隔离学者的职业兴趣,以确定成功的衡量标准。

Saranya Ramakrishnan, Sarthak Giri, Michelle Mei
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引用次数: 3

摘要

当今大多数学术界面临的主要问题之一是经典的供需经济问题,即寻求永久学术职位(供应)的博士候选人和博士后的数量远远超过了可用的学术职位(需求)。因此,有抱负的毕业生为了在学术界取得进步,竞争加剧了。其他研究考察了给这些毕业生带来竞争优势的外部因素,但它们未能确定这些候选人是否真的有兴趣在学术界蓬勃发展。94名研究生、博士后研究员和教授完成了荷兰兴趣量表的修订版(Feldman, Smart, & Ethington, 2008)。这包括6个因素:现实(R)、调查(I)、艺术(A)、社会(S)、进取(E)和传统(C)。只有打算在学术界从事职业的研究生和博士后才被考虑参加这项研究。在这项研究中,我们表明,学者在S, A和I的兴趣很高。SAI趋势在第一组(教授)中出现的频率为56%,而在第二组(博士和博士后)中只有36%。在6个兴趣中,第一组(教授)成员的最高兴趣从来都不是E或c。然而,第二组成员的最高兴趣涵盖了所有6个兴趣。了解这些信息将有助于学生在攻读博士学位之前就决定学术界是否是他们正确的职业选择。这一有意识的决定可能会淘汰不兼容的候选人,留下有限数量的有抱负的毕业生从事学术工作。从而缓解了供给侧的问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Isolating occupational interests of academics to identify metrics of success.
One of the main problems most of academia faces today is the classic economic problem of supply and demand, i.e. the number of PhD candidates and post-doctorates seeking permanent academic positions (supply) far exceeds the available academic positions (demand). As a result, competition has increased among aspiring graduates as they scramble to advance in academia. Other studies have examined external factors that give these graduates a competitive edge, but they fail to identify whether the candidates actually have the right interests to thrive in academia. A sample of 94 graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and professors completed a revised version of the Holland Interest Scale (Feldman, Smart, & Ethington, 2008). This is comprised of 6 factors: Realistic (R), Investigative (I), Artistic (A), Social (S), Enterprising (E), and Conventional (C). Only graduate students and post-doctorates who intended to pursue careers in academia were considered for the study. In this study, we show that academics are high in S, A, and I interests. The frequency of the SAI trend is 56% in Group 1 (professors) and only 36% in Group 2 (PhD, post-doctorates). Of the 6 interests, the highest interest of Group 1 (professors) members was never E or C. However, highest interests of Group-2 members ranged across all 6 interests. Understanding this information would help students decide if academia is the correct career choice for them even before pursuing a doctoral degree. This conscious decision may eliminate incompatible candidates and leave a limited number of aspiring graduates to pursue academia. Thus alleviating the supply side of the problem.
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