
What to Expect and How to Respond
Distress and Success in Academia
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Published on 21. September 2016
Book
Hardback
218 pages
978-1-4758-2744-6 (ISBN)
Description
What to Expect and How to Respond offers a solutions oriented glimpse into life in academia from the vantage point of groups including students, faculty and administrators. This interdisciplinary anthology provides insight into the profession for graduate students planning on becoming academics; brings to the attention of junior faculty potential tenure and promotion pitfalls as well as strategies to successfully overcome potential obstacles; offers senior faculty strategies to improve collegiality and the workplace environment; and provides administrators with tools to proactively and effectively contend with sensitive managerial matters. This interdisciplinary anthology is useful for undergraduate and graduate students of any discipline designed to prepare them for a career in academia whether as staff, faculty or an administrator. Moreover, this volume is a fine resource for those already in academia who may be experiencing any one or number of specific challenges highlighted from which useful survival strategies could be garnered.
Reviews / Votes
The collection of essays assembled in What to Expect and How to Respond offers clear insight into the world of higher education as experienced from the vantage point of minority faculty and administrators, at various stages of their careers. Each compelling narrative emphasizes overcoming challenges and obstacles in "tense" and oftentimes "traumatic" environments. This unique text provides readers with a lens to deconstruct events and ways to build resilience within institutions in which they could otherwise feel defenseless. -- DeMond S. Miller, director, Liberal Arts and Sciences Institute for Research and Community Service, Rowan University What to Expect and How to Respond addresses race and cultural democracy in the American academy from the perspectives of a select racially and culturally diverse group of women and men. The horrors and distress described are painful to read. More importantly, however, while perceived horrors and distress exist, insight is provided to those who seek ways to be victorious rather than victims. -- Delores P. Aldridge Ph.D, Emory University, Grace Towns Hamilton, distinguished professor emerita of sociology and African American studies, Emory University What to Expect and How to Respond should be required reading for graduate students in professional seminars. Entering the job of university professor can seem, to the outsider, to be a laid back position with lots of free time and wonderful colleagues. Those of us who have had careers as professors quickly learned that much of this is not true. Finally this academic reality has been put between two covers. Read each chapter; learn the lessons given; enter the ivory tower; and become successful! -- Craig J. Forsyth, editor, Deviant Behavior, University of Louisiana, LafayetteMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
United States
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 235 mm
Width: 157 mm
Thickness: 18 mm
Weight
515 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4758-2744-6 (9781475827446)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Earl Wright II | Thomas C. Calhoun
What to Expect and How to Respond
Distress and Success in Academia
E-Book
09/2016
1st Edition
Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
€32.99
Available for download
Persons
Earl Wright II is Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Cincinnati and the author of groundbreaking works on the contributions of W. E. B. Du Bois and the Atlanta Sociological Laboratory to American sociology. He is also the past president of the Association of Black Sociologists and Mid-South Sociological Association.
Thomas C. Calhoun is Associate Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs and Professor of Sociology at Jackson State University and he has published extensively in the area of deviance. He is the recipient of the Aida Tomeh Outstanding Teaching Award and J. Milton Yinger Distinguished Career Award from the North Central Sociological Association; the A. Wade Smith Outstanding Teaching Award and the James E. Blackwell Distinguished Career Award from the Association of Black Sociologists; and is past president of the Association of Black Sociologists, Mid-South Sociological Association and North Central Sociological Association.
Thomas C. Calhoun is Associate Vice President for Academic and Student Affairs and Professor of Sociology at Jackson State University and he has published extensively in the area of deviance. He is the recipient of the Aida Tomeh Outstanding Teaching Award and J. Milton Yinger Distinguished Career Award from the North Central Sociological Association; the A. Wade Smith Outstanding Teaching Award and the James E. Blackwell Distinguished Career Award from the Association of Black Sociologists; and is past president of the Association of Black Sociologists, Mid-South Sociological Association and North Central Sociological Association.
Content
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part One: Navigating the Academic Pipeline
Chapter 1: Cuentos and Testimonios: Professional Socialization into Academia
Alma L. Zaragoza-Petty
Chapter 2: Hanging by a Thread: International Students Reaching for the American Dream
Cristina S. Stephens and Elena Gheorghiu
Chapter 3: Gritty Tales of Tenure Track Job Seekers in Higher Education
Thomas Hochschild
Part Two: Now That You Have the Job
Chapter 4: Paperwork, Meetings, and Program Review: The Challenges of University Teaching in the 21st Century
Deborah L. Smith and Brian J. Smith
Chapter 5: Honeymooning Alone: On the Challenges of Dual-Career Long-Distance Academic Couples
Breanne Fahs
Chapter 6: Who Publishes in Leading Sociology Journals (1965-2010)?
Robert Perrucci, Mangala Subramaniam and Carolyn C. Perrucci
Part Three: Challenges in Academia
Chapter 7: The Tyranny of the Majority: A Case Study of Intellectual Exclusion in Sociology
Joseph Michalski
Chapter 8: Two Professors and Their Stories from a Tiny College
Hamon Ha-am and Malintzin
Chapter 9: Down the Rabbit Hole: Racism and Microaggressions at a Public New England University
Shanette M. Harris and Donald Cunnigen
Part Four: Survival Techniques in Academia
Chapter 10: We are all Huskies: Constructing a Collective Memory after the Tragedy at Northern Illinois University
Bobbi A. Knapp
Chapter 11: Horror Stories from the Hallowed Halls of Academia: How Six Women Lived to Tell the Tale
Claire H. Procopio, Helen Tate, Kristina Horn Sheeler, Krista Hoffmann-Longtin, Sarah Feldner, and Karrin Vasby Anderson
Chapter 12: Turning Nightmares to Victories: Handling Promotion and Tenure Horrors
Lin Huff-Corzine and Melvin Rogers
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Index
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part One: Navigating the Academic Pipeline
Chapter 1: Cuentos and Testimonios: Professional Socialization into Academia
Alma L. Zaragoza-Petty
Chapter 2: Hanging by a Thread: International Students Reaching for the American Dream
Cristina S. Stephens and Elena Gheorghiu
Chapter 3: Gritty Tales of Tenure Track Job Seekers in Higher Education
Thomas Hochschild
Part Two: Now That You Have the Job
Chapter 4: Paperwork, Meetings, and Program Review: The Challenges of University Teaching in the 21st Century
Deborah L. Smith and Brian J. Smith
Chapter 5: Honeymooning Alone: On the Challenges of Dual-Career Long-Distance Academic Couples
Breanne Fahs
Chapter 6: Who Publishes in Leading Sociology Journals (1965-2010)?
Robert Perrucci, Mangala Subramaniam and Carolyn C. Perrucci
Part Three: Challenges in Academia
Chapter 7: The Tyranny of the Majority: A Case Study of Intellectual Exclusion in Sociology
Joseph Michalski
Chapter 8: Two Professors and Their Stories from a Tiny College
Hamon Ha-am and Malintzin
Chapter 9: Down the Rabbit Hole: Racism and Microaggressions at a Public New England University
Shanette M. Harris and Donald Cunnigen
Part Four: Survival Techniques in Academia
Chapter 10: We are all Huskies: Constructing a Collective Memory after the Tragedy at Northern Illinois University
Bobbi A. Knapp
Chapter 11: Horror Stories from the Hallowed Halls of Academia: How Six Women Lived to Tell the Tale
Claire H. Procopio, Helen Tate, Kristina Horn Sheeler, Krista Hoffmann-Longtin, Sarah Feldner, and Karrin Vasby Anderson
Chapter 12: Turning Nightmares to Victories: Handling Promotion and Tenure Horrors
Lin Huff-Corzine and Melvin Rogers
About the Editors
About the Contributors
Index