March 31, 2005

Guerrilla Girls @ OSU

The women's center at OSU is bringing the Guerrilla Girls to the LaSells Stewart Center, April 21, at 8pm. I called and it sounds like the Guerrilla Girls have not really identified what they will be discussing, but the women at the center were all really, really excited. I think it would be very interesting to go. They have been producing feminist/activist art for twenty years now.

March 24, 2005

Defining Failure in Academia

This article is worth reading for anyone considering graduate schoool, already in graduate school, or looking for an academic job. The article summarizes some serious concerns about how the academic culture defines "failure". It appeared in this week's Chronicle of Higher Education.

A Ph.D. and a Failure
By MEGAN PINCUS KAJITANI and REBECCA BRYANT

What you should know about nonacademic careers for Ph.D.'s

As graduate career counselors at two major research universities, we encounter the F-word a lot, but not the one you think. The F-word we hear is "failure" -- a nasty, horrible utterance applied to many an overachieving Ph.D. who falls short of finding a tenure-track job.

Fear of that word -- for the summa cum laude, the Phi Beta Kappa, or the NSF grant recipient -- can become debilitating and demoralizing, turning a once confident and optimistic young adult into a depressed, panic-ridden, and paralyzed recluse. Unfortunately, we are not exaggerating.

The real problem here is the painfully constrictive definitions of failure and success within academe.

Failure, says academic culture, is anything other than achieving the ultimate goal of a tenure-track professorship. More specifically, the epitome of success is a tenure-track job at a major research university. You're still successful, albeit to a lesser degree, if that job is at a liberal-arts college, and even less so if it's at a community college. But a nonacademic career, well, that's just unacceptable.

That may seem a harsh indictment, but we've witnessed such attitudes time and again in our own experiences as former doctoral students and in those of the graduate students we now advise.

We know there are exceptions: deans who boldly pay for programs to help graduate students explore diverse career opportunities; faculty advisers who surreptitiously write reference letters for their students to apply to law school, to teach at a community college, or to seek a nonacademic job. And attitudes vary somewhat among disciplines.

But there are countless faculty members, administrators, and students themselves who continue to perpetuate a narrow definition of success in academe. Anything else is "less than."

Unfortunately, the hard facts show again and again that only a small percentage of doctoral students can achieve the success of becoming a tenure-track professor at a research institution. In their study, "Ph.D.'s -- 10 Years Later," Maresi Nerad and Joseph Cerny found that only 58 percent of Ph.D.'s in English were on the tenure track or tenured 10 years after graduation. Of those, less than a fifth worked at top research universities (The Chronicle, September 10, 1999).

Those numbers do not include the approximately 50 percent of students -- cited by Barbara E. Lovitts in Leaving the Ivory Tower: The Causes and Consequences of the Departure From Doctoral Study -- who never even completed their Ph.D.'s. Thus, a great majority of students who begin doctoral programs will never reach the "nirvana" of the tenure track. What happens to all of those students who don't make the cut?

Perhaps such figures help explain the recent finding that "depression and other forms of mental distress" were a serious problem in a study of more than 3,100 graduate students at the University of California at Berkeley. According to the study: "Nearly half of all survey respondents (45 percent) reported an emotional or stress-related problem that significantly impacted their academic performance or well-being." Another 67 percent reported feeling hopeless at times, 95 percent felt overwhelmed in graduate school, and 54 percent said they had felt so "depressed that it was difficult to function." About 10 percent had seriously considered suicide, and one in 200 had actually attempted suicide in the last year.

The Berkeley study cites dysfunctional relationships with faculty advisers, significant family responsibilities, financial difficulties, isolation from campus life and student resources, and an inability to recognize the symptoms of a psychological problem as possible reasons for graduate students' declining mental health.

We argue that all of those factors are part of the overall academic culture that privileges a narrow and largely unreasonable standard of success.

We've had to confront the academic line about failure in our own lives: One of us (Rebecca), a Ph.D. in musicology, recently ran into a former professor who said Rebecca would "never be truly happy" if she did not become an academic musicologist. The other (Megan) completed four years of doctoral work in communication before deciding that her current staff
position allows her the balance that she wants in her life, as well as the opportunity to have a daily impact. But Megan has been scolded by people she barely knows for "giving up" and not becoming a professor. (Since when did a master's degree and a meaningful career become failure?)

We've also heard the stories of students who come to us for career advice:

A Ph.D., thrilled to land a faculty position at a liberal-arts college near her home, is asked by her dissertation adviser when she was going to "get a job." Presumably, a "real" one.

An alumnus, unwilling to spend yet another year unsuccessfully searching for a tenure-track position, moves on to a new career. He hides his choice from his former adviser, fearing his mentor's disappointment.

Two graduate students who are pursuing community-college careers are terrified to tell their dissertation committees, and another student fears that her fellow graduate students will shun her for considering leaving her Ph.D. program for the nonprofit world. During a recent meeting of a new career-support group for graduate students, the topic of "feeling like a quitter" evoked painful emotions from many participants and was revealed as their biggest obstacle in choosing an alternative career path, with "not knowing there were other options" a close second. Clearly the myopic mission of many doctoral programs often clashes with graduate students' changing priorities, and could be a factor in academe's high attrition rates.

At both of our universities, we have established programs and counseling services to help graduate students counter the idea that they are successful only if they become research faculty members, and to help them explore other potential career options.

This spring the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign held a well-attended symposium titled "Defining Academic Success," during which faculty and staff members from non-research-oriented institutions shared their stories and introduced students to new notions of a successful academic career.

At the University of California at San Diego, a workshop on "Alternatives to Academia for Graduate Students" drew a standing-room-only crowd last year, prompting an encore this year that attracted more than 100 graduate students.

At both institutions, we encourage graduate students to learn about the academic job search process early on in graduate school, so they can better prepare for what it requires and make conscious choices about whether it feels right for them.

What can be done on your campus?

If you're a faculty member, open your mind to a diversity of career choices for your advisees. Validate their interest in teaching or other work, not just academic research. Acknowledge alumni or former students who have "succeeded" in a range of career paths. Be realistic with students about the job market, as well as your own experience in it, and realize that not everyone wants to do what you do.

If you're an administrator, support career panels, workshops, and conferences that validate a variety of career options. Offer mental-health services for graduate student and training programs for faculty mentors. Conduct studies on graduate-student attrition and satisfaction on your campus.

If you're a graduate student, step outside of the limited perspective of the Ph.D. world and look at other versions of success. Consider what you need to be happy and successful, not just your adviser's definition. Cover your bases by pursuing other interests or experiences during graduate school; don't put all of your eggs in one basket. Take advantage of workshops and support services, and demand them if they're not available. Finally, realize that sometimes changing your mind is the right decision.

For all parties involved, we urge a re-examination of success and failure in doctoral studies. The abundance of shame, depression, anxiety, and paralysis among incredibly talented and capable graduate students can be lessened by offering them more options for a satisfying life and career, and more validation for their choices. Think about that the next time you
inflict the F-word on yourself or on others.


Megan Pincus Kajitani is the graduate-student adviser in the Career Services Center at the University of California at San Diego. A former journalist, she received her M.A. in communication arts from the University of Wisconsin at Madison. Rebecca Bryant is the director of the Graduate College Career Services Office at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She earned her Ph.D. in musicology from the University of Illinois.

March 23, 2005

Warhol Carpool

Ladies and Gentlemen,
For those of you making the trip from Corvallis to the U of O on the 16th interested in ride-sharing, email me @ hornerjw@email.com. Save the planet and see art at the same time!

March 19, 2005

Warhol Exhibition

I'm giving plenty of notice here. There will be an organized trip to the University of Oregon Museum of Art to view the Andy Warhol screenprints from the collection of the Jordan Schnitzer Family Foundation. We will meet in the lobby of the museum on Saturday, April 16 at 1:00 PM. Information on the museum and exhibit can be viewed on the university website.



"Once you 'got' Pop, you could never see a sign the same way again. And once you thought Pop, you could never see America the same way again." -Andy Warhol.

Exhibition Information

UPDATE: For interested individuals, after the museum visit we will be meeting at the East 19th Street Cafe (Yes, yet another McMenamins.). Information and address

Please, let me know if you plan to come. Post a brief RSVP in the "responses" below. Thanks!

March 10, 2005

Guidelines

Here are some general guidelines, suggestions and objectives for posting:

  • To become a contributor to Tesserae you must be or have been a colleague or student of John Machado, but all are encouraged and welcome to participate in the discussion.

  • Send an email to request being added as a contributor.

  • Contributors can make new posts to Tesserae and edit their own posts, but they are not able to make other changes to the blog.

  • To be a contributor you must first open a free Google account.

  • You can make responses to posts on Tesserae without being an official contributor by simply clicking on "comments" at the bottom of any post.

  • Please, be professional and respectful in your posts and responses. You should be analytical and critical in your discussions, but not personal. Participants on this blog will range from novices to professionals. All are welcome.

  • Remember to restrict your posts to topics of visual art and art history. Some suggestions...
    • Discuss a work of art you recently viewed.
    • Review an article or book you have read or a movie you have seen that covers an aspect of the visual arts.
    • Share an art museum or gallery going experience.
    • Are you traveling in a distant land? Keep us up to date on all the interesting art and architecture you are seeing.
    • Pose a question that you would like to hear other people's thoughts on.
    • Recommend an upcoming art-related event to attend.
    • Share a piece of information that might be useful to other artists and art historians.

  • If you are posting for course extra credit, be sure to include your full name.

  • UPDATE: An important note on plagiarism.

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