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Academic Career Trajectories: Transatlantic Comparisons. Hans Pechar Lesley Andres Alpen Adria University University of British Columbia HER 2013. Overview. Contemporary Concerns History of the Habilitation Model History of Tenure Track Model Habilitation /Tenure Track Compared
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Academic Career Trajectories: Transatlantic Comparisons Hans Pechar Lesley AndresAlpen Adria University University of British Columbia HER 2013
Overview • Contemporary Concerns • History of the Habilitation Model • History of Tenure Track Model • Habilitation/Tenure Track Compared • The Case For and Against
Contemporary Issues North America Decline in TT positions • an obsolete model? • how much are research universities affected? GermanicCountries TT a Role Model? • relationship between academic status groups e.g., what is an assistant professor? • transparent career trajectories; reduce risk in early career stages
Tenure, TT, Habilitation UK, Sweden, Netherlands • lecturers/senior lecturers have permanent positions (tenure) • only a minority is promoted to full professor (SWE: 1/3, UK 1/4) North America • those admitted to tenure track are expected to become a full professor Habilitation model • only full professors should have permanent positions • junior faculty -- trainees on fixed term positions
Tenure (FRA/UK), TT (US), Habilitation (GER) Source: Kreckel 2012
Different Habilitation Systems (CZE/GER/CH/AT) Source: Kreckel 2012
History of the Habilitation Model Early 1800s • departure from “family university” (academic dynasties) Raising Quality Standards • from preservation of traditional knowledge to creation of new knowledge • dissertation written by students, not professor • Habilitation - ‘private docent’ - entry qualification for academic career
Chair Structure University = federation of many small principalities One Professor per Institute • represents the discipline comprehensively • little formal structure • huge discretionary power • strong personal dependence • future academics apprentices under “his” supervision
Mass Higher Education • most teaching/research is done by non-professorial faculty • improved social rights but still regarded as “qualification position” (no career track) • conflicts about representation in collegial bodies (struggle for quotas)
History of the Tenure Track Model Roots • intellectual independence • collective autonomy • time and financial security to conduct scholarly work (Horn, 1999) • academic freedom
Early Contracts • presumption of tenure – Scottish tradition • no specific reference to term of office • tenure during pleasure • 1915 American Association of University Professors report • numerous dismissal cases and court challenges in USA and Canada from the 1860s to 1950s difficulties recruiting new faculty
“their opportunities for suitable employment are rare, and if lost are not easily substituted by other congenial employment. Their specialized training unfits them for general service. In their chosen field, the material rewards are relatively small. In order . . . that this noble profession may still attract recruits, it is wisely acknowledged both in theory and practice that the employment of professors by colleges should be characterized by stability approaching to permanence” (Mr. Justice A.K. Dysart in Horn, 1999)
professorships akin to professional status • dismissal should be be based on due process used in disbarring lawyers or revoking licenses of physicians • tenure as custom vs. tenure as law 1960s Onward • CAUT Statement on Academic Freedom and Tenure (1960) • “sellers” market for faculty • tenure during good behaviour – first “understood” and then formalized in collective agreements • probation – tenure – dismissal for cause only • constrained by retirement at 65
Tenure Track Habilitation Model • rigorous PhD • required mobility (contest mobility) • assistant professor = independent academic career • trial period in unfamiliar territory
Tenure Track Habilitation Model • tenure evaluation (up or out) • permanent contract dependent on achievement • promotion to full professor at home institution • promotion depends on personal achievement • no limits due to available positions
Tenure Track Habilitation Model less demanding doctorate Habilitation required internal recruitment (sponsored mobility) ‘assistant’ = literally assigned to professor qualification period within familiar network • rigorous PhD • required mobility (contest mobility) • Assistant professor = independent academic career • trial period in unfamiliar territory
Tenure Track Habilitation Model venialegendi no permanent contract application for full professor requires mobility) imbalance between applicants and available professorial positions • tenure evaluation (up or out) • permanent contract dependent on achievement • promotion to full professor at home institution • promotion depends on personal achievement • no limits due to available positions
Crucial Differences Habilitation • insider orientation below professoriate • juniors remain within familiar networks • selective career step = late (prolongs uncertainty) • categorical differences between status groups (impedes solidarity) Tenure Track • selective recruitment at early stage allows for regular promotion within a career track • gradual differences between status groups (conducive for solidarity)
Status Groups - Quantitative Relations AT US Source: Kreckel 2008
Status Groups - Qualitative Relations highly separated tracks vs flat hierarchy AT US required mobility required mobility
The Case Against Tenure Track Habilitation Model long period of personal dependency high uncertainty • promotes conformity rather than creativity • “impediment, rather than aid, to academic freedom” (Kingwell, 1997) • guarantees employment to unproductive faculty “deadwood” • stifles institutional flexibility in a greatly changed academic landscape • no longer needed vis-à-vis academic freedom
The Case For Tenure Track Habilitation Model tradition gives “legitimacy” guarantees high quality of academic training • flawed, but substitutes (e.g., renewable contracts) no improvement • regular reviews costly • required to attract and keep the intellectually gifted, innovative, and outspoken • long pre-tenure period serves as quality control • required for academic freedom
Further Reading Ben-David, J. (1991). 'The Profession of Science and Its Powers'. In: Scientific Growth. Essays on the Social Organization and Ethos of Science (pp. 187-209). Berkeley: University of California Press. Busch, A. (1963). The Vicissitudes of the "Privatdozent": Breakdown and Adaptation in the Recruitment of the German University Teacher, Minerva, Vol. 1, pp.319-341 Clark, W. (2006). Academic Charisma and the Origin of the Research University. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Kreckel, R. (Hg) (2008): Zwischen Promotion und Professur. Das wissenschaftliche Personal in Deutschland im Vergleich mit Frankreich, Großbritannien, USA, Schweden, den Niederlanden, Österreich und der Schweiz. Leipzig: Akademische Verlagsanstalt. Metzger, W. P. (1987). 'Academic Profession in United States'. In B. R. Clark (Ed.), The academic profession: National, disciplinary, and institutional settings (pp. 123-208) Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. Neave, G. & Rhoades, G. (1987). 'The academic estate in Western Europe'. In B. R. Clark (Ed.), The academic profession: National, disciplinary, and institutional settings (pp. 211-270) Berkeley, CA: University of California Press. Schimank, U. (2006). Unsolved problems and inadequate solutions: The situation of academic staff in German higher education. In J. J. F. Forest & P. G. Altbach (Eds.), International handbook of higher education (pp. 115-136). Dordrecht, NL: Springer. Schmeiser, M. (1994). Akademischer Hasard. Das Berufsschicksal des Professors und das Schicksal der deutschen Universität 1870 - 1920. Stuttgart: Klett.