Since I entered graduate school, I've heard the same advice given to grad students when the opportunity comes up for teaching:
- "Have you taught before? If so, you don't need to do it again, it's already on your CV."
- "You're going on the market – and the hiring committee will care about your publications, not your teaching."
- "Even the 'teaching-centric' liberal arts schools don't have a good way to include teaching when they evaluate hires, so teaching just doesn't matter."
- "Get one independent class to show you can do it – and no more than that."
I'm sincerely curious whether anyone knows of instances where teaching experience, or teaching excellence, has a clearly positive effect on an academic's career either for tenure, hiring, getting interviews, etc.?