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The Professoriate Today

Languishing in Dante's Purgatory

By (author) John "Jack" Hampton
Format: Hardback
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham, MD, United States
Published: 1st Aug 2017
Dimensions: w 152mm h 229mm d 17mm
Weight: 513g
ISBN-10: 1475836481
ISBN-13: 9781475836486
Barcode No: 9781475836486
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Synopsis
The changing role and expectations of higher education have reached a crisis point. The heart of the problem is an isolation of the professoriate. An emphasis on obscure research and lack of accountability is undermining the academy. Creating a dissertation is usually an exhausting and frustrating task. New professors are not prepared for what is about to happen to them. Students are being shortchanged by professors who fail to facilitate learning. The effort to find a long-term academic appointment can be just as bad. This book tells the story of a period of suffering for new professors quite comparable to the description of purgatory in Dante's Divine Comedy. This book documents the story.

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The Hampton book offers a keen insight into the status of professors in colleges and universities. As the father of a young woman in graduate school, I am familiar with the stresses of pursuing the doctoral degree. I was less familiar with the fact that the pain continues as the assistant professor pursues a full-time appointment. I reflected on the quote about the juvenile sea squirt. When it finds its home for life, it no longer needs to think. Does it really eat its brain? Is the same true for a professor who gets tenure? I enjoyed the reflections throughout this book. The portrayal of the journeys by Dante and the aspiring professor are compelling. I recommend this book to anyone concerned about the current state of higher education in the United States. -- Robert A. Smith, JD, Managing partner, Smith, Hiatt, and Diaz (retired) Jack Hampton offers a glimpse into the culture of higher education through his vetting of the university tenure system. His ability to use both humor and stark reality in exploring this cultural anomaly is an eye-opener for academics and citizens alike. He demonstrates that, what at times looks like "hazing" robs valuable time and resources from the heart of the educational process. Although tenure is seen as a badge of honor, the process is described by Hampton as meaningless and inane given the arbitrary hoop-jumping required. It is an "all-hands-on-deck" time for higher education, a time to revisit the University tenure process through a new set of eyes. -- Mary McDonough, PhD, Professor / Prior Chief Academic Officer, Organization Development Specialist, and UPS Executive You've decided you want to be a college professor. Stop. Before you spend the next 6-10 years getting your doctorate, read Hampton's informative, thought providing, startling and often amusing assessment of this prestigious profession. Hampton will guide you through the dissertation process, help you keep your sanity while getting tenure, and highlight the characteristics you need to become a superstar professor. Keep a pen handy because you'll want to check off many of the gems in this book as you become the great professor you've always wanted to be. -- Nathan Sambul, entrepreneur; investor; visiting professor at universities in the U.S.A. and Europe This book is a courageously unvarnished look at the implications of academia as a career choice. Its rules are starkly different from those of practitioners, and its objectives often lack alignment with those of students, parents and the industries in need of an educated labor force. Using questions and answers, stories, studies and personal observation, John Hampton takes readers through the maze of processes, contexts and attitudes that are invisible to outsiders. It is a clear wake-up call that academic preparation via the Ph.D. and post-doctoral career progress toward tenure are not designed to produce optimal student outcomes. Hampton's work provides a valuable basis for focus on student interests and the role of universities as facilitators and enablers of student success. -- Linda Hermansen McNeely, PhD, visiting Instructor of marketing, University of Tampa Hampton's book captures a lesson for so many natural-born teachers. Maybe higher education as currently formulated is not the path for them. I saw this in a science teacher who could not make it at the doctoral level in Oceanography. As a sixth-grade teacher, he shared wonderful lessons with students, encouraged them to careers in science, and fulfilled many of his expectations. Sure, he felt disappointment but at least he got out. Other struggling professors should read Hampton's book to help them make the right choices. -- George Schafer, middle and secondary school teacher, assistant principal and principal (retired)