Help, I'm trapped in an ivory tower! Or "what the fuck am i getting myself into with this academia stuff"

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Well, what are the practical 'real-world' applications of PhDs in philosophy? What are the numbers like? Would you actively discourage students from doing research in less marketable areas and steer them towards more marketable ones? (So idk, semi-informed guessing here but maybe less medieval philosophy and philosophy of religion but more mainstream contemporary social theory work that might directly lead to a career in the public service and math-oriented work that could have some sort of technological application? And would those dissertations be as pragmatic as straight-up social science or computer science or math degrees? Or translation? Would you encourage students to leave your discipline if those other options were more practical?).

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 12:40 (nine years ago) link

I don't think philo doctorates are going to fit naturally into pre-existing job descriptions, but that's not shocking: there's not been many philosophers available to craft job descriptions for! But as I said, analysis is what we're trained to do: conceptual analysis, analysis of arguments, analysis of the space of possibilities for problems: and we do so in quite general arenas (including within history of philosophy, yes). the generality means we're not bound to problems in "just" one area, or beholden to jargon and vogue-y frameworks. I suppose I see consultant-like teams forming with an economist, a philosopher, a software person, etc. I have friends with physics doctorates who've moved into the real world and they do things like this: bring their skills in experimental design and analysis to bear on problems quite remote from their training in substance but not form. for reasons I pointed at earlier philosophers have resisted doing this, and don't individually have the financial or social support to get it off the ground: but that's something a graduate program can do, in the way they do in the sciences and engineering.

droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 13:06 (nine years ago) link

these kinds of ideas are floated a lot but they tend to run aground on the conflict between what such "training" would really require and the traditional requirements of a dissertation--and if, fine, we change the dissertation then we in fact pretty substantially change the discipline and then all of a sudden people start asking "what's the point of philosophy when we have all these other disciplines that do similar things in a more focused way?"

ryan, Tuesday, 3 March 2015 13:15 (nine years ago) link

i mean, in my own field it usually turns out to be, "yes that all sounds great but what does this have to do with joyce?"

ryan, Tuesday, 3 March 2015 13:16 (nine years ago) link

philosophy doesn't have contentual boundaries, though: it has methodological boundaries, modes of investigation, and even those are porous. tbh I don't really care about disciplines. one way that disciplines are bounded is by linking to previous literature, so that your traditional dissertation requires lots of ties to other secondary lit in the vicinity. I think we overdo that and it ties us back.

if some other discipline had the methodological views of philosophy and inquired with the depth and boldness of good philosophy into a wide range of questions then sure, replace philosophy with that. I care about knowledge and truth (and the interrogation of those), not patrolling boundaries.

I have had a few colleagues who agree with me on this but many more who have not, though.

droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 13:24 (nine years ago) link

eh i certainly agree with you in some respects, but "knowledge and truth" are not, imo, produced in and of themselves but within disciplinary boundaries where we have the particular means for evaluating them according to how knowledge and and truth are produced in those disciplines.

point being: i dont think the "knowledge and truth" that philosophy produces can be replicated in other disciplines so easily. so i guess im saying im not as sanguine about boundaries because i see a real risk when they are discarded. sometimes they should be! not always.

ryan, Tuesday, 3 March 2015 13:30 (nine years ago) link

and, fwiw, I'm not sure many disciplines in the humanities have strict boundaries on content anymore. I guess "classics" does--and look what happened there.

ryan, Tuesday, 3 March 2015 13:35 (nine years ago) link

when we're talking about getting students jobs in the real world, the means for evaluating knowledge and truth are going to be taken, in the first run at least, from the real world. think Moore "fuck yes one hand is here". I work on math where I think real world standards are pretty inapplicable a lot of the time, and that's why I love what I do; but a student who's going to work on a team helping some business improve its framework for managing product distribution or whatever, those standards are going to be set at first. then the philosopher on that team can play with the standards as well as work on the problems given, but in daily life it's not up to us to rebuild the capitalist system or whatever. my program would not be training revolutionaries, someone else can do that, it's a cool problem, but we just gotta get people fed.

droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 13:38 (nine years ago) link

Heh, my philosopher partner wrote a p good paper on the usefulness of 'useless' fields of study that I want to pull out now. I'm still having trouble seeing why this business would need a philosophy PhD on their team to improve their product distribution framework (as opposed to e.g. someone who took a couple of undergrad logic courses).

I have a good laugh when people advocate for music programmes moving wholesale into training people for the commercial music industries, as if those industries are thriving. At least a trad conservatory programme trains you pretty well to teach music lessons and play wedding gigs.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 15:42 (nine years ago) link

Anyway, I better shut off the internet for a few hours if I want to keep up my contingent academic employment.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 15:43 (nine years ago) link

yeah I'm not making a detailed case for the business in question, but just pointing out the "structure" of the fit between philosopher and business world that I have in mind. but the skills will definitely go well beyond logic: I'm talking about analysis. Logic is one part of that but by no means all of it. this is getting too vague at this point, I know; just saying that I think grad programs owe their students training toward productive work, and that what counts as "productive work" has to incorporate more than just teaching. each discipline will have to handle that in its own way. but grad training is very different from undergrad training so the expected outcomes of those programs should also be very different than what we've come to expect from higher education grads, particularly in disciplines that have traditionally seen the doctorate as leading exclusively to professorial work.

droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 15:54 (nine years ago) link

i dont think restructuring is enough, we just need fewer grad students

no (Lamp), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 16:24 (nine years ago) link

that's on students, then, not on me

droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 16:28 (nine years ago) link

you'd have to think that the tier 3 and 4 programs (if not the tier 2 eventually as well) will eventually wither away if only because there seems increasingly little to no point in attending those programs. id like to keep a close eye on undergraduate enrollment in different majors because that'll be the first sign of any big contraction in the graduate ranks.

ryan, Tuesday, 3 March 2015 16:30 (nine years ago) link

yeah students should only attend top-ish programs. I dunno about seeing signs of wither in undergrad majors, though; so many American doctoral students come from outside the USA.

droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 16:36 (nine years ago) link

that's on students, then, not on me

i dont think any of it is 'on you'! its not even really on schools either. my take is the larger problem is 'credentialism' or w/e you want to call it. which really is the fault of a fundamental shift in the labor market which &c &c

from the years i spent teaching undergraduate classes i grew to feel like so much of it was a waste - of time, of resources, of spirit - and nothing has really managed to shake that conviction. many of my students were taking 'practical, useful' science courses they had no interest in or particular aptitude for. i think the only sin you could commit teaching one of those courses was to make a drastic changes to the final exam structure so that students couldnt simply just d/l past exams and use them to study from. and its rational for students to want to exert as little energy as possible in getting the best grade they can in a course they dont care about for a degree thats only a necessity. but why have this system at all?

idk i feel like schools need to be less connected to the business world, less focused on acting as a free filtering system for firms and be smaller, more 'useless'.

no (Lamp), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 17:08 (nine years ago) link

I don't teach math anymore but I know what you mean about that. ime math depts are concerned to craft (lower level) classes that can support having a wide variety of instructors plugged in & still "succeed". I hope those courses are replaced by something genuinely automated then: that's what (ime) math depts want in those classes as it is.

in philo I don't get the grade grubbers the way I did in math, so I think this varies from discipline to discipline.

also I don't think "schools" need to be more/less connected to the business world---my current american uni has almost 2000 tt faculty, there's no unity of thought among them. departments are a better unit to have something like unity of thought, and there I think it varies by discipline: my discipline needs better contacts with the "real world" (not just business world), for math it's different, etc.

droit au butt (Euler), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 17:24 (nine years ago) link

I don't entirely disagree with Lamp's last post. If companies need a trained labour market, there's an argument to be made that they should bear the cost of workplace training.

you'd have to think that the tier 3 and 4 programs (if not the tier 2 eventually as well) will eventually wither away if only because there seems increasingly little to no point in attending those programs.

If the Colander study is to be believed, the numbers don't seem to support this. The bottom tier programs are doing just about as well as the Tier 2 programs (and not horrendously worse than Tier 1 programs) when it comes to job placement.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 17:38 (nine years ago) link

that's true, but i have to imagine it's gonna get (even) worse--particularly as you can't go "up" a tier. (a tier 4 phd won't be getting a TT placement in a tier 2 school, for instance). there's something weird about the numbers in this respect--logically you'd think they would drop off because upper tier phds have a better shot at lower tier jobs than lower tier phds do. isn't there also a backlog of upper tier phds sitting around as well? how does this backlog figure into projections? does the study take 1 year on the job market to be equivalent to 10?

ryan, Tuesday, 3 March 2015 18:13 (nine years ago) link

princeton phds ain't about southeast bumblefuck community college

j., Tuesday, 3 March 2015 18:19 (nine years ago) link

and vice versa really

j., Tuesday, 3 March 2015 18:19 (nine years ago) link

yeah that's what I was starting to think, "oh maybe they're just being snobby."

ryan, Tuesday, 3 March 2015 18:27 (nine years ago) link

my take is the larger problem is 'credentialism' or w/e you want to call it. which really is the fault of a fundamental shift in the labor market which &c &c

from the years i spent teaching undergraduate classes i grew to feel like so much of it was a waste - of time, of resources, of spirit - and nothing has really managed to shake that conviction. many of my students were taking 'practical, useful' science courses they had no interest in or particular aptitude for. i think the only sin you could commit teaching one of those courses was to make a drastic changes to the final exam structure so that students couldnt simply just d/l past exams and use them to study from. and its rational for students to want to exert as little energy as possible in getting the best grade they can in a course they dont care about for a degree thats only a necessity. but why have this system at all?

idk i feel like schools need to be less connected to the business world, less focused on acting as a free filtering system for firms and be smaller, more 'useless'.

― no (Lamp), Tuesday, March 3, 2015 12:08 PM (1 hour ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

you were probably teaching a first year course though, right? from the credentialist pov wouldn't the value of taking `practical, useful' science courses not be the kids in 1st year courses with no interest or aptitude memorizing past finals but the signal sent/skill acquired by the ones who ace the 1st year classes then opt to take advanced upper year electives, etc? like schools aren't just a `free-filtering system for firms' in that some of the kids who don't get filtered out actually learn the skills too.

also like, assuming we're moving towards some autor-ean dual labor market with a highly educated technocracy and a low-skilled service sector, isn't a function of college to give kids a taste of what they're in for if they decide to try and make it in the former? despite having a horrible undergrad gpa i actually kind of believing in the sorting equilibria function of higher ed. someone once told me the only prerequisite for studying law was not being bored by dry texts. i thought that kind of made sense. like, most people hate reading dry texts. if you realize that you like it, and can make a wage premium from doing it full time, there's a social benefit to be captured. if not, join the precariat service underclass lol

flopson, Tuesday, 3 March 2015 19:04 (nine years ago) link

well i dont think its very useful as a filtering system! i think you can send very good signals w/o learning anything - if anything i would argue that in 100 and 200 level courses a genuine desire to learn is probably disadvantageous if yr goal is simply getting the highest gpa possible. i dont think gpa is a useful sorting mechanism for the sort of system yr taking abt for lots of reasons.

also i think most work in the professional class isnt that highly skilled or technical really - i think that some kind of training or apprenticeship system is probably preferable? idk thats just a feeling really, not a serious proposal.

idk i feel like im trying to argue against a bunch of things and its not like i have any hard data to draw conclusions from. really my post was an emotional one rather than an incisive critique.

no (Lamp), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 19:18 (nine years ago) link

No, I think you're making good points!

EveningStar (Sund4r), Tuesday, 3 March 2015 19:43 (nine years ago) link

we just need fewer grad students

grad programs owe their students training toward productive work, and that what counts as "productive work" has to incorporate more than just teaching.

I don't necessarily agree with either of these statements. I think the 'casualization' of university teaching work is unjust in that people are doing demanding, skilled work (for which students are paying increasingly large sums of money) and not being compensated or evaluated in what I would consider a fair manner. However, I don't think it is in itself necessarily an injustice if graduate education does not directly lead to a career for many students. I don't think that grad programs owe, or really should owe, their students anything more or less than an education and academic freedom. As long as students are not being misinformed about the job placement numbers and as long as the people who are admitted are actually capable of doing high-level scholarly work and are given adequate support to do so (three big "as long"s), I don't necessarily see a problem with people taking a few years to study something they love with the funding to do so. It can be comparable to a four-year contract, sometimes with better conditions than other entry-level jobs. Besides, generally, people do pick up some useful skills in the process and the extra credentials can make some difference.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Wednesday, 4 March 2015 15:49 (nine years ago) link

i don't agree with either of those statements either. i think we need higher taxes on the rich to fund more generous education in this country. the concentration of privileged people in the academy defies the explicit ideals of the preponderance of thinkers taught in american colleges/universities and is more indicative of neo-feudalism than a functioning democracy

reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 4 March 2015 16:26 (nine years ago) link

i see that this, from Robert Pippen, is from last summer, but it's new to me and seemed quite interesting on a skim, even if i dont agree with everything.

As I said, my understanding of what’s been happening is that the pressure on the humanities to demonstrate their relevance anew is caused by this financial panic. It doesn’t have a serious intellectual pedigree, there isn’t a serious case. Secondly, we ought to remember that the so-called new humanities aren’t new. I mean, what’s new is the invocation of empirical science. But attacks on the autonomy of the discussion of meaning and value have been going on for forty years in the academy. The movements toward it, like semiotics, structuralism, structuralist Marxism, Althusserian Marxism, psychoanalysis, discourse theory—a variety of ways of essentially denying the phenomenon of human intentionality, another fancier word for meaning—have been going on for a long time.

So we have this perfect storm of financial panic in 2008, gradual defunding of public universities and massive increases in tuition in private universities that were accelerated by the financial panic, coming just at the time when many humanities programs were coming out of a long, thirty- or forty-year period of nearly suicidal self-criticism, just at the wrong time for there to be massive amounts of evidence that humanities programs were as critical of the enterprise that they used to be engaged in as any Steven Pinker. So it was a terrible, terrible conflation of storm elements to produce this crisis in the organization of knowledge.

As I said, for me, the most interesting single fact about it—and I’ll just stop here before I go on too long—is just the one I’ve been mentioning throughout. There is no new intellectual argument that one can cite that is responsible for the diminution in the enterprise of teaching people what it is to mean and to value. I’m in philosophy—I can tell you, there’s plenty of materialist, reductionist, eliminitivist philosophy of mind out there, but there’s nobody who’s taken on the canon of classical texts or French literature in the nineteenth century and demonstrated that the attempt by methods of rigorous analysis, textual analysis, interpretive finesse, that those methods have been discredited by a discovery. This furor is about nothing intellectual. The people who are attacking are not really presenting a principled position for which they have arguments; they’re presenting small case studies, which they purport to be exciting because they’re new and they use new methods … But it also plugs into this anxiety about the legitimacy of autonomous disciplines within the humanities, like art history, or music, or philosophy, or literature, or classics. So I think that we shouldn’t be confused by the nature of the dispute. It’s a financial dispute fueled by panic—and coming right at the wrong time in the history of the university.

ryan, Thursday, 5 March 2015 15:54 (nine years ago) link

link: http://thepointmag.com/2014/criticism/ways-knowing

ryan, Thursday, 5 March 2015 15:55 (nine years ago) link

sooooo many rejection letters today. all expected, of course, but this is some kind of black Friday.

ryan, Friday, 6 March 2015 22:13 (nine years ago) link

one of my grad student peers got tenure last night, after essentially doing… nothing at his low-level slac job, other than showing up for several years

: /

j., Friday, 6 March 2015 22:17 (nine years ago) link

really trying hard to keep the bitterness at bay, but I've got a good record of publications and a fairly relevant, maybe even "sexy," up-and-coming specialization, but I can hardly even get more than an interview or two--I'm fucking up on some major level and I can't even figure out what I is. cut of my gib is showing, I guess.

ryan, Friday, 6 March 2015 22:27 (nine years ago) link

I regret that post--I'll keep the self-pity to myself from now on!

ryan, Friday, 6 March 2015 22:33 (nine years ago) link

you should light them all on fire

http://cdn.hark.com/images/000/503/062/503062/original.jpg

j., Friday, 6 March 2015 22:53 (nine years ago) link

that might create a few openings, at least.

ryan, Friday, 6 March 2015 23:17 (nine years ago) link

two weeks pass...

the inability of adjuncts to get how difficult the real faculty have it may be their tragedy. although somehow they can't/won't arrest/reverse trends the unsophisticated might deem 'unfair'/'inhumane', certainly tenured/tenure-track professors are superior to contingent instructors intellectually, work-ethically, and diplomatically

http://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/o-adjunct-my-adjunct

the show must go on! if only the less sophisticated would accept their betters couldn't achieve important marxian/theoretical/civil rights breakthroughs, subject to plebeian conditions

reggie (qualmsley), Wednesday, 25 March 2015 22:32 (nine years ago) link

can i presume the requirement of a "statement of philosophy" for this job really means a "statement of teaching philosophy" or is this some new horrible thing i havent encountered yet.

ryan, Thursday, 26 March 2015 18:14 (nine years ago) link

I had a Skype interview on Monday for a VAP teaching position and am already seriously questioning whether I would even want to move halfway across the continent for a 4/4 teaching load. I'm growing oddly attached to my precarious lifestyle that (so far) leaves time for actual research and creative work.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Thursday, 2 April 2015 18:42 (nine years ago) link

(Think it went OK, although who ever knows?)

EveningStar (Sund4r), Thursday, 2 April 2015 18:43 (nine years ago) link

In other news, I just gave my last lecture of the semester.

EveningStar (Sund4r), Thursday, 2 April 2015 18:50 (nine years ago) link

i've gotten sent a couple (usual) long-shot short-term job opportunities lately by friends, and i'm feeling more than ever like, why would i want to move across the country for that. again (not that i've moved 'across the country' yet. but moving is moving.) i don't quite know how to justify myself to them, though - hard to sound sensible 'passing up' 'opportunities' when your status quo is far from peachy anyway.

j., Thursday, 2 April 2015 19:47 (nine years ago) link

perhaps justifiable if you believe the opportunity will somehow lead to further, and better, opportunities down the line. though this is increasingly hard to believe.

ryan, Thursday, 2 April 2015 20:08 (nine years ago) link

"the writing is just so turgid"; "I can't really see why he's insisting on..."; "This is a crazy set of pairs"; "this just doesn't work at all", &c &c. anonymous academic reviewers can be kinda mean.

cis-het shitlord (Merdeyeux), Saturday, 4 April 2015 00:20 (nine years ago) link

I would write the second and fourth of those remarks, but not the first and the third: those are really mean, "crazy", "just so turgid". ime Brits are meaner in reports, and even in letters of rec where I've seen some quite faint praise and even meanness being dished out, and maybe in the UK those are good (I doubt it) but in the USA they're...not

droit au butt (Euler), Saturday, 4 April 2015 10:39 (nine years ago) link

how much of it is because the subject and perhaps style are recogniseable within small fields and personal antipathy seeps through

Albanic Kanun Autark (nakhchivan), Saturday, 4 April 2015 11:09 (nine years ago) link

just in general not necessarily in relation to merdes, though whoever wrote that is a miserable cunt

Albanic Kanun Autark (nakhchivan), Saturday, 4 April 2015 11:13 (nine years ago) link

iirc Merdeyeux is a doctoral student so his style wouldn't be recognized; and a good editor wouldn't send an article to a referee that s/he knew would have personal antipathy toward the subject of the essay. it is very hard to find referees (people say no to me about eight times as much as yes) and accordingly harder to find good referees but this separates well-run journals from badly-run ones. I got a silly report from a silly journal to which I was persuaded to submit as part of a group of people and it reminded me why that journal is silly. I get it: you don't get paid for editorial work, you don't get teaching reductions, it's just an additional professional burden that you do for the sake of service to the profession (and the concomitant ego boost for getting the position), and so the temptation to resort to bad referees is easy to justify.

droit au butt (Euler), Saturday, 4 April 2015 11:17 (nine years ago) link

ha yeah when I was applying for jobs I was encouraged to get recommendations from Americans, or at least people who would write "American-style" recommendation letters xp

kriss akabusi cleaner (seandalai), Saturday, 4 April 2015 11:19 (nine years ago) link

anonymous academic reviewers can be kinda mean.

academics are mean, generally. especially to each other.

ryan, Saturday, 4 April 2015 13:05 (nine years ago) link

once the revolution comes that they're laying the groundwork for then they'll be as nice and humane as the values they teach suggest they should be

reggie (qualmsley), Saturday, 4 April 2015 14:02 (nine years ago) link


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