That “Volunteer Professor” Ad [View all]
By Rebecca Schuman
Last week, I suggested that assistant adjunct might just be the worst job title in academia. It sounds like someone who DustBusts the crushed Bugles out of the regular adjuncts 1990 Toyota Celica. But I realized I might have been wrong about that title when I came across this job ad for a volunteer professor at Southern Virginia University. Yep, professors who work for free. Well, not 100 percent freethey get complimentary apartment-style housing and five meals a week.
This ad has ripped across the digital universe of beleaguered Ph.D.s, many of whom work close-to-voluntary wages as it is. Some are in disbelief. (Have we reached a new low in academic labor? asks the University of Houstons Dave Mazella.) Others are unimpressed. (A benefit of volunteer teaching is to bring your own food to eat with other volunteers! bemoans McGills Susan Rvachew.) Still others are resigned to it; one reader even told me shed consider applying, just for the affiliation and library privileges.
Lets be clear: That ad is not aimed at your garden-variety desperate recent Ph.D. (and more on that in a sec). But that so many people of about my age and qualifications believe volunteer professor is aimed at them says a tremendous amount about the precarious state of the American university. Reaction to the ad belies a culture in which the Life of the Mind is considered a higher calling too lofty for such déclassé considerations as remuneration. This mentality is what helps create the vast oversupply of Ph.D.s cramming into near-voluntary part-time work, for which they are supposed to genuflect silently in thanks.
This ad has ripped across the digital universe of beleaguered Ph.D.s, many of whom work close-to-voluntary wages as it is. Some are in disbelief. (Have we reached a new low in academic labor? asks the University of Houstons Dave Mazella.) Others are unimpressed. (A benefit of volunteer teaching is to bring your own food to eat with other volunteers! bemoans McGills Susan Rvachew.) Still others are resigned to it; one reader even told me shed consider applying, just for the affiliation and library privileges.
Lets be clear: That ad is not aimed at your garden-variety desperate recent Ph.D. (and more on that in a sec). But that so many people of about my age and qualifications believe volunteer professor is aimed at them says a tremendous amount about the precarious state of the American university. Reaction to the ad belies a culture in which the Life of the Mind is considered a higher calling too lofty for such déclassé considerations as remuneration. This mentality is what helps create the vast oversupply of Ph.D.s cramming into near-voluntary part-time work, for which they are supposed to genuflect silently in thanks.
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http://www.slate.com/articles/life/education/2015/07/volunteer_professor_ad_it_says_a_lot_about_the_sorry_state_of_academia.html