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IDENTITY WORK AND SENSEMAKING BY FACULTY APPROACHING TENURE

In recent years, federal grants for biomedical research have become increasingly difficult to secure, yet remain important for receipt of tenure in the biomedical sciences at research-intensive institutions. This study examines how pre-tenure biomedical faculty in a top research university cope with the threat of tenure denial that is due, in part, to the current NIH economy. It specifically focuses on the effect this experience may have on professional identities. Ten lower-funded and eight higher-funded faculty were interviewed about their professional identity, their experiences approaching tenure, and institutional support. The majority of the participants had strong professional identities as academic researchers. There was a clear sense among the majority that being funded is more important than receiving tenure. Unmet expectations existed regarding the nature of science and faculty work, academic freedom, independence, and the intense focus on funding. Several faculty described episodes of identity work. Some made conscious efforts to separate their professional and personal identities and another tried to integrate the two. Faculty used preventive identity work to inhibit future identity chasms and to cope with potential identity threats. Four types of professional identity work were displayed: reframing the nature of professional work, reframing the approach to work, reconceptualizing the professional self, and renegotiating the relationship of self to professional work. Faculty participants understood professional success in their institutional environment to mean receipt of biomedical research grants from the federal government. They exhibited a lack of clarity regarding institutional expectations for tenure, and acknowledged that department chairs and mentors can help both in this regard and with developing a sense of community and fit. This research sheds light on the pressures experienced by those who may find cures for a plethora of public health issues in the future. Practical suggestions are provided to help medical school administrators wishing to support and enhance the productivity and comfort of junior faculty.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PITT/oai:PITTETD:etd-07272010-164923
Date08 December 2010
CreatorsRobinson, Georgeanna
ContributorsMichael G. Gunzenhauser, PhD, Bennett Van Houten, PhD, John C. Weidman II, PhD, B. Jean Ferketish, PhD
PublisherUniversity of Pittsburgh
Source SetsUniversity of Pittsburgh
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
Sourcehttp://etd.library.pitt.edu/ETD/available/etd-07272010-164923/
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