Here today, gone tomorrow: University governance and PhD massification

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Here today, gone tomorrow : University governance and PhD massification. / Sarauw, Laura Louise.

2010. Paper presented at UNIGO Seminar.

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperResearch

Harvard

Sarauw, LL 2010, 'Here today, gone tomorrow: University governance and PhD massification', Paper presented at UNIGO Seminar, 24/06/2010 - 24/06/2010.

APA

Sarauw, L. L. (2010). Here today, gone tomorrow: University governance and PhD massification. Paper presented at UNIGO Seminar.

Vancouver

Sarauw LL. Here today, gone tomorrow: University governance and PhD massification. 2010. Paper presented at UNIGO Seminar.

Author

Sarauw, Laura Louise. / Here today, gone tomorrow : University governance and PhD massification. Paper presented at UNIGO Seminar.5 p.

Bibtex

@conference{b04f81134d944db79c219030ef4424c0,
title = "Here today, gone tomorrow: University governance and PhD massification",
abstract = "Earlier this spring, a colleague of mine chose to leave her position at the university. The reason was not that was offered a better or more prestigious job somewhere else. The fact is that she preferred an insecure life supporting herself by other means to the career offered by the university. Personally, however, I was not as shaken by her decision as by the fact that no one at the department really reacted, or tried to address it as symptomatic to a much broader and general problematic. Departing from the case of my college, the essay explores a series of unaddressed questions within university governance in relation to the on going massification of doctoral education. The essay is based on a minor survey among PhD fellows at the Faculty of Humanities, UoC. ",
author = "Sarauw, {Laura Louise}",
year = "2010",
month = jun,
day = "24",
language = "English",
note = "null ; Conference date: 24-06-2010 Through 24-06-2010",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Here today, gone tomorrow

AU - Sarauw, Laura Louise

PY - 2010/6/24

Y1 - 2010/6/24

N2 - Earlier this spring, a colleague of mine chose to leave her position at the university. The reason was not that was offered a better or more prestigious job somewhere else. The fact is that she preferred an insecure life supporting herself by other means to the career offered by the university. Personally, however, I was not as shaken by her decision as by the fact that no one at the department really reacted, or tried to address it as symptomatic to a much broader and general problematic. Departing from the case of my college, the essay explores a series of unaddressed questions within university governance in relation to the on going massification of doctoral education. The essay is based on a minor survey among PhD fellows at the Faculty of Humanities, UoC.

AB - Earlier this spring, a colleague of mine chose to leave her position at the university. The reason was not that was offered a better or more prestigious job somewhere else. The fact is that she preferred an insecure life supporting herself by other means to the career offered by the university. Personally, however, I was not as shaken by her decision as by the fact that no one at the department really reacted, or tried to address it as symptomatic to a much broader and general problematic. Departing from the case of my college, the essay explores a series of unaddressed questions within university governance in relation to the on going massification of doctoral education. The essay is based on a minor survey among PhD fellows at the Faculty of Humanities, UoC.

M3 - Paper

Y2 - 24 June 2010 through 24 June 2010

ER -

ID: 33582356