What does it mean to be an academic in the twenty first century?
Clearly, there is no one answer to this question, as the diversity
evident in the following chapters reveals. Elite research universities
often tend to join with others of their kind, so that a professor from
an elite US institution may well undertake a Japanese sabbatical (if
at all) at the University of Tokyo, a UK semester at Oxford or
Cambridge, or an Australian semester at the University of Sydney, or
perhaps Melbourne. At each, they can expect to have at their disposal
well-stocked libraries, replete with requisite books, journals and
databases, (many now available electronically), as well as highly
regarded specialist peers in their research areas, with whom they can
discuss their work in detail. How can this academic lifeworld be
compared with that of a member of the South East Asian professoriate,
for example, or many in Latin America and Africa, where inadequate
wages often necessitate taking on a second job, often at a lower
quality private institution (which, however, likely offers better
remuneration), and/or perhaps conducting a small business on the side
(Welch 2003, Tipton, Jarvis and Welch 2003), and where the lack of
basic infrastructure, as well as research training, means that
teaching, and perhaps some administration, is perhaps the limit of
one’s activities? The story of differentiation, however, is not
limited todifferences between elite institutions in OECD countries and
more modest institutions elsewhere.
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Profile of a Profession
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781402033834
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter