Empathizing with adjuncts

During my final years as a PhD student, when most people in my cohort were applying for academic jobs, I wasn’t on the market. It was hard enough to focus on my dissertation, and I really wanted it done. I wasn’t in love with academia anymore, was doing occasional freelance work, and had savings in my bank account, a result of good scholarships and cheap living. Financially, I could afford to put off job applications. I felt some shame about this, but I didn’t hang out in my department and spent little time on campus, thus managing to avoid job market conversations. I figured that I’d start the hunt for tenure-track employment later.

Well, later never came. I handed in the final draft of my dissertation in the fall of 2011, and the entire finishing process, before and after, was hugely emotionally draining. My supervisors were supportive and my defence went well. But on the whole the process was exhausting and unpleasant (and not anyone’s fault, per se).

My saving grace, in addition to actual savings, was my freelance work. My clients liked me and that was the obvious next step for me. Really, it wasn’t a next step: I was already doing it, and carried on doing it past my defence, final submission, and graduation this past summer.

As I think back on my experiences, I realize that my transition got going in earnest only about the time I started this blog: in mid-December 2012. Even though I’d handed in my dissertation 10 months earlier, my life was little different than it had been in years past. My decision to fire myself (as I put it) from my main freelance client was a significant moment for me, much more important than my dissertation defence and even my graduation, which was a happy day. By quitting I was finally straying from the obvious path. It was a risk but a necessary one if I was to move forward.

These things are on my mind this week because of media coverage of and commentary on the adjuncting crisis in the US, Canada, and elsewhere. I was never an adjunct; I was never in “sessional hell,” to use a common phrase this side of the border. But I can relate, and not just because I have friends who are. I was, like some adjuncts, in a low-pay, low-reward, low-prestige job. I was in it because it was the obvious place for me to be, post-PhD. It seemed the only place for me to be, given my lack of academic credentials—no publications, no instructor experience—and my lack of “real world” experience—I never had a full-time job, having been in school since I was 4 years old. To me, this is why some PhDs opt to adjunct: they need employment and they believe their options are limited.

I got out of my less-than-ideal situation (for me, by then) because I took a leap of faith in myself and, crucially, I could do it without an immediate risk of racking up crippling credit card debt, or worse. Many PhDs and other “indentured servants” working in academia are less lucky. Even if they somehow believed that their skills, talents, and experiences might open many wonderful doors beyond the ivory tower, changing careers is a major undertaking, requiring a significant investment of time, energy, and money. What’s a poor doctor to do?

I have deep empathy for adjuncts and I want to do what I can to help out. If my own optimism about and enthusiasm for our futures rubs off . . . if the Q & A series shows how many options there are for smart, creative, motivated people . . . if my honesty about my own experiences helps people feel less alone . . . I don’t know. This is hard stuff.


Comments

8 responses to “Empathizing with adjuncts”

  1. There is little support to manage the transition out of graduate school beyond the traditional job market discussion. I have felt equally shameful if I even mention that I’m not sure about academic employment. I appreciate your candor and think it will inspire others to be equally honest.

    1. Jennifer Polk Avatar
      Jennifer Polk

      I hope so, too, thanks. This shame stuff is nuts!

  2. Especially with hours being cut, I get more ‘don’t know what I am going to do’ posts on the NFM Facebook.I sound them out about their support options. Not everyone wants to take or is up to/in a position to take action. So just now I suggested to one who said she was leaving to look for full time work to come here that she come by here and check out the transition interviews.

    1. Jennifer Polk Avatar
      Jennifer Polk

      Thanks! It’s so hard to broaden our vision, zoom in on what particularly we love about doing certain things, and see that those things can be had elsewhere. It’s also an incredibly common experience, for all ppl. The effort takes much energy/time/money, but it’s crucial to living a good life that we take it on, even if it takes years, while we work in other jobs to pay the bills. This is what I think, anyways.

      1. Not regretting any part is important – not getting into it, nor either leaving or not leaving, staying interested in fields or shifting interests to new areas ~ all part of that life (and being pleasantly surprised by unexpected connections between areas…

        1. Jennifer Polk Avatar
          Jennifer Polk

          Yes! We’re so good at giving ourselves a hard time, but hey: stuff changes. It always does. We should strive to respect ourselves and our choices and experiences, and notice when it’s time for another shift.

  3. I can relate to your uncomfortable feelings about not entering the job market. It’s been a long time for me (i graduated in 2004), but I can still look back in a low moment and think i didn’t try hard enough (3 years on the job market). It’s a huge step to take. I appreciate finding your blog and also appreciate you sharing your blog roll of others who have left academe!

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