News, Views and Careers for All of Higher Education
Aug. 6
One of the concerns many academics have had in recent years is that the increased financial pressures in higher education and what critics call the “corporatization” of academe would make higher education a less desirable place to work.
But a study presented this week at the annual meeting of the American Sociological Association finds that academic scientists — in the natural and social sciences — are more satisfied than are their counterparts outside of higher education. The original hypothesis of the paper was that there might be a convergence of satisfaction levels, especially since satisfaction was defined in ways that stress traditional academic values, not more entrepreneurial ones. The scientists were asked about satisfaction with their independence and responsibility and the social contributions of their work — the sorts of factors that many fear are being lost as academic science at many universities is increasingly connected to the business world. (Although they were asked many other questions about their jobs, the satisfaction questions were defined in this way only.)
The authors — Roberta Spalter-Roth of the sociology association and Grant Blank of Applied Social Research Associates — found instead that academic scientists (except psychologists) remain more satisfied than those outside academe.
There were some notable results with regard to demographic groups. Black scientists were as satisfied as others with one exception — non-academic psychologists, who were less satisfied than colleagues who are white. Latinos were also generally as satisfied as those in other groups. But almost across the board, Asian American scientists are less satisfied with their jobs than are white scientists.
In terms of gender, the norm was a lack of difference in satisfaction levels. But men were less satisfied than women in the fields of academic biology, non-academic physics, academic sociology, and all of psychology.
Aging also appears to increase job satisfaction — especially outside academe, where that was the case across fields. Within academe, being older correlates with increased satisfaction in biology, physics and political science.
The overall data below are satisfaction on a 4-point scale, and generally point to high levels of satisfaction, on average, with the largest gaps favoring academic satisfaction in engineering, physics and chemistry. The data were gathered from the national Survey of Doctorate Recipients.
Mean Satisfaction of Scientists In and Out of Academe
|
Discipline |
Non-Academic |
Academic |
|
Biology |
3.47 |
3.60 |
|
Math / statistics |
3.31 |
3.52 |
|
Chemistry |
3.34 |
3.58 |
|
Physics |
3.30 |
3.56 |
|
Psychology |
3.65 |
3.60 |
|
Sociology |
3.45 |
3.53 |
|
Economics |
3.46 |
3.55 |
|
Political science |
3.46 |
3.55 |
|
Engineering |
3.28 |
3.56 |
|
Total |
3.44 |
3.58 |
Some of the discipline-specific findings:
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The article states that academic psychologists are less satisfied than non-academic psychologists. While this interpretation might be justified if these two data points are considered in isolation, it doesn’t make sense in the context of the full set of findings. The average rating for academic psychologists is the highest among the data reported for academics (and equal to the average rating of the academic biologists, who are described as significantly more satisfied than their non-academic peers). What sorts of conclusions can we really draw from these findings?
Claudia, at 4:40 pm EDT on August 6, 2008
In addition to controlling for multiple comparisons, how about effect sizes — I’d venture small —- and something about the sampling. Most clinical psychologists never expect to go into academia when they enter graduate school. How about eliminating clinical psychologists from the data; I’d expect that to change the results dramatically.
I’m a semi-retired academic clinical psychologist who thought he had the bestjob conceivable.
Milton Strauss, Professor Emeritus at Case Western Reserve, at 4:40 pm EDT on August 6, 2008
But are academic and non-academic scientists really commensurable for purposes of answering the research question? If we want to know whether corporatized colleges/universities are worse places to work than non-corporatized colleges/universities, then shouldn’t we compare scientists who work at each type of institution? The fact that academic scientists are no less happy than corporate ones doesn’t prove that corporate academia is a fine place to work. It in fact would seem to suggest that as colleges/universities become more corporate, their faculty will come to resemble the corporate workforce in every way. I’d rather see a study that compared the happiness of academics in non-corporate settings (this would have to be operationalized, but probably it would include both the most elite places—e.g., Ivies—and the least elite ones—many community colleges) to the happiness of their colleagues in more corporate settings (e.g., second-tier state universities). My own experience suggests that community college faculty are generally much happier than state U. faculty, but the study cited here was not designed to capture data like that... As a sociologist, I’m ashamed of the ASA on this one...
a dude in academe, at 4:40 pm EDT on August 6, 2008
Aug. 8. 2008
To “Dude in Academia” and others,
I’m researching a news piece on colleges and the struggling economy. I am hardy an expert in this subject, but in the little research I’ve done I’ve seen many references to corporate ties in academia, usually as a means to generate revenue. You seen familiar with it. Could you tell me more about it? Contact me through e-mail, jtulenko@merrow.org.
Thank you.
John Tulenko, Producer at PBS, at 2:30 pm EDT on August 8, 2008
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Statisticians dissatisfied
Ummm, error bars? P-values? Correction for what seems to have been enormous multiple hypothesis testing?
CC, at 2:45 pm EDT on August 6, 2008