There is an air of mystique (and kudos) surrounding the title āProfessorā. On the one hand, it conjures up tired stereotypes (think eggheads and batty scientists), and on the other, those elite, high-flying scholars soaring through the academic stratosphere (think Richard Dawkins, Stephen Hawking or even Brian Cox).
A professorship is widely seen as the pinnacle of achievement for staff in higher education. But what ā in 2015 ā should a professor be?
Broadly speaking (and with many caveats around the differences between countries and cultures), professors teach students at a high level, they conduct research and they publish scholarly works. So far, so simple.
In fact, from a US perspective, Iāve heard that things are perceived as far simpler in Europe (where only very senior faculty call themselves professors).
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Writing to freshers , the University of Houston-Clear Lakeās Keith Parsons attempted to simplify the situation still further for his new charges. āI am your professor, not your teacher. There is a difference,ā he wrote. āUp to now your instruction has been in the hands of teachers, and a teacherās job is to make sure that you learnā¦However, things are very different for a university professor. It is no part of my job to make you learn. At university, learning is your job ā and yours alone.ā
A university professor, he wrote, should ālead you to the fountain of knowledgeā, but āwhether you drink deeply or only gargle is entirely up to youā. Itās an interesting view.
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Emory University English professor Mark Bauerlein wrote a piece for The New York TimesĢż³Ł¾±³Ł±ō±š»å ? In it, he argues that āyou canāt become a moral authority if you rarely challenge students in class and engage them beyond it. If we professors do not do that, the course is not an induction of eager minds into an enlarging vision. It is a requirement to fulfil.ā
He goes on to state that in times past āstudents looked to professors for moral and worldly understandingā. In 1967, in fact, more than twice as many students said they hoped that university would help them in ādeveloping a meaningful philosophy of lifeā as they hoped that it would ensure they were āwell off financiallyā in the future. Since then, these objectives have traded places.
The decline in regard for teaching in higher education seems to have deep roots. Back in 1518 (!), a requirement for Oxford arts graduates to undertake a period of teaching was rescinded ābecause nobody attends those lecturingā.
I certainly subscribe to the view that the best professors treat students as individuals, not numbers. They go the extra mile in helping students and in responding in a timely and constructive manner to study queries; they not only know their stuff but also know how to communicate it, in an engaging and inspiring way.
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Professors should go way beyond the academy and talking in huddles through journals that have limited readership. They should not be presenting articles in arcane language and publishing findings a year or so after the event.
We find ourselves in a world of mass migration, climate change, poverty and war. Now ā of all times ā is a moment for leadership and connection; for influencing policy, communicating ideas and facilitating their implementation. Without this, we as citizens and academics are lost. As philosopher of science J. D. Bernal commented ā the scientist is citizen first, scientist second.
There appears little consensus on what a professor actually is. Is it a status symbol; the summit of the academy? The opaqueness of the issue was brought home by one retired professor who told me: āYouāll know a real professor when you see one.ā
James Derounian is principal lecturer, applied social sciences, and National Teaching Fellow at the University of Gloucestershire.
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