By: the Junior Prof
www.juniorprof.com
We all face career
barriers, and while every situation is unique, we also have much in common.
This series of guest posts highlights stories and advice from a diverse group
of people who have confronted a wide variety of career barriers. Hopefully this
post helps you to feel less alone in your struggle, gives you advice for moving
forward, or allows you to help someone around you.
Thinking About
Employment in Graduate School
I’ll confess to you that I arrived to the first semester of
my graduate school career totally unconcerned about my future employment
prospects – no one had warned me that the Humanities were in “crisis” or that
landing a job post-PhD could be an arduous task. You can imagine, then, my
shock when a unit of my cohort’s “Intro to Graduate Studies” class was themed
around the death of the profession I thought I’d one day join. I’ll never
forget fighting back tears as a faculty member in my field told me briskly that
I didn’t have a prayer of getting a job in my field. In many ways, my dreams of
finding healthy employment at an institution (like the R1 I had attended for
undergrad) crashed before they ever took off.
Throughout graduate school, I was surrounded by both
institutional and departmental programming that addressed employment issues in
the professoriate for Humanities PhD-seekers. Much of this was deeply
empowering – I learned about the systemic issues causing the decline of the
field that I belonged to; I internalized that this decline was something far
greater than me and not to be taken personally; I learned to recognize the
skillset created by pursuing a Humanities PhD and explored the multitude of
professional opportunities that could make me happy post-degree; I embraced the
intellectual journey for what it was and saved the anxiety of unemployment for
another day.
That being said, the over-arching tone remained true to the
reality…which was that I was statistically unlikely to ever get a tenure track
job. Far less likely was that I would land a tenure track job at an R1 institution
like the one that was producing me. I began to feel puzzled by the ethics of
producing PhDs in my field if there were no jobs to be had and wondered if the
programming I appreciated was the corporate university’s strategy for dodging
these ethical qualms and retaining its source of cheap labor.
I did what any young dreamer with an interest in
self-preservation would do…I talked myself out of wanting a job in the
professoriate before I ever really made up my mind I wanted it; it was so far
out of reach that why should I bother? This attempt at self-preservation
started off cautiously as I researched the wealth and variety of postsecondary
institutions across the United States and found merits in all of them. Then I
explored the transition to the demanding yet rewarding possibility of teaching
high school or finding a job at a government agency. I entertained editing,
publishing and creative writing. I trolled hiring webpages for the tech
industry’s hard-hitters (think Google and Facebook) who were looking for
researchers of all different backgrounds, including Humanists. I’ll also never
forget my graduate school adviser telling me not to worry because if I didn’t
get a job I would surely get into a great law school and everything would be
fine from there… (that’s a myth, by the way).
TAKEAWAY: Ask yourself what you
want early and frequently. To clarify, I DO NOT advocate for closing doors on
plan-B’s, but I DO advocate for knowing what your plan-A is. The constraints of
finding professorial jobs as a PhD in the Humanities are REAL, but you should
ask yourself if you want one.
Thinking About
Employment While on the Job Market
I went on the job market twice while in graduate school. The
first time I had funding left and wanted to dip a proverbial toe in the waters
to see what came of it. My partner was transitioning in their career so it was
a chance to align our geographical location. I also saw it as a chance to get
my materials in order, experiment with what worked and what didn’t, get asked
bizarre interview questions and strategize on how to answer them. I applied to
around 20 jobs and got a few interviews. They didn’t go anywhere which, in
hindsight, isn’t surprising considering I’m fairly confident I came across as
very green. I tried to mitigate my disappointment by continuing my forays into
exploring any and every possibility other than becoming an assistant professor.
Year two I felt confident. I had some experience with this
beast under my belt and was much closer to completing my dissertation. I
applied to EVERYTHING. I applied to the jobs I was “making a case for” even if
it proved to be a tremendous waste of time. The rejection was starting to take
a toll on my mental health so I resolved that this was the last year of job
market hell. However, I know myself well enough to know that to properly grieve
something and move on, I have to leave no stone unturned. So that was the
strategy…all
in so that I could be all out.
Near the end of year two my home institution threw me a bone
and offered to let me come back to adjunct for them in the event that I didn’t
get a job. I was tremendously relieved that I would know where my next paycheck
was coming from but, in some ways, taking it would have felt like moving back
in with my parents after I had resolved to move out. I had accepted the offer
when something miraculous happened: I got a tenure track offer. It came so far
out of left-field I thought I was dreaming. I took it. And I sighed with relief
because I hoped it meant I wouldn’t have to ask myself these questions ever
again. I was thankful that I had gotten the job so few people get and, given
industry standards, relatively early in the game.
TAKEAWAY: Only apply to jobs that
make sense. The desperation of employment led me to apply to so many things
that all I did was effectively double the amount of rejection I faced. Applying
to more jobs doesn’t mean you’ll get more interviews. More likely, it means a
larger tax on mental health.
Thinking About
Employment as an Employed Humanist
The prognosis for the Humanities continues to be solemn.
Since getting my job, I’ve allowed myself the mental and emotional space to do
the deep-dive of figuring out exactly how
solemn. In the last several weeks, the Chronicle of Higher Education has
published “What
We Hire in Now: English by the Grim Numbers,” “Why
Are Students Ditching the History Major?” and “The Real
Cause of the Humanities’ Woes.” When I read these articles, my
gratitude for my job deepens, but I can’t ignore the nagging question that has
finally surfaced: “what do I want?”
Prognosis aside, I have found myself back
on the job market a mere 6 months after getting my job. I believe
this to be the unfortunate side-effect of not feeling sure I’m where I’m
supposed to be. Some people might argue that it’s shamefully soon to be
considering leaving a job I only just got. (I have heard that argument more
than once.) I’ve come to realize that reason I’m back on the market is
relatively simple: all of the hype surrounding unemployment among Humanities
PhDs caused me to internalize that reality, which prevented me from ever asking
myself what my best-case scenario was.
My job search this year has produced a couple of interviews
which is, quite frankly, a couple more than I saw myself getting. I feel relief
that I can mentally turn over the pros and cons of each job and ask myself
whether or not I want it in a way I never felt empowered to do before. My
current job may have produced a bit of a paradigm shift in that regard, but I
still get the sense that I’m back at square one.
TAKEAWAY: If I could give my
younger self a piece of advice, it would be to relax about the whole thing. I
realize that it was the key ingredient in allowing myself the space to
self-explore. Instead, I spent a lot of time stressing about things I couldn’t
control.
For all of these reasons, finding employment provoked an
unexpected existential quandary in me: if I could have any job, what would it
look like? My obstacle now trying to shed the habit of consistently answering
questions about my future with what I deem “possible” or with my impostor
syndrome laden “limitations” in view. I confess all of this to you so that
you’ll ask yourself what you want sooner and more frequently than I did.
Sending all of you positive vibes as you search for your calling.
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