Managing career endings and the transition to retirement https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk The case of academics Wed, 26 May 2021 09:27:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/cropped-typerwriterkeys-32x32.jpg Managing career endings and the transition to retirement https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk 32 32 Academics Retiring, Scunnered Or Otherwise https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/academics-retiring-scunnered-or-otherwise/ https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/academics-retiring-scunnered-or-otherwise/#respond Wed, 26 May 2021 08:30:41 +0000 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/?p=420 Download Academics Retiring, Scunnered Or Otherwise (PDF)

This extended working paper reports on an investigation into how the career endings of UK academics and their transition to retirement are managed by the individuals concerned and their employing institutions. The project was funded by the Leverhulme Trust. It was conducted over 18 months from October 2019, the majority of which time coincided with the COVID-19 pandemic, which necessitated revision of the original research design.

The principal data were collected through virtual interviews and two surveys, one of academics further on in their careers but still working (defined as receiving at least the majority of their income from paid work) and another of retired academics (defined as receiving the majority of their income from pensions). 81 survey participants were still working and 161 were retired. 54 interviews were conducted, 20 with participants who were still working and 34 retired. Overall the participants split into two halves, those under 70 and those aged 70 or over. Although the retired participants inevitably were concentrated in the older age groups, there was considerable variation in actual or planned age of retirement. Men made up between 55% and 69% of the different groups of participants, and there were further biases towards participants being white and working for (or having worked for) pre-1992 Higher Education Institutions (HEIs). Survey participants had better representation from STEM subjects, while the interviews had better representation from humanities and social sciences. Over 80% of survey participants lived in households with a partner (a minority of these with other family members as well). Interviewees included good representation from Scotland as well as England. Further data were collected relating to HEI policies on later careers and retirement, and relating to academic obituaries.

The survey data were collected between May and September 2020 and the interview data between May and October 2020. While the surveys and interviews were being set up, analysis of obituaries featuring in The Times Higher over the 5 years to December 2019 was conducted. The HEI policy documents were collected in January 2021.

The analysis of the data was framed around answering four questions:

  • What does ‘retirement’ mean, and what does it look like?
  • Is there a right time to retire?
  • How do academic identities evolve? and,
  • What support do universities provide?

The discussion of the data in relation to these questions in section 3 makes up the bulk of this extended working paper, where the challenges of defining ‘retirement’ and ‘careers’ for academics are discussed. Four main themes emerged from the analysis, relating to the uncertainties surrounding later academic careers and retirement, the strong sense of academic work as a vocation, the complex nature of turning points and trajectories, and the importance of paying attention to contextual influences. The analysis of policy documents revealed wide variation in what is available by way of university support and also in its tone, and some indication of what might be considered good practice is given. Other material available to later career academics is also discussed, including consideration of the idea of ‘role models’. It is concluded that although opportunities do exist for people to shape their path to academic retirement so that it fits their circumstances and preferences, nevertheless difficulties remain. Participation in three ongoing conversations is recommended.

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Research note 7. Collecting data online is fast, but do we lose too much context? https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-7-collecting-data-online-is-fast-but-do-we-lose-too-much-context/ https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-7-collecting-data-online-is-fast-but-do-we-lose-too-much-context/#respond Fri, 05 Feb 2021 09:26:33 +0000 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/?p=448 The ‘feel’ for a person that comes from encountering them in their home is difficult to replicate in depth online. The pandemic has forced many changes in the way we work, although the implications will take time to become fully apparent. The most prominent change, of course, is the acceleration of the move to online working.

As a researcher needing to press ahead with collecting data, I found unalloyed positivity in my project funders’ rapid approval of the request to switch to online interviewing. Not only was there relief that the project could continue, there was also pleasure at the thought of being freed from travel and all the frustrations that come with it.

Suddenly, research did not have to be done at the expense of home comforts, and the need to kill time when arriving early for an appointment became a thing of the past. Indeed, liberated from the so-called tyranny of distance, I could interview more people in a given time, not only because interviews could be scheduled closer together but also because the working day could be extended to fit participants’ availability and preferences.

This euphoria did not survive first contact with the realities of online interviewing. Although initially spared the technical challenges of poor-quality and lost connections (which became all too familiar as time went on), I immediately discovered that a lot of contextual information about interviewees is lost when people are not interviewed face to face in their homes or offices.

For a start, obviously, a Zoom or Skype call screens out all the things beyond the immediate frame. I was interviewing academics and retired academics, who were most often positioned against a backdrop of bookshelves (as indeed was I). However, I’m used to interviewees in their homes apologising for the mess (quite often only in their imagination), engaging in casual conversation about photographs of family members on a mantelpiece or offering to show me their garden when I mention a particular plant.

Other rituals of the face-to-face interview that do not figure in the virtual encounter are offers of refreshments and enquiries about the journey. The “feel” for a person simply has less depth to it when the encounter is conducted online than when you meet them in their home setting. This relative shallowness works both ways, of course. The interviewer’s presentation of self is also more superficial when all that is seen by the interviewee is an image on a screen, and opportunities to convey things about oneself are more limited. The scope to employ body language is reduced when only head and shoulders are on view, and the props that reinforce the researcher’s identity, such as the recording device and notebook, are less obtrusive.

Although I was aware of these variations between modes of interviewing as my data collection progressed, my consciousness of them has been heightened now that the phase of data analysis has arrived. Immersion in the data always brings with it the thought that elements of interview conversations could have been pursued further or taken in other directions, but the medium of the virtual interview does seem to have left me with an intensified sense of these paths not taken.

Might it have been possible to elicit fuller accounts of interviewees’ perceptions had the photographs of representations of retirement (my research topic) been handed to them as laminated objects rather than presented as images on a screen? Might memories of a career have been conveyed more fully if I had been able to hold and read the inscription on the celebratory tankard awarded for four decades of loyal service by appreciative colleagues?

If there is a balance sheet to be drawn up of the pros and cons of virtual interviewing, the loss of the immediacy of face-to-face interviews will inevitably feature in that assessment, but not everything will be placed on the debit side.

As already noted, it does allow more people to be interviewed for a project than is possible if travel has to be factored in, with savings of money as well as time. It may also be the case that research participants prefer the greater control over the extent of intrusion into their lives that virtual interviewing affords. Once telephone and email interviewing are added into the mix, it may well be that Skype and Zoom emerge as a new happy medium that endures long after the pandemic has eased.

Graham Crow is professor of sociology and methodology at the University of Edinburgh.

This research note appeared in The Times Higher Education Supplement on 5 February 2021.

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Research note 6 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-6/ https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-6/#respond Fri, 29 Jan 2021 09:23:37 +0000 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/?p=446 Nearing retirement doesn’t have to mean you’re ‘out of the game’. But for those who wish to continue playing, it takes determination, stamina and strategy when the odds are stacked against you. Likening aspects of careers to a game can be a useful analogy, prompting numerous insights about “goals”, “players”, “skill”, “strategy”, “the rules of the game” and, of course, “winners and losers”.

This idea has been advanced through the sociological writings of Erving Goffman (who himself spent time working as a card dealer in Las Vegas, where he had the message reinforced that play is a serious business) and Pierre Bourdieu (who drew attention to people’s “feel for the game”). Game theorists’ models of successful strategising offer another source of such thinking with a longer pedigree.

The game analogy also helps in understanding what happens after careers are formally over. In a survey of recently retired academics conducted two decades ago, more than one in eight participants agreed that they felt “out of the game, no longer of consequence”. The study’s authors, Barbara Tizard and Charlie Owen, rightly saw such end-of-career marginalisation as undesirable for those individuals who wished to maintain links with academic teams of which they had been a part, and for institutions that were missing opportunities to benefit from post-retirement contributions.

This might be expected to have changed in the interim because fixed retirement ages have been replaced by more flexible arrangements in most UK universities. As a result, those who wish to “stay in the game” as paid staff may do so. Higher Education Statistics Agency data show numbers of academic staff aged 66 and over increasing by almost 30 per cent in the four-year period to 2018-19. By contrast, overall numbers for all age groups increased by less than 10 per cent, and numbers of those aged 35 and under increased fractionally less than that average.

While absolute numbers of older scholars staying in post may be relatively small, the perception of early career scholars being kept waiting for their chance to “get on to the field” is real. One of the retired participants in my current study of later academic careers and retirement put it thus: “Being out of the game is a necessary stage to allow others into it.” Nearly a quarter of retired academics in my survey identified “wanting to ‘make way’ for the next generation of academics” as one of their motivations for retiring.

Of course, retirement is not solely an individual decision. Almost a fifth of Tizard and Owen’s participants identified pressure from their institutions to retire as part of their considerations, and things do not appear to be so very different now. The language of being “forced out”, “kicked out” or “got rid of” features in several people’s accounts of “hanging up their boots”.

In many cases, this relates to changes being made to the “rules of the game”, with much criticism levelled at the perceived proliferation of irksome rules and regulation. This is not unique to the current generation of retirees, as bureaucratisation and the extension of audit culture figured in the “dissatisfaction with the work situation” that was the most prominent reason given for early retirement by Tizard and Owen’s participants. Further back still, in 1992, the erosion of academic autonomy was part of A. H. Halsey’s narrative concerning the Decline of Donnish Dominion.

Just as in sport, academics who do not feel ready to retire when their contracts come to an end may seek new teams to join − and in the process challenging ageist assumptions about declining productivity. Just as a footballer is thought to hit their peak at about 27 or 28 years of age, certain academic disciplines are known for judging people’s best work to occur early in their careers, though these are contested notions and some individuals strive to prove the value of experience over youth.

However, at all career stages, there are numerous ways in which the “playing fields” are not “level”, and for those who wish to continue playing it takes determination, stamina and strategy when the odds are stacked against you. Many such veterans’ accounts of staying in the game also mention that most unpredictable element of games: the luck of the draw.

Academics for whom retirement may be on the horizon and who regard the prospect with anxiety should take comfort from the finding that many of their predecessors have made the transition to life beyond work and found it much fuller and more rewarding than feared.

Plenty of participants in my study present narratives in which they look back and wish they had taken the plunge sooner. Counterbalancing this are the accounts of those numerous academics who are working well beyond state retirement age and who do not feel ready to retire. They have found ways not only to stay “in the game” but to stay “on top of their game” − and remaining well integrated with other team members appears key to that.

Graham Crow is professor of sociology and methodology at the University of Edinburgh.

This research note appeared in The Times Higher Education Supplement 29 January 2021.

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Research note 5 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-5/ https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-5/#respond Fri, 18 Sep 2020 09:21:04 +0000 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/?p=444 Is the concept of the academic role model primed for an update? The grand achievements of those who came before are often held up as inspiration for current members of the academy, but a more nuanced view might be required. Are role models inspirational or a sign of an impoverished imagination? For advocates they offer guidance at key moments of career development regarding what it is possible to achieve and what sort of person one might become. The case against is that they discourage authenticity; they exhort: “Don’t be yourself, be like Professor X!” They might lead also to unrealistic expectations among academics who find themselves in circumstances far removed from those enjoyed by celebrated figures of the past.

The American sociologist Arlie Hochschild has noted the benefits to females starting out on academic careers of having female role models who have been successful in the male-dominated academy, but she also recalls as a teenager rejecting the role models her mother encouraged her to emulate.

The self-help literature that advises on managing an academic career is likewise ambiguous on role models. A good role model can supply confidence and reassurance about the desirability, and indeed the possibility, of building a career in contemporary universities, particularly to people vulnerable to “imposter syndrome”. But one person’s successful trajectory cannot be replicated by someone who comes later; contexts change, and serendipitous connections make every career to some extent unique.

This ambiguity helps to explain why interviewees in a project I am conducting on later academic careers and retirement have responded as they did when I asked them about role models. I had (naively, it transpires) expected the question to elicit numerous names of forerunners and peers who were judged to have navigated their later careers in ways that brought an identifiable sense of achievement and fulfilment, but surprisingly few candidates have emerged.

In addition, a proportion of those who have been identified have had their case for consideration as a role model qualified by caveats: their achievements would be harder to match in today’s faster-paced and more demanding environment and, anyway, the things that bring satisfaction to one individual may be disappointing to another.

Furthermore, the very idea of a role model may be objected to on principle because of the way it lionises the individuals who are identified as role models. There is something disagreeable when a person is turned into a heroic figure against whom the majority of people are made to look mediocre in comparison.

A related complaint is that attributing success to an individual risks overlooking the part played by that individual’s colleagues and subordinates, along the lines of Bertolt Brecht’s Questions from a Worker Who Reads. There are echoes here of the way in which obituaries are found to be one-sided, presenting rather selective accounts of their subjects’ lives that focus on the more favourable aspects (however understandable it may be to do so at the time of someone’s death).

People held up as role models may, on closer inspection, turn out to have feet of clay, or at least to have been less consistently saintly than their admirers have portrayed them. We should rightly be wary of hagiography and are correctly reminded that some of the most influential figures in the history of various disciplines had careers that were, by conventional standards, failures (in sociology, Thorstein Veblen, for example).

My interviewees have also stressed that it is difficult to relate to individuals whose reported career trajectories follow a neat and tidy linear pattern of repeated success, which can come across as too good to be true. There is, as Raymond Williams showed in Keywords, an older, less positive meaning of the word “career” relating to being uncontrolled, and it is important not to airbrush out this aspect of work lives that is beyond the power of individuals to influence.

Despite these reservations we may, nevertheless, retain a place for the notion of the role model. A person could be held up as an inspiration to others less because of their achievements than because of their personal qualities. Indeed, in the academic obituaries that I have been studying as part of my project, these personal qualities are often to the fore. An analysis of the 256 obituaries in Times Higher Education, mostly written by Matthew Reisz, in the five years from January 2015 revealed these qualities to be many and varied. They range from attention to detail to versatility, and from integrity to open-mindedness. This focus on qualities rather than on achievements makes a role model more human and opens up a wider pool of people from whom role models may be selected, going beyond decorated members of the establishment.

Furthermore, we may be led to acknowledge that what have been celebrated as people’s good points in certain circumstances may in other circumstances be less desirable characteristics. Even when focusing on their qualities, role models still need to be chosen with care.

Graham Crow is professor of sociology and methodology at the University of Edinburgh. He was director of the Scottish Graduate School of Social Science from 2013-16 and deputy director of the ESRC National Centre for Research Methods 2006-15.

This research note appeared in The Times Higher Education Supplement 18 September 2020.

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Research note 4: The condensed lives of sociologists https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-4-the-condensed-lives-of-sociologists/ https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-4-the-condensed-lives-of-sociologists/#respond Thu, 11 Jun 2020 22:23:44 +0000 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/?p=394 I am sure I am not alone in being asked quite often what it is that sociologists do. One way of answering this question is to refer to the work of particular sociologists, and I find myself doing this more often since I started looking systematically at obituaries. These may be only brief, but even a condensed account of a life can be informative, engaging and instructive. Among the 256 obituaries featured in The Times Higher in the five years from January 2015 (mostly written by Matthew Reisz) there are at least six identified as sociologists (Ulrich Beck, Michael Feige, Andy Furlong, John Urry, Immanuel Wallerstein, and Peter Wright), along with several more of people whose work contained strong sociological elements (such as Benedict Anderson, Agnes Heller and Doreen Massey).
Even from this small number of brief lives it is immediately apparent that sociologists do many things. Sociologists investigate troubling issues in the public domain such as the risks associated with climate change, the challenges to the peace process in the Middle East, the fractured transition from education to employment, the restructuring of place, the interplay of politics and economics in recent world history, and the historical roots of modern science. Sociologists also provide us with tools to think with, for example the conceptual framework of world systems theory and the ideas of risk society and of individualization. In addition to shaping intellectual agendas, sociologists also communicate these ideas to diverse audiences, from students in the lecture hall to wider publics in various fora, both institutional and activist. Peter Wright’s obituary recalls his arrest at a protest over racial segregation in a 1960s Leicester pub, and Michael Feige’s death in a terrorist attack in Tel Aviv brought to a premature end a life dedicated to the peace process. These obituaries tell stories of lives of research, ideas and engagement. In addition, they are accounts of lives lived that also contain glimpses of people whose professionalism was combined with a range of very human personal qualities: kindness, courtesy, humility, imagination, commitment to reason, and commitment to social justice.
This note was first published in Everyday Society on 11 May 2020 https://es.britsoc.co.uk/the-condensed-lives-of-sociologists-in-obituaries/ and permission to reproduce it here is gratefully acknowledged.

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Research note 3: Lessons from academic careers https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-3-lessons-from-academic-careers/ https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-3-lessons-from-academic-careers/#respond Mon, 01 Jun 2020 21:27:44 +0000 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/?p=365 A successful career can take many forms, and there are always lessons to be learned through studying people’s achievements. For successful academics, obituaries are revealing about what counts as success and how to achieve it. In the obituaries featured weekly in The Times Higher in the five years from January 2015 (256 obituaries in total, mostly written by Matthew Reisz) there are Nobel Prize winners recognised for their scientific discoveries, such as Sir Charles Kuen Kao, ‘the grandfather of broadband’. There are authors noted for their prolific output, such as the development studies scholar Calestous Juma of whom it was said by a contemporary that he ‘could write faster than most of us could read’. There are much-loved teachers who inspired generations of students; Patrick O’Donnell delivered his introductory psychology lectures to 45 academic cohorts, long enough for his students to include members of three generations of the same family. There are people whose talent for administration and team-building include the physicist James Stirling who made it look easy to lead what was described (with implied understatement) as ‘a large department of occasionally fractious academics’. There are pioneers of organizational change, for example the health scientist Mary Edmonds, famous for promoting widening participation among women from minority ethnic backgrounds. Then there are quirky figures whose nicknames convey their personalities: the engineer Lord Kumar Bhattacharyya was ‘known as “Lord Battery Charger” for his fast-paced enthusiasm’, and Steve Redhead’s research engagement with contemporary dance culture earned him the moniker ‘Professor Rave’.
In some cases, success came despite inauspicious beginnings. Several of the obituaries relate stories of early lives scarred by displacement and persecution during the Second World War. Among these, the Dutch physicist Clemens Roothaan survived a concentration camp and went on to be described as ‘probably the person who most deserved but never received the Nobel Prize’. Another physicist, Ursula Franklin, survived a forced labour camp and went on to become the first female professor in the University of Toronto’s Faculty of Engineering; she also won Canada’s Pearson Peace Medal for her humanitarian work. Others also took contrasting paths to that of smooth progression following conventional academic milestones. The archaeologist Mark Pluciennik completed his undergraduate degree at the second attempt in his thirties, but despite this ‘late start’ he became ‘a scholar of international repute’. The anthropologist Paul Clough took 19 years to complete his PhD, but perseverance with this and related research paid off as it ‘transformed our understanding of African peasant economies and societies’. And without the work of the transgender neuroscientist Ben Barres (who transitioned mid-career and reflected on how male and female scientists are received differently), it is said that ‘there would be no field’ of glial studies at all.
There are of course also plenty of cases of favourable beginnings (such as having academic parents) and of steady career progression, but even here chance events feature in life stories. The psychologist John Krumboltz was introduced to his discipline by his tennis coach. Carl Weber’s route to becoming Professor of Drama at Stanford followed both working with Bertolt Brecht and being forced into exile by Cold War politics. The literary scholar Pascale Casanova had Pierre Bourdieu as her PhD supervisor, but never held a permanent academic post in France. For the humanities scholar Annette Kolodny, her early education and career took her to several prestigious North American institutions but the hostile reception given to her ideas led her to liken academic life to dancing through a minefield. Her legacy is framed in terms of both her scholarship and her inspirational personal characteristics, including graciousness.
Other obituaries also remember their subjects for a set of positive qualities, including attention to detail, boundless energy, charisma, commitment, compassion, congeniality, diplomacy, empathy, encyclopaedic knowledge, fearless forensic intelligence, genius, humility, humour, integrity, kindness, modesty, natural aptitude for communication, open-mindedness, prodigious energy, rigour, and scholarly temperament. They are described variously as astonishingly wide-ranging, committed, dedicated, delighted when others succeeded, distinguished, exuberant, fair-minded, generous, good-humoured, highly-influential, humble, infectiously brilliant, much-admired, outstanding, passionate, pioneering, spellbinding, stimulating, tireless, and versatile team players. One wonders how ‘a great scholar of the old school’ (the description applied to the expert on culture and politics Joseph Buttegieg) would fare if starting out in to-day’s more competitive academic environment. That said, competitiveness overshadowing collegiality is the gist of a minority of obituaries, framed as the forthrightness of combative and provocative characters unafraid of confrontation. Such figures are remembered wryly as having attracted ‘as many critics as admirers’. Other minorities include those described as ‘scatter-brained’ and ‘maverick’. Paul Clough’s reported capacity ‘to connect with any argument’ also suggests unusualness. On another plane, the scholar of literature and religion William Gray is perhaps unique among academics in having been ‘completely free of the wish to impress’; we may not see his like again.
Two decades ago Barbara Tizard and Charlie Owen’s survey of retired academics in the UK found a strikingly diverse pattern of career trajectories. At that time, however, fixed retirement ages had forced an ending which has now become more optional, and the prospect beckons of some academics keeping their jobs into their seventies and beyond. In the UK, at least, changed pension arrangements are another variation from the fixed points of earlier generations’ calculations about when and how to retire from a fulfilling academic career. This limits the extent to which iconic members of those earlier generations can provide to-day’s academics with realistic role models. For these and other reasons, including the feminisation of the workforce and the precariousness of much employment in universities, the time is ripe for a new study of academics’ later careers and retirement. The Leverhulme Trust are funding me to undertake this, and data are being collected through two surveys of UK-based academics, one for current staff contemplating retirement and another for those already retired.
This note was first published in Discover Society https://discoversociety.org/2020/05/06/lessons-from-academic-careers/  and permission to reproduce it here is gratefully acknowledged.

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Research note 2: What is academic retirement? https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-2-what-is-academic-retirement/ https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/research-note-2-what-is-academic-retirement/#respond Mon, 01 Jun 2020 21:14:17 +0000 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/?p=363 A life expectancy of 75 may seem low for academics, but it is the average age at which death occurred for the people featured in the weekly obituaries column of The Times Higher over the five years from January 2015. Of course, it does not follow that university dons have a lower life expectancy than the general UK population, because the sample is not a random one. Of the 256 obituaries featured during this period, only a quarter were women, and a significant minority lived and worked outside of the UK, principally in the USA but in a dozen or so other countries besides, across five continents. The oldest lived to be over 100; the youngest was only 37 when he died. One in seven did not reach their sixtieth birthday, but an almost identical proportion lived to be over 90.
At an individual level, the retirement to which academics can look forward is unpredictable in terms of length. The picture of life after work is further complicated by some people choosing to carry on with what they know. The old adage that academics never retire is supported by the many cases in which the obituarist (normally Matthew Reisz) uses phrases such as ‘notionally retired’, ‘nominal retirement’, ‘a committed researcher to the end of her life’, ‘intellectually active to the last’, and ‘even in hospital, continued working on his final paper’. Some easing up is implied in the story told by the medical researcher Denis Mitchison of his decision aged 90 ‘to take Mondays off’. Another nonagenarian, the physicist and educationalist Lewis Elton, ‘hardly let retirement slow him down’; a third, the mathematician Martin Shubik, was ‘a committed researcher right up to his death’. The philosopher Agnes Heller’s continued high profile as a prodigious writer and lecturer prompted an invitation to lunch from Emmanuel Macron when she reached 90.
Instances of leaving academia early are noticeably fewer, reflecting perhaps a correlation between number of years in the job and the likelihood of achieving the distinction needed to be selected to feature in this obituary column. Distinctions in the form of prizes (including Nobel Prizes), medals, honours and citations awarded in recognition of achievement are typically features of later career stages or post-retirement, as in the case of the astronomer Jack Meadows who had a minor planet named after him aged 72. (It should be noted, however, that a similar honour was given to the physicist Christine Floss, who died in her fifties.) The centenarian oceanographer Walter Munk, described as having been ‘a provocative force in science for 80 years’, had both a deep-sea worm and a pygmy devil fish named after him.
Another very long career was Gillet Griffin’s; his association with Princeton lasted over six decades and included a friendship with Albert Einstein. The view associated with Einstein that great careers start young receives support in several obituaries. Aubrey Trotman-Dickenson’s was one such case, highlighting a first article published when he was 21, based on work done at school with his teacher; both went on to become University vice-chancellors/principals. Early achievements mentioned in Claire Sponsler’s obituary include reading Nietzsche aged 7, while Anne Monius traced her academic trajectory to a visit to Harvard University’s Museum of Comparative Zoology at the age of 8. By contrast, other journeys to academic success are prefaced by phrases such as ‘despite his late start’; several accounts chronicle diverse life experiences (such as working as a record store assistant, a docker, a footballer, a singer, a journalist, and doing national service in the armed forces) before devoting attention to university. Still others include the extreme challenges faced by children escaping Nazi Germany via the Kindertransport, or surviving the second world war in a forced labour camp, or being orphaned by a father’s execution. In short, there are diverse career trajectories that range from what are called in the literature ‘early achievers’ to ‘late bloomers’.
Although there are cases of individuals following an idealised pattern of ‘rising through the ranks’ to prominent positions then enjoying deserved retirement pursuing new interests such as writing thrillers, learning to fly aeroplanes, community singing, volunteering, travelling, campaigning, birdwatching, and cultivating their gardens, others stayed in more familiar territory by setting up a publishing house, teaching in a prison, and writing memoirs. Twenty years ago Barbara Tizard and Charlie Owen’s survey of retired academics in the UK found a similarly diverse pattern. At that time, however, fixed retirement ages forced a change which has now become more optional, and the prospect beckons of academics keeping their jobs into their seventies and beyond. In the UK, at least, changed pension arrangements are another variation from the fixed points of earlier generations’ calculations about when and how to retire. This limits the extent to which members of those earlier generations can provide to-day’s academics with realistic role models. For these and other reasons, including the feminisation of the workforce and the precariousness of much employment in universities, the time is ripe for a new study of academics’ later careers and retirement. The Leverhulme Trust are funding me to undertake this, and data are being collected through two surveys of UK-based academics, one for current staff contemplating retirement and another for those already retired.

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Research note 1: Managing career endings and the transition to retirement: the case of academics https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/managing-career-endings-and-the-transition-to-retirement-the-case-of-academics/ https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/managing-career-endings-and-the-transition-to-retirement-the-case-of-academics/#respond Mon, 02 Mar 2020 15:59:20 +0000 https://www.academic-career-ending.sps.ed.ac.uk/?p=51 Post by Professor Graham Crow

Academic careers matter for several reasons, and much has been written about them. Extensive advice is available on establishing successful academic careers, but a recent contributor to this literature lamented that the ideal model of academic careers ‘fails to attend to the concerns of scholars looking to transition successfully out of the university at the end of their career’ (Hay 2017: 200). This issue warrants attention to begin with because it matters to the people whose careers are coming to a close at a time when retirement is associated with new opportunities but also uncertainties (Phillipson et al. 2018). Secondly, the issue matters to universities because they have responsibilities to, and the potential to continue to benefit from, members of their academic staff as they negotiate the completion of their careers. Thirdly, existing arrangements need to be kept under review as times change. The autobiographies, biographies and obituaries of earlier generations of academics that provide accounts of completed careers may be an unreliable guide to what is possible or appropriate now. Each discipline will have its own iconic figures and role models which will bear some resemblance to the sociologists drawn upon here as illustrations, as well as some distinctiveness.

Retirement is not something that workers necessarily approach with equanimity. As Richard Sennett observed in his study of modern, flexible work patterns, ‘It is quite natural that flexibility should arouse anxiety’; when they move away from previously stable points of reference, ‘people do not know… what paths to pursue’ (1998: 9). In the year that Sennett’s book was published, Barbara Tizard and Charlie Owen conducted a survey of academics recently retired from pre-1992 universities in England. They found that two thirds had retired ‘early’ (relative to the fixed retirement ages of the time), although over half of the 1295 academic participants in the study returned to work part-time for universities subsequent to their formal retirement. This raises interesting questions about the very meaning of ‘retirement’, and of the related idea of a ‘career’, about which there is a long history of lively debate (Becker and Strauss 1956; Bourdieu 1988; Pahl 1995; Sennett 1998; Young and Schuller 1991). Tizard and Owen argued that those people who opt to continue to work into ‘retirement’ cast doubt on widely-held concerns that ‘the skills and experience of academics are lost to society once they retire’ (2001: 265) and the associated idea that this is a group characterised by frustration at being compelled to stop. The replacement of compulsory retirement ages by flexible arrangements in almost all UK universities has coincided with a more general movement away from the pattern of early labour market exit that characterised the later stages of the 20th century (Kohli et al. 1991). There have also been changes to pension arrangements, and acknowledgement that career trajectories are gendered further complicates the picture. There is, moreover, a (contested) view that older academics staying in post for longer has the effect of blocking opportunities for colleagues at earlier career stages whose vulnerability to precarious employment already contrasts unfavourably with the early career experiences of the ‘baby boomer’ generation who are now retiring (Grove 2018). It would be interesting to know how much this constitutes a ‘push’ factor for academics considering retirement, and whether it is outweighed by issues of economic need to keep working and the pursuit of self-fulfilment and status among peers. Tizard and Owen’s (2001) findings on these issues are two decades old, based on English pre-1992 universities, and require updating. 

In a linked study of the policies and practices that universities in England and Scotland put in place to support retired academics, Tizard discovered great variation. She found that some institutions regarded on-going relationships with former staff a cost-effective way of contributing to their strategic goals, while others treated them as ‘using up valuable resources long after they have ceased to play a useful role’ (2004: 261). Notwithstanding the humorous old adage that ageing professors never die but merely lose their faculties, ageism is a serious matter in academia. The controversial opinion (attributed to Albert Einstein) that ‘A person who has not made his great contribution to science before the age of 30 will never do so is more often associated with ‘hard’ sciences than with other disciplines, but even there it is contested. Instances of ‘late blooming’ (Becher and Trowler 2001: 145) are identifiable in a range of contexts. Arne Kalleberg has pointed out that the use of the terms ‘“early achievers” and “late bloomers” reflect our assumptions about levels of achievement assumed to correspond to (or match) particular life stages’ (2007: 65), but the methodological foundations of what is known about typical academic career trajectories may be shaky. Certainly there are competing views about the best way to approach the study of careers (Abbott 2001: ch.5). But whether the focus is on structural causes of outcomes or on the narratives that people construct, there must be concern that Tizard and Owen found ‘dissatisfaction with the work situation’ (2001: 261) so widespread among their sample’s members who had retired early. Their participants expressed particular concerns relating to the growth of administration, audits, assessments and class sizes. These concerns will have featured in many of them concluding that early ‘exit’ was preferable to continued ‘loyalty’ to their organization or to the option to ‘voice’ disquiet from within, to use the terms made famous by Hirschman’s (1970) classic study. How things stand in relation to the question of job satisfaction among later career and post-retirement university employees two decades on from Tizard and Owen’s study is a matter calling out urgently for repeat investigation. 

The issue of the relationship between what has happened in the past and what is feasible for to-day’s academics needs to combine historical exploration with consideration of emergent possibilities. In the discipline of sociology, for example, the autobiographies of Alan Fox (1990) and Chelly Halsey (1996) that were written during active retirements both report on having been born into working-class families in the 1920s and on careers at the University of Oxford. Both books contain much that members of subsequent generations of academics may relate to, but they also prompt the sense of a lost world, as does Halsey’s (1995) survey-based Decline of Donnish Dominion. A more extreme example is the career trajectory of Norbert Elias, which involved compulsory retirement at the age of 65 from his first lectureship which he had secured at the University of Leicester only eight years previously in 1954. The remarkable flowering in terms of publications and international recognition subsequent to that retirement (Elias 1994) is hard to envisage being repeated, although another exile from continental Europe, Zygmunt Bauman (who also continued publishing into his nineties) may have come close (Davis 2017). Born in the same year as Elias and living only two years fewer than he did, Baroness Barbara Wootton had arguably as many claims to fame but subsequently came to be ‘forgotten’ (Oakley 2011: 2), a state of affairs that Ann Oakley’s biography was written to correct. It has every chance of doing so in an age where researchers are expected to achieve both academic rigour and research ‘impact’, and where the academic sexism that required Wootton at the start of her career to lecture under a man’s name has been successfully challenged. Women are present among the contributors to Alan Sica and Stephen Turner’s (2005) collection of autobiographical accounts of academics who had been students in the 1960’s, and among the contributors to Rosalyn Darling and Peter Stein’s (2017) accounts of sociologists’ journeys into ‘fulfilling retirements’. They constitute the majority of the collection of British sociologists’ accounts of their careers (Twamley et al. 2015). Sociology is only one among 34 disciplinary categories used in the Research Excellence Framework and sociologists would be the first to raise questions about the wider typicality of academic career patterns relating to breaking through gendered glass ceilings and related issues that new research covering the range of academic disciplines has the opportunity to investigate. 

Bringing these three elements together has the potential to shed light on what might constitute a successful academic career and retirement in current circumstances. The very idea that ‘success’ is the appropriate yardstick may be contested, just as it has been for politicians’ careers which have been said to almost always end in failure (Powell 1977). Max Weber’s observation (made in 1917) that ‘In science, each of us knows that what he has accomplished will be antiquated in ten, twenty, fifty years’ (1970: 138) is one way of thinking about this. Asking Crane Brinton’s question ‘Who now reads Spencer? (Parsons 1968: 3), which draws attention to the fleeting character of academic celebrity, is another. Both provide a useful antidote to the potential for fantasy to enter our imagined futures (Goodwin and O’Connor 2015), although Weber’s discussion of academics’ legacies uses the language of the ‘gratifications’ that are possible despite the work that has been done being superceded. Revisiting the issues raised in Tizard and Owen’s study thus generates some intriguing hypotheses to pursue, including ones about the collective nature of academic life and the importance of cultivating connections to other people, to institutions, and to schools of thought through which individual contributions can continue to be appreciated. Later careers and retirement do involve reconsideration of the meaning of ‘success’ relative to earlier aspirations (Pahl 1995), but this does not have to be couched in terms of disappointment. As Sara Lawrence-Lightfoot’s (2009) research has shown, turning 50 can open the door to a world of ‘passion, risk and adventure’. 


References:

 Abbott, A. (2001) Time Matters. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.  

Becher, T. and Trowler, P. (2001) Academic Tribes and Territories. Buckingham: Open University Press, 2nd edition. 

Becker, H. and Strauss, A. (1956) ‘Careers, Personality and Adult Socialization’, American Journal of Sociology 62, pp.253-63. 

Bourdieu, P. (1988) Homo Academicus. Cambridge: Policy Press. 

Darling, R. and Stein, P. (eds) (2017) Journeys in Sociology. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. 

Davis, M. (2017) ‘Zygmunt Bauman, 1925-2017’, Discover Society 10 January https://discoversociety.org/2017/01/10/zygmunt-bauman-1925-2017/  

Elias, N. (1994) Reflections on a Life. Cambridge: Polity. 

Fox, A. (1990) A Very Late Development. Warwick: IRRU. 

Grove, J. (2018) Number of academics working beyond 65 in UK doubles, The Higher 20 September, p.10.  

Halsey, A. H. (1995) Decline of Donnish Dominion. Oxford: Clarendon Press. 

Halsey, A. H. (1996) No Discouragement. Basingstoke: Macmillan. 

Hay, I. (2017) How to be an Academic Superhero. Arts and Humanities. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar. 

Hirschman, A. (1970) Exit, Voice and Loyalty. Cambridge, Ma.: Harvard University Press. 

Kalleberg, A. (2007) The Mismatched Worker. New York: W. W. Norton. 

Kohli, M., Rein, M., Guillemard A-M. and van Gunsteren, H. (eds) (1991) Time for Retirement. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.  

Lawrence-Lightfoot, S. (2009) The Third Chapter: Passion, risk and adventure in the 25 years after 50. New York: Sarah Crichton. 

Oakley, A. (2011) A Critical Woman. London: Bloomsbury Academic. 

O’Connor, H. and Goodwin, J. (2014) ‘Notions of fantasy and reality in adjustment to retirement’, Ageing and Society 34(4), pp.569-89. 

Pahl, R. (1995) After Success. Cambridge: Polity. 

Parsons, T. (1968) The Structure of Social Action, vol.1. New York: Free Press. 

Phillipson, C., Shepherd, S., Robinson, M. and Vickerstaff, S. (2018) ‘Uncertain Futures: Organisational Influences on the Transition from Work to Retirement’, Social Policy & Society, First View  

Powell, E. (1977) Joseph Chamberlain. London: Thames and Hudson. 

Sennett, R. (1998) The Corrosion of Character. New York: W. W. Norton. 

Sica, A. and Turner, S. (eds) The Disobedient Generation. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. 

Tizard, B. (2004) ‘Support for retired academic staff: University policies and practices’, Oxford Review of Education 30(2), pp.257-63. 

Tizard, B. and Owen, C. (2001) ‘Activities and attitudes of retired academic staff’, Oxford Review of Education 27(2), pp.253-70. 

Twamley, K., Doidge, M. and Scott, A. (eds) Sociologists’ Tales. Bristol: Policy Press. 

Weber, M. (1970) From Max Weber. London: Routledge and Kegan Paul. 

Young, M. and Schuller, T. (1991) Life After Work. London: Harper Collins. 

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