âHello, James, have a nice break?â asks the title character in Butley, the 1971 Simon Gray play about a hapless university lecturer, when his principal phones him at the start of a new term.
He immediately regrets the question. âSorry, James, I canât talk now - Iâm right in the middle of a tutorial,â Butley says abruptly, and hangs up as his colleague begins to bore him with the details of his holiday.
Itâs mere dramatic invention, but it is incontrovertibly a fact that academics worldwide approach the end of the summer and the start of a new academic year with emotions that range from annoyance to trepidation - increasingly so, in an age of budget uncertainty, bigger classes, advancing technology and studentsâ growing sense of entitlement.
Many have in common such things as insomnia on the eve of classes, or nightmares, which are surprisingly similar across cultures. Some even practise particular rituals - wearing a specific article of clothing or playing a favourite song in preparation for the start of the new academic year. Yet at a time when an entire industry has grown up around readying students for the resumption of university each autumn, only a few institutions prepare their staff to cope.
Âé¶č
âItâs not a topic that is discussed often in the faculty lunchroom but faculty have high levels of anxiety when the semester begins,â says Peter Seldin, an emeritus professor of management at the Lubin School of Business at Pace University in New York and author of the book Coping with Faculty Stress, who has worked as a consultant to universities in 40 countries. âIn fact, I cannot remember ever talking about this topic with any of my colleagues, and thatâs over a 30-year span.â
Seldin says he has visited universities in countries as varied as South Africa, Finland and Malaysia, and found, after careful encouragement to speak frankly, that âthereâs a commonality to that faculty experience. Itâs the uncertainty that comes at the beginning of a term.â
Âé¶č
Thatâs precisely the theme emerging from a collaboration between the University of Kent, Leeds Metropolitan University and other partner institutions that solicits diary entries from faculty members - predominantly in the UK, although it is open to academics worldwide - about their daily lives and normal routines. It seems that academics taking part in the Share Project (), where submissions are anonymous, confront the start of a new term with a flood of conflicting, often uneasy, emotions.
âIt is only one week to the start of a new academic quarter, and the activities on campus have already intensified,â one diarist recorded. âWith class preparations, research/student projects, committee work and other service work in full swing, Iâm feeling a mix of excitement, anxiety, exhaustion and uncertainty.â
Another was âawake at 4am worrying about the tsunami that is the new academic yearâ. The pattern continued in this entry: âMy day had a false start at 3am. Term hasnât started yet, and Iâm already waking up in the night, worrying about how Iâm going to cope.â
For Julie Nelson Christoph, the problem isnât trouble sleeping, itâs the nightmares that occur when she does. The associate professor of English at the University of Puget Sound, in the US Northwest, says she has recurring dreams when the autumn term nears âwhere you show up and your teeth fall out, or youâre naked, or you canât find the classroom or you walk in and you realise youâre not prepared. Itâs fear, panic.â
Nightmares are surprisingly common. Jane Buck, the former president of the American Association of University Professors and a retired professor of psychology, dreamed that she would show up at the wrong time in the wrong place. Once, she says, it actually happened. âI walked into a classroom and began with, âThis is Psychology 206 and the textbook is such and suchâ, and Iâm rattling on and I could tell I had completely lost the class. I looked around at the stunned looks on their faces and realised I was in the wrong class.â
Such fears, says Buck, âare akin to stage fright. One thing a lot of people donât think about is that, as a professor, you are on stage every time you walk into a classroom. I imagine for some people there is the impostor effect: do I really deserve to be here, will I be found out, will the students like me, will they respect me?â
Some academics admit to being unsettled, like the fictional Ben Butley, by the switch from quiet, solitary summers doing research or writing to the abrupt arrival of new terms with busy schedules and increasing responsibilities. âItâs always stressful to change gears,â James Turk, executive director of the Canadian Association of University Teachers, says.
âA pretty standard day for the week before our registration week, this, I suppose - consisting of doing highly professorial things such as photocopying,â one diary writer told the Share Project. âThis is technically the last research week of the summer, but no research can be done in a day of this kind.â
Âé¶č
The same principle holds true for an academic as for a banker returning to the office after a holiday. âYouâd still rather be on vacation,â says Naomi Baron, director of the Center for Teaching, Research and Learning at American University in Washington DC.
âFaculty are human beings,â says Baron. âIâll vouch for this. I have a pulse. And they have the same kinds of disgruntlements, the same kinds of uncertainties, that anybody does moving from one pace, one schedule, to another. If youâve been doing some serious work during the summer, now you have to put away where your brain has been, or maybe even where your heart has been.â
Students, meanwhile, can have a disproportionate share of control in the classroom at the start of a new term, academics say. Theyâve often already had days or weeks to get to know each other, living and eating together. âYouâre the new kid, as the academic walking into that class,â says Christoph.
âThe notion of respect - and I donât mean that in an authoritarian way, but the notion of people coming to a university because they really respect what the faculty has to offer - has died,â claims Baron. âThe students feel very empowered. A colleague of mine described faculty as having become waiters with serviettes on their arms. Itâs not just, âwho are these people, will they like me?â Itâs, âIâm supposed to sell myself to themâ.â
Well, maybe not waiters, says Turk, who formerly taught Canadian and labour studies and sociology. (He has had those nightmares, too, of sleeping in and missing class, and of being unprepared.) But he agrees that âa source of anxiety is the extent to which university administrators are treating students as customers and putting faculty in more vulnerable positions as a result of that. Thereâs a sense that faculty have that administrators are expecting not that they be waiters, but that theyâre service providers.â
Meanwhile, Turk says, in North American universities, students take their time at the start of the semester deciding which classes most appeal to them. âYou have lots of people shopping during those first three weeks, so youâre trying to make the course interesting and challenging, knowing that students are wandering through.â
Shobhit Mahajan, professor of physics at the University of Delhi, says that when he started teaching over 25 years ago, âthe percentage of uninterested students was possibly much less than it is today. More importantly, there were always a few very motivated, interested and energetic students in the classâŠNow, unfortunately, it is rare to find even a handful who might be interested in the subject.â
Student evaluations are becoming increasingly important and research shows that first impressions are among the most crucial. In one study, teaching evaluations filled out by students after the first 10 minutes of the first class were strikingly similar to evaluations they completed at the end of the term.
âSetting the tone in the very first class is critically important,â says Amy Hillman, executive dean of the W.P. Carey School of Business at Arizona State University, who has also taught in Austria and Canada. âIf you arenât nervous about the first class, youâre probably not very human. Being in front of a new audience and having the ability to connect or disconnect with them within the first few moments can be very daunting.â
Hillman compares the first class of a new term to a job interview, âwhere you walk in and you have a relatively short time to make a first impression. If I donât get them excited about what weâre going to do in that very first class, Iâve got a much harder job the rest of the semester.â

Baron likens the experience not to a job interview but to a first date. âYou donât know what the other person, or in this case people, will be like,â she says. âUntil you can feel comfort with your audience, youâre shaking in your boots.â
There are other new developments in higher education that intensify scholarsâ fears with each new academic year. One is whether academics will even have classes to return to - especially the increasing numbers of contingent, part-time staff, who may be hired and fired at the whim of enrolment and budget shifts.
âTheir anxiety is, will they have a job?â says Buck. âIn many cases, the loss of a single course could mean their income for that semester is reduced by half or a third. On top of which, theyâre preparing in hopes of having a course and it may all be in vain because the course may not materialise.â
Âé¶č
The digital divide, too, can intimidate academics less comfortable with new technologies than their students or younger peers. âOlder faculty have been grudgingly dragged into the technology age and weâre less confident of our own abilities,â says Seldin. Thereâs also the competition from the technologies that students have, says Turk - iPhones, iPads, laptops. âAre they texting friends, are they checking their email, are they paying attention to your lectures? The new technologies are an opportunity but do pose the challenge of distraction.â
Meanwhile, Baron says, the demands on academicsâ time have been growing astoundingly. âNot just exponentially - astoundingly. The idea that I will teach my classes and then I can go off and thinkâŠNo, you now have committee meetings, youâre meeting with students. Thereâs really a feeling of being pressed from all sides.â
Some confess to a weariness that comes after years of repeating the annual cycle. For Arjun Mahey, a lecturer in English at the University of Delhi, the beginning of a new term - and in India, the term starts in July - âprompts a sensation of profound dreariness: the bureaucratic paperwork, the confusion of timings, the uncertainty and the tedium of knowing that I face yet another year of a now-cheerless standard operating procedure.â He likens it to what, in athletic training, is called muscle fatigue.
Mahey says that, depending on the students he is called upon to teach, his feelings âcan range from boredom to trepidation to cheerful anticipation. When I was younger, I was quickened by an eager enthusiasm. In later years, it was the solacing feel of routine.â Now, he says, âItâs simply a regimented drill.â
But reassuringly for many, anxiety and worry turn to excitement and enthusiasm.
âThe weather has turned unpleasant and everyone is under the pall of the return of students,â one academic told the Share Project. âThis period of anticipation (after a long summer of freedom) is more unpleasant than the reality of encountering students, (which is) usually rather pleasant and intriguing.â
Once she gets past her trepidation, Hillman says, she remembers that âthis is a new group of students. Thatâs what gets me going.â
Hillman practises a ritual before every first class: she listens to upbeat music, usually by the Red Hot Chili Peppers. Earlier in her career, when she was not much older than her students, she says, she also always wore a red business suit, âa really fantastic power suit. It was something that gave me confidence.â
Eileen Barrett teaches English and is director of faculty development at California State University East Bay, in San Francisco, which produces a video for academics about how to make the most of a first class.
She says that in her first class of a new term she has her students read the first paragraph of every book they will study, including Virginia Woolfâs To the Lighthouse, the first words of which are, ââYes, of course, if itâs fine tomorrow,â said Mrs Ramsay.â
Shen Guolin, a professor of journalism at Fudan University in Shanghai, always tells his first classes about his own experiences since studying at university. âA lot of my personal stories are hopefully helpful to my studentsâ lives,â he says.
Christophâs rituals are âthe sort of sensible things you do before something youâre worried about: eat a good breakfast, get a good nightâs sleepâ. And when Baron taught at Brown, one of her colleagues would wear a business suit to the first class and then never wear a suit again. âIt was his way of not so much exerting authority but of saying, I do own a suit, in case youâre wondering,â she says.
David L. Stoloff, professor of education and director of the Center for Educational Excellence at Eastern Connecticut State University, has a start-of-term ritual, too. He ends every first class with the first stanza of a song - Uncle Johnâs Band, by the Grateful Dead:
Well, the first days are the hardest days
Donât you worry any more.
When life looks like Easy Street,
here is danger at your door.
Think this through with me.
Let me know your mind.
Wo-oah, what I want to know
is are you kind?

Fresh start or shock to the system? Academics on the start of the year
Times Higher Education asked members of its Reader Panel how they felt about the start of the new academic year.
âThe new term signals the arrival of new students with fresh attitudes,â says Claire Taylor, dean of students and academic engagement at Bishop Grosseteste University College. âIt is a privilege to see them arriving and enjoying the buzz of making new friends, meeting tutors and finding out about freshersâ activities.â
Another panel member, who asks not to be identified, says she likes to âspot the âAâ and âEâ students before they submit their first assignmentâ. She also enjoys the fact that her office is tidy. âThere is now some semblance of order around my deskâ and ânew books around that smell so goodâ.
Her resolutions for the new year include using her blog (âIf only I could think of something to put on itâ), updating her web profile (âI hate web editing softwareâ), thinking of âsome brilliant way to use Second Life/podcastsâ and keeping âon top of the call for papers from highly rated journalsâ (she never finds the time).
But Patrick OâSullivan, professor of business ethics and head of the department of people, organisations and society at Grenoble School of Management in France, always finds September a shock to the system.
âFinished are the balmy summer days of leisurely rising and writing interspersed with outdoor pursuits when time seemed to stand still: now we are faced again with, horror of horrors, fixed timetables for classes and meetings.â
He adds: âIt is well known that the stock markets do systematically worse in the autumn as post-summer depression sets in but less studied perhaps is the rude shock to the academicâs constitution of this sudden change of biorhythm.â
There is the return âwith a heavy heartâ to âthe drudgery of regular classes, more boring and interminable meetings, more boring quality control procedures and very soon more marking just as we had got over last yearâs backlogâ. However, all is not gloom and doom.
With the arrival of âlots of new and friendly faces eager to sit at our feet and learnâ, âthere may also come some startling new ideas to awaken us, Kantian style, from our âdogmatic slumbersâ. They may even lead us to radically new theories and visions of the world,â OâSullivan says.
Thom Brooks, reader in political and legal philosophy at Newcastle University, wonders if 2011-12 will be the end of an era given the changes facing universities in England. âMy hope is that the academic experience for all continues to improve, but my worry is that too much of our time will be spent preparing ourselves for 2012-13,â he says.
Âé¶č
âą Times Higher Education invites academics and university staff to join its Reader Panel. If you are prepared to receive emails from our journalists asking for comments on developments in the sector, email John Elmes, THEâs editorial assistant, who will add your contact details to THEâs Reader Panel database.
Register to continue
Why register?
- Registration is free and only takes a moment
- Once registered, you can read 3 articles a month
- Sign up for our newsletter
Subscribe
Or subscribe for unlimited access to:
- Unlimited access to news, views, insights & reviews
- Digital editions
- Digital access to °Ő±á·Ąâs university and college rankings analysis
Already registered or a current subscriber?
