TY - JOUR
T1 - 'I'm not a real academic'
T2 - a career from industry to academe
AU - Santoro, Ninetta
AU - Snead, S
N1 - Dr. Ninetta Santoro is an Associate Professor of Education and the Head of the
School of Teacher Education at Charles Sturt University in Australia. Her research
engages with how teacher and academic identities are constructed and taken up
within educational milieus, in particular, teacher education contexts. She has
published in the areas of classroom practice, teacher education, language education
and research methodology.
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - Over the past thirty years universities have increasingly extended their offerings of vocationally oriented degrees and have recruited into academe, practitioners from the professions. This paper reports on a qualitative study that investigated the experiences of 20 professionals-turned-academics in Australia; their expectations of academe and how they defined, resisted and took up the multiple and changing roles associated with academic work. Findings indicate that the majority experienced nostalgia for universities of the past which they imagined to be places of intellectual elitism and curiosity-driven research and scholarship. At the same time, they identified strongly as practitioners within their professional fields, were committed to field-oriented practical education and resisted taking up researcher identities, understanding ‘real’ research in narrowly defined terms. Our discussion of these findings highlights the tension between what is desired and what is real in academe and its impact on job performance and satisfaction for this group of academics.
AB - Over the past thirty years universities have increasingly extended their offerings of vocationally oriented degrees and have recruited into academe, practitioners from the professions. This paper reports on a qualitative study that investigated the experiences of 20 professionals-turned-academics in Australia; their expectations of academe and how they defined, resisted and took up the multiple and changing roles associated with academic work. Findings indicate that the majority experienced nostalgia for universities of the past which they imagined to be places of intellectual elitism and curiosity-driven research and scholarship. At the same time, they identified strongly as practitioners within their professional fields, were committed to field-oriented practical education and resisted taking up researcher identities, understanding ‘real’ research in narrowly defined terms. Our discussion of these findings highlights the tension between what is desired and what is real in academe and its impact on job performance and satisfaction for this group of academics.
KW - academic identities
KW - academic work
KW - academics from industry
U2 - 10.1080/0309877X.2011.645457
DO - 10.1080/0309877X.2011.645457
M3 - Article
SN - 0309-877X
JO - Journal of Further and Higher Education
JF - Journal of Further and Higher Education
ER -