The Repurposed Ph.D.
By REBECCA TUHUS-DUBROW
Published: November 1, 2013 4 Comments
ON a recent Sunday afternoon, a monthly meeting convened around a long
table in a Whole Foods cafeteria on the Upper West Side of Manhattan. As
people settled in, the organizer plopped down a bag of potato chips and
tackled housekeeping matters, like soliciting contributions. But she
did not insist. “I know that some of you are in fragile situations,” she
said.
Kirsten Luce for The New York Times
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One attendee recalled scraping by on $9,000 a year. “I was exhausted by
years of living in poverty,” she said. Her neighbor chimed in: “Amen,
sister.”
An eavesdropper might have been surprised to learn what the group had in
common: formidable academic credentials. Sitting at the table were a
historian, a sociologist, a linguist and a dozen other scholars. Most
held doctorates; a few were either close to completion or had left
before finishing. All had toiled for years in graduate school but, by
choice or circumstance, almost none had arrived at the promised
destination of tenure-track professorships (the one who had was thinking
of leaving). Now they found themselves at a gathering of a group called
Versatile Ph.D. to support their pursuit of nontraditional careers.
After a round of introductions, the participants broke into clusters to
swap stories and tips. A 32-year-old man who had studied ancient
religion at Princeton wore a T-shirt emblazoned with the name of his
employer, a finance website; he talked up his job to a physicist who was
finalizing her thesis. The historian, a teacher at an elite private
school, advised a recent American studies Ph.D. on where to find job
postings and how to package himself. That young Ph.D., Adam Capitanio,
who completed his degree in 2012, had looked for an academic position
for three years, focusing his search on the Northeast and applying for
at least 60 jobs. He hadn’t received a single interview. Now he was
working as an editorial associate at an academic publisher, trying to
devise a long-term plan. “Things were kind of desperate before I had
that job,” he said. “This gives me some flexibility to figure out what I
actually want to do.”
Dr. Capitanio’s experience is far from unusual. According to a 2011
National Science Foundation survey, 35 percent of doctorate recipients —
and 43 percent of those in the humanities — had no commitment for
employment at the time of completion. Fewer than half of Ph.D.’s are
expected to land tenure-track jobs. And many voluntarily choose another
path because they want higher pay or more direct engagement with the
world than monographs and tenure committees seem to allow.
Though graduates have faced similar conditions for decades, the past few
years have seen a surge in efforts to connect Ph.D.’s with gratifying
employment outside academia and even to rethink the purpose of doctoral
education. “The issue itself is not a new issue,” said Debra Stewart,
president of the Council of Graduate Schools. “The response, I would
say, is definitely new.”
In addition to New York, Versatile Ph.D. groups have formed in at least
seven other cities, including Philadelphia, Chicago and Los Angeles.
Abundant online resources help Ph.D.’s turn curricula vitae into résumés
and market their skills to nonacademic employers. And former academics
can find kindred souls at blogs like “Chronicles of a Recovering Academic,” “Your Barista Has a Ph.D.” and “Dr. Outta Here” (obscenity alert).
The spirit of change has even begun to take root inside the ivory tower. The University of California, Berkeley, held a “Beyond Academia”
conference last spring, hosting Ph.D. speakers who have succeeded in
other domains, from consulting to biotech. Similar events are planned at
the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, which
established its new Office of Career Planning and Professional Development in February.
The problem is especially urgent in the humanities. For Ph.D.’s in STEM
disciplines (science, technology, engineering, mathematics), industry
has long been a viable option. But students who study, say, Russian
literature or medieval history have few obvious alternative careers in
their fields. They confront questions about their relevance even inside
the academy, let alone outside it.
In August, the Scholarly Communication Institute released a report titled
“Humanities Unbound: Supporting Careers and Scholarship Beyond the
Tenure Track.” In it, Katina Rogers, the lead researcher, discusses the
nascent concept of alternative academic, or alt-ac, professions. The
term has gained widespread currency (and its own Twitter hashtag) and
can refer to jobs within universities but outside the professoriate,
like administrator or librarian, as well as nonacademic roles like
government-employed historian and museum curator.
Dr. Rogers suggests that alt-ac is less a matter of where you work than
how — “with the same intellectual curiosity that fueled the desire to go
to graduate school in the first place, and applying the same kinds of
skills, such as close reading, historical inquiry or written
argumentation, to the tasks at hand.” In an interview, she credited the
neologism with infusing “positive energy” into the often gloomy
conversations about alternative careers. The alt-ac ethos holds that
nonacademic work is not a fallback plan for failures but a win-win:
Ph.D.’s can bring their deep expertise and advanced skills to a whole
gamut of challenges, rather than remaining cocooned in the ivory tower.
Karen Shanton explored unconscious cognitive processes for her philosophy Ph.D. from Rutgers but works at the National Conference of State Legislatures, which provides legislators with nonpartisan analysis. She won the two-year fellowship from the American Council of Learned Societies.
Its Public Fellows program, created in 2011, places Ph.D.’s from the
humanities and social sciences in nonprofit and government
organizations.
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