• In our most recent "how can we help you?" thread, a reader asks:

    I wonder if anyone has general tips for those who want to transition from the academic job market to the university administrator market. Since universities are hiring fewer permanent faculty and more administrators, one plausible alt-ac route is to simply market oneself as an administrator.

    One specific tip I'm looking for: which sort of experience should I be looking to get as someone currently in a temporary position at an R1?

    I'm not sure, but my sense is that universities can do internal appointments for leadership and lower-level administrative positions (e.g., Assistant Deans, Faculty Senate Presidents, etc.) that may provide some good experience here. Also, I suspect maybe chairing one's own department may be good experience. But I'm not sure how available these routes may be for someone in the OP's position (a temporary position at an R1).

    Do any readers have any helpful tips or other insights?

     

    7
  • In our most recent "how can we help you?" thread, a reader asks:

    I'm a graduate student working on modern philosophy. I'm trying to figure out where to attempt to publish my work. What is the hierarchy of journals that publish essays in that area?

    Any readers have any tips?

    6
  • A grad program placement director writes in:

    I was thinking about next year's job market and wondering if you thought it was worth a small discussion at the Cocoon. In particular, I'm wondering about just how bad the market will be next year. I know there are a number of hiring freezes right now and that other places who don't have official freezes have nonetheless been told that there won't be much hiring next year (this is the situation here). On the other hand, I have heard that some R1s are still planning on advertising tt jobs, so maybe it won't be so bad? I wonder if people have a sense of whether their institutions will be hiring in the fall or if people have any other insight into what applicants should expect in a few months. I see there was a small discussion at the start of April but at this point maybe people have a clearer sense? 

    Do any readers have any inside insights at their institution?

    17
  • In our most recent "how can we help you?" thread, a reader asks:

    I am looking for advice on what to do about a paper that I've tried to get published for years and is, frankly, kind of ruining my life. For context, this paper is the biggest idea I have and comes out of my dissertation. Every one of my advisors speaks very highly of the paper, so I do think the general idea is quite good and novel. In response to various forms of feedback, however, I have rewritten the paper many times over the years in order to reframe it and the like. I do not yet have a TT job, and I unfortunately seem to take far longer than the average person to rewrite papers. So, the opportunity cost on this one paper has been fairly enormous for my job market prospects. It feels like I may have gotten a TT job by now if I'd only ever had smaller, more publishable ideas and had never come up with the idea for this particular paper.

    This summer, I am in the process of rewriting it yet again. Every time I interact with this paper, though, it feels absolutely awful on a visceral and spiritual level. I think it has become something of a symbol at this point of my failures thus far at making it in academic philosophy. Given that, I would love to just abandon it, especially for the time being. Since I've already sunk so much time into it, though, I worry it will look bad if my CV doesn't soon have that paper in the publications list, which is currently too light for my years since defending. Given that, I'm tempted to just send it off somewhere now in its former version, but that would also mean that the past month or so that I've been working on the new version during my precious teaching-free summer time will have been a complete waste. That said, every time I seriously work on this paper I get very close to quitting my teaching job and leaving the profession altogether.

    Any advice (or commiseration) would be greatly appreciated!

    I'm sorry the OP is dealing with this. I know how it is, so I deeply empathize. I actually had a paper just like this: it was from my dissertation, and everywhere I presented it, people told me it was great. Yet, journals repeatedly rejected it (14 times, if I recall). So I rewrote it over and over again (about 60 times, if my memory recalls). It tortured me–and yes, like the OP, I seriously considered leaving the profession. But you know what: I kept at it, ended up publishing it (albeit in a new-ish and pretty out-of-the-way journal), and … it's my most-cited philosophy paper. Since then, I've published several follow-up pieces (in some well-ranked journals) building on it. 

    Obviously, I'm just one person–but my first piece of advice to the OP would be this: keep at it as long as you're able to and so long as you're convinced the paper is strong (I've dropped a number of papers after referees convinced me they were irreparably flawed–but that never happened with the paper above, which is why I kept at it). My second piece of advice, though, would be this: don't put all of your eggs in one basket. Work on it, send it out. But work on other things too. It took me 6 years to publish the piece mentioned above. If that had been the only thing I worked on (let alone published), I don't think a TT job would have ever been in the offing for me. So, I'd advise the OP: finish up the new draft as expeditiously as you can, and then get to work on something else (or something new!).

    Do any other readers have any help or commiseration to offer?

    13