tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5397103.post4344287082413927723..comments2024-01-02T18:05:23.666-06:00Comments on Streak's Blog: On developing new paths for history phdsStreakhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01443433745929880701noreply@blogger.comBlogger3125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5397103.post-84664715589949303962014-03-22T10:27:42.550-05:002014-03-22T10:27:42.550-05:00I have wrestled with what might have better prepar...I have wrestled with what might have better prepared me in my graduate and post graduate work for real world job options. Due largely to my age I was immediately put into non-profit-a nice placement except I just wasn't ready to accept that I had no future in academia. My second job was in a public history option-preparing expert witness historical studies. The writing for these was expected to be completely non thesis driven, impartial, objective. I was told my "expertise was a detriment to this job." Eventually I quit. Both jobs could have been done (and eventually were done) by people with undergraduate degrees. My wish is that there would be better bridging in history specifically with policy oriented disciplines--esp for us environmental historians. History is so rarified and seems to treasure that in itself to such a high degree that any real world application is held in distain. While policy driven disciplines are so frequently woefully lacking in historical knowledge. I had a history professor ask me once what public history was?! Secondly, tenured professors who take on the challenge of being graduate advisors should be held more accountable for their students success. Obviously this has limits but there are many more profs out in the world pushing their students and if your prof is just too polite, insecure, lofty, etc. to pick up the phone you are at a real disadvantage. Over time, if a program sees this happening, there should be more pressure to do right by its students. I have had such a high degree of success in scholarly writing that I am now thinking of that as some sort of career path on its own--how to cash in on that talent but it is still not likely to ever be monetarily adequate. It is a frustrating struggle. <br /> weave and spinhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02701833950097523264noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5397103.post-60703586431697354572014-03-21T15:37:00.478-05:002014-03-21T15:37:00.478-05:00Key example: "...crafting curricula designed ...Key example: "...crafting curricula designed to give students better real-world skills, such as how nonprofit organizations work." Most business divisions have existing courses that cover this with emphases on how to get hired and work there; why duplicate that effort in history departments, instead of tweaking the major requirements to let a class like that count toward required credits? Weird.leightonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07821884432248870789noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-5397103.post-85891681438173127012014-03-21T15:32:05.804-05:002014-03-21T15:32:05.804-05:00I've been out of academia for close to a decad...I've been out of academia for close to a decade, but it seems like a lot of the initiatives the grant will fund are basically just interdisciplinary conversations. Data-mining history sounds awesome, but it seems like the kind of thing you could get if you locked history and statistics grad students in a lounge with a couple bottles of vodka. Seminars on job possibilities sound really, legitimately helpful, but I'm not sure why it would require a 7-figure grant and a 3-year dedicated position to make it happen. Maybe the culture is even more ossified than I remember. leightonhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07821884432248870789noreply@blogger.com