Are you anacademic who issuffering from burnout? Isthere achance you might beneurodivergent?
Im sorry to pose the question insuch ablunt way, but this conversation iswell overdue. Every day Imeet academics who Im pretty sure are onthe spectrum, yet, according to , there were only 430 autistic academics in theUK in2022-23 out of atotal of240,420.
If we include all neurodiverse conditions, that number rises to 4,385, but that is still less than one in every 50academics. The number is so low it is almost impossible to believe.
Let me tell you a personal story. In the past few years, Ive been diagnosed with two conditions: autism and ADHD. The former Ihad suspected for many years; the latter came as a complete surprise. Initially, Iwas sure Iwould be open about my diagnoses, including at work Ithought about setting up a forum for neurodivergent staff and students at my university. Pretty quickly, however, these plans vaporised.
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What if people take me less seriously? Ithought. Will my students lose all respect for me? Will Iget viewed as a headcase: someone incapable of the kind of sober, rational analysis academia so greatly prizes? My diagnosis quickly became a stigma that Ihad to hide at all costs. And Iam sure that Iam far from alone.
This is ironic because academia is surely one of the most popular professions for neurodiverse people. We are drawn into it by the long hours of solitary work, the passionate obsession with niche topics, by the prospect of being paid for doing something we probably would have tried to do anyway.
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The problem is that this is a picture of how academia used to be, 50 years ago. Today, academics are also expected to be administrators, to be counsellors, to network. Just about everyone Iknow complains of burnout. And, sure, there is a lot wrong with UKuniversities at the moment. But is it possible that a whole cohort of neurodivergent people are being asked to perform in aneurotypical way? Has the marketisation of higher education made it less amenable to the neurodiverse people who used to find it their natural habitat?
In wider society, neurodiversity is rapidly becoming less of a stigma. Rates of diagnosis are soaring. Ithink [this] is going to continue until maybe everyone is categorised as neurodiverse, , a sociologist at the University of Exeter, earlier this year. And maybe, in time, everyone will.
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This led me to wonder whether there are any neurotypical academics. And what does it mean to be neurotypical? Im not sure Iknow anyonewhom Iwould confidently define that way. With neurodiversity covering such a wide range of conditions, neurotypical seems to be a mere negation someone who is 紳棗喧泭紳梗喝娶棗餃勳措梗娶眶梗紳喧. It has nocontent of its own.
But maybe in 100 years the categories will be switched around. Maybe we will no longer speak of autism and ADHD, for example, but will call this cluster of traits something else, much as we no longer speak of hysteria or neurasthenia (100 years ago Imight have been diagnosed with neurasthenia). You put a label on something, but what is it youre putting a label on? We are only just beginning to understand the complexities of the human mind, and how it can vary.
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What unsettles me is the thought that Ive been caught up in a cultural moment. ADHD, in particular, seems to have exploded into the public consciousness just as Ive been diagnosed. Are people simply becoming more aware of the condition, spotting its traits more readily? Has the same percentage of people had what we now call ADHD throughout history?
Or is something else going on here? Have environmental factors led to an explosion in its prevalence? Has long-term screen exposure affected the development of our minds? Like so many of my students, Irarely put down my smartphone these days; is that a symptom of ADHD, or a cause? Are you telling me ADHD is unconnected to these phenomena?
On the other hand, people used to worry about the effects of train travel on the nerves. Later it was radio and television. Such fears seem silly now; will we come to feel the same about concerns over screen time?
Perhaps. But whatever their causes and however mutable their definitions to get back to my main point autism and ADHD do seem to be the elephants in so many university seminar rooms. Isnt it time we acknowledged their presence?
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Perhaps Im focusing too much on my own experiences and observations. Other academics may feel that a diagnosis is unnecessary, or that it would reduce their complex individuality to a condition. But that doesnt mean we shouldnt talk aboutit.
Because, lets face it, youre a bit odd to be working in this profession. There are easier ways to make money, and there are easier ways to pursue a vocation. Maybe its time to think about why youre doing it in the first place. And maybe its time for the sector to reflect on whether it is asking too much of you.
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is director of the Leo Baeck Institute London and a lecturer in modern European history at Birkbeck, University of London.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline: We neurodiverse fill academia, but do universities ask too much of us?
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