让工薪阶层学子为成功做好准备

Kenneth Oldfield
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摘要

我是莱恩和萨克雷笔下的 "天堂陌生人 "之一,一个在工人阶级家庭长大的学者。成为教授后,我慢慢明白,要成为一名成功的教员,需要学习一套不同于我在本科和研究生阶段成功所需的生存技巧。就像我在学生时代一样,我的家人或他们认识的任何人都无法指导我如何获得终身教职、晋升、休假或学术界提供的其他奖励。让这个问题雪上加霜的是一种适得其反的信念,其他像我这样背景的人也经常持有这种信念。那就是,我害怕寻求帮助会显示出我的软弱,这是我没有资格成为一名学者的初步证据。除了我不敢问的问题,还有许多我不知道该问的问题,这些问题的答案本可以让我免去无数的头痛。希望本文能为新入职的工薪阶层学者指点迷津,我希望自己在成为大学教授之前能学到七条经验,这些知识如果能尽早掌握,会让我在大学的迷宫中走得更轻松,少走很多弯路。
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Preparing Working-Class Academics for Success
I was one of Ryan and Sackrey’s Strangers in Paradise, an academic raised in a working-class family. After becoming a professor, I slowly grew to understand that being a successful faculty member requires learning a different set of survival techniques than those I needed to succeed in my undergraduate and graduate studies. As it was during my student years, nobody in my family or anyone they knew could counsel me on what it takes to earn tenure, promotion, sabbatical leave, or any of the other rewards the academy offers. Compounding this problem was a counterproductive belief, one frequently held by others from backgrounds like mine. Namely, the fear that asking for help shows weakness, prima facia evidence that I was unqualified to be an academic. Beyond the questions I was afraid to ask were the many questions I did not know to ask, questions with answers that would have saved me from countless headaches. In hopes of smoothing the way for recently hired working-class academics, this article presents seven lessons I wish I had learned before becoming a university professor, knowledge that had I acquired early on would have made my travels through the university labyrinth far easier – infinitely less trying.
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