory writing, have included the
New Yorker staff writer
George Packer, the novelist
Tom Perrotta, the former
Boston Globe music critic
Richard Dyer and the poet
Dan Chiasson. At
Columbia University, on the other hand, "preceptors" are senior graduate students who, along with senior faculty, teach courses on "Literature Humanities" and "Contemporary Civilization". The title is also used to refer to
teaching assistants at
Princeton, who are typically
graduate students. At
Elon University School of Law in
North Carolina, a preceptor is an attorney who mentors two or three first-year law students. ==Health==