Skip to main content

What Professors Wait For



Ambitious professionals often wait to learn if what they have accomplished will be enough to move one step forward in their career path. Would-be university professors are no exception.

I survived the Ph.D. hazing activities (dissertation/ defence/ oral exams), which allowed me to enter employment as a psychologist. When I learned how little my advisor earned compared to my starting salary, I did not pursue an academic career and turned down an early offer from a small college.

Eventually, after a professional career, I decided to leave fulltime work as a clinician to enter academia. I have thus been a participant-observer in a very different environment than the world of the self-employed. I had to learn to wait on others who sometimes moved at a snail's pace. I often wondered if the slowness was the reason for universities' "nonprofit" status. I couldn't imagine making patients or consultees waiting for answers or decisions as happens in academia. I used to think insurance companies were slow in paying their bills until I entered the world of academia where 60-days is like warp speed.

Adding to the stress of waiting is the fact that there is so little return on investment. That is, many things professors wait for are tied to funds. But to have a chance at obtaining a few more dollars, you often have to invest considerable time to write a book proposal, complete a grant application, or submit documents to move up another rung on the academic ladder.

And, there's zero pay--not one cent--in royalties for those dense time--consuming articles you publish in a peer reviewed journal.

Here's my list of things university professors wait for. And I offer this list as something to consider by those thinking about entering academia. I should point out that the items in the list are not experienced by all professors. Surely, the waiting experiences vary with the discipline, school, individual, and the macro-economy to name a few waiting-game factors. By the way, I retired and appreciate my Emeritus Professor status. Now I wait on myself.

Some things American professors wait for...

  • approval to be eligible to teach as a low-pay-no-benefits adjunct professor--hoping for a course or two to help make ends meet
  • the availability of a course to teach as an adjunct instructor--hoping to build a CV and prove one's worth if a fulltime position becomes available
  • a phone interview in response to an application for employment
  • an in-person or video hiring interview following a successful phone interview
  • the results of a hiring interview, which can take weeks to months
  • reimbursement for travel to hiring interviews
  • a fulltime position as a professor--hoping to accomplish enough to reach the next step
  • Fall break
  • end of the Fall semester
  • Spring break
  • end of the Spring semester
  • Summer school contract -- learning if you will get a contract to teach a summer course for a few more dollars
  • the results of teacher evaluations that might influence someone in the bureaucracy about your worthiness to teach a thing or two to 18-year-olds
  • the results of a mini-grant to do some research or offer a great experience for eager students
  • students to turn in their work so you can complete grading and live a little until the next assignment or school break
  • feedback from a professional organization on whether your proposal to deliver a paper at a conference has been approved or if you will be sent to the trenches (a poster session)
  • funding to attend a conference to present your latest work to a few eager young graduate students
  • feedback from peer review on your latest journal article based on countless hours of research, writing, and re-writing
  • feedback from a book publisher on whether or not they like the proposal you spent weeks trying to prove it will be a best-seller
  • a response from administration on a modest proposal from a committee you and your colleagues considered the next best way to make university life better in some important way
  • news of getting a new contract for the following academic year
  • the response from old-time professors to your presentation of accomplishments required for promotion to the next level of professorship
  • approval for a sabbatical
  • the response from old-time professors on your application for tenure and a smidgeon of peace of mind that you might have some job protection 
  • news of a raise

**********

I wish you well and hope you find creative ways to reduce wait-time and engage in meaningful activities while waiting for others.


Links to Connections

Checkout My Page    www.suttong.com

  

My Books  AMAZON          and             GOOGLE STORE

 

FOLLOW me on   FACEBOOK   Geoff W. Sutton   TWITTER  @Geoff.W.Sutton

 

PINTEREST  www.pinterest.com/GeoffWSutton

 

Articles: Academia   Geoff W Sutton   ResearchGate   Geoffrey W Sutton 

 





Comments

Popular posts from this blog

9 Beliefs of Christian Counselors

Updated 26 Feb 2018 What Christian Counselors Believe, Value, and Practice Part I: Beliefs I once asked a conservative evangelical Christian Chaplain how he handled counseling when he was pretty sure a dying patient was not a Christian and, according to his tradition, would soon spend eternity in hell. He sincerely said he would have to think about that question. A female health care provider told me she switched jobs so she could work with children rather than seniors, because she believed that, unlike the elderly, children would go to heaven if they died. In this case, her Christian beliefs appeared to have a cause -effect influence on her career. Counselors normally focus on the needs of clients and help clients find solutions in a supportive setting. Theoretically, rapport ought to be enhanced when counselors and clients share common values and beliefs.  Why ask what Christian Counselors Believe? The primary reason ...

EASTER: VARIATIONS IN BELIEF

Differences in Religious & Spiritual Beliefs Relevant to the Easter Story By Geoffrey W. Sutton, Ph.D. at suttong.com Like most Christians, my wife and I attend an Easter Service. And, a s usual, the media rise to the Spring occasion with Bible stories, comments from various religious leaders and a few atheists—just to keep things balanced. Other religions are on the back burner until Monday. So many statements of beliefs come from the Easter events.  For now, here’s a sample of some core beliefs from various sources. God: 51% believe in God as in the Bible Statista (May, 2023) reported US belief "in God as described in holy scriptures" at 51%. Another 22% reported a belief in a higher power or spirit. Pew researchers from 2021 find 58% believe in God as described in the Bible and another 32% believe in a God or Higher Power.  Belief in God is obviously a core belief. U.S. belief has declined to 58% having no doubt God exists and another 17% have do...

Doom and Gloom and Bad Actors

  Sculpture at Terazin  2024 “Those Who Do Not Learn History Are Doomed To Repeat It.” George Santayana ***** A great quantity of information in the form of text, photographs, statues, films, drawings, and paintings portray and honour the lives of those who were victims of the Nazi’s murderous plan. The concentration camps do concentrate one’s focus on a particular era of terror. The evidence from the past 80 years suggests Santayana was right and wrong. In a sense, his statement was too general to be contradicted. For example, the specific conditions that generated and maintained the Nazi system of mass murder are unlikely to be replicated; however, some timeless characteristics of human nature persist. ***** I’m a psychologist and not a historian yet, I come away from recent visits to several Nazi terror sites with some impressions. 1. Religion supports dictators. Horrible leaders often have an amiable relationship with the larger religious groups who fail to dissuade th...