āI wonder if anyone has ever died from academia,ā , a senior lecturer in popular music at the Institute of Contemporary Music Performance in London, on his Dr Drums Blog.
āMore to the point, I wonder if it will kill me.ā The self-confessed wannabe rock star describes himself as working āin the foothills of academiaā, comparing this experience to when he āused to smoke copious amounts of weedā.
āThe high is enveloping and immersive, but it makes me very anti-social and makes everything else in the day seem boring, hilarious or impossible,ā he explains. āAnd I can never find my keys.ā
The āallure of academiaā, he continues, is that it āso closely resembles a meritocracyā ā leading to long hours and an ever-growing to-do list.
Āé¶¹
āWhile I worked towards my PhD, my wife never saw me, except when I was nervous and stressed and trying to work. And now thatās all the time. Iām less free now than I ever wasā¦Iām editing books and starting up a journal. Iām writing and co-writing chapters and articles. Iām working on two more monographs,ā he says.
āIām focusing my tweets and my Facebook comments, and feeding back on studentsā work at all hours of the night. I am teaching three days a week, and being dad on two of the others, and again Iām working in Michigan this summer for less money than itāll cost me to travel.ā
Āé¶¹
Although a lot of people seem to like his work, it is never enough for them to hire him full-time, he says, adding that they tell him that āone day Iāll be huge (didnāt they say that about Van Gogh, Mozart and Bach? They all had to die first!)ā.
So why do academics work so much? Philip Nel, university distinguished professor of English and director of the graduate programme in childrenās literature at Kansas State University, in an essay on Inside Higher Ed. He proposes six answers.
āPart of it is habit,ā is the first. āWhen weāre just starting out, we learn to say āyesā to everything.ā Second, is simple economics. āAt my university we have no ācost of livingā raises. We have merit raises, but only when the state budget allow[s],ā he writes, in keeping with Dr Smithās perception of meritocracy.
Third is the fact that busyness is built into the structure of academia: āThe more you do and the longer youāre in the profession, the more opportunities and obligations accrue,ā Professor Nel writes, before moving on to number four: āWork that is āfunā is often not perceived as real work. Academics may be busy, but, hey, weāre doing what we love, so we canāt really complain, right?ā Wrong.
Āé¶¹
Technology is to blame, according to reason number five. āEmail, accessing databases from your laptop, and skyping with collaborators in distant cities all help us be more productive,ā he says. āBut can you turn it off? If you do, you may miss an important conversation.ā
Finally, the volume and nature of academic work āerases the boundary between work and not-workā, Professor Nel says. āBecause we have too much to do and because much of what we do is genuinely interesting, work always spills into the rest of our lives. This is both boon and bane.ā
Send links to topical, insightful and quirky online comment by and about academics to chris.parr@tsleducation.com
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