Inger Mewburn is director of researcher development at the Australian National University. Her 10-year-old blog,Ā , has amassed more than half a million words of content and 100,000 followers over four social media channels. Her fifth book,Ā Level Up Your Essays, comes out next February.
Where and when were you born?
Tasmania in 1970. My parents didnāt expect twins because it was the 1970s and they didnāt have ultrasound. I was second so I was the unexpected package deal. They didnāt have two names sorted out. They were really into Abba and Sweden. They called me Inger because I had blonde hair.
How has it shaped who you are?
My dad was in Hobart managing a dye house. He was an industrial chemist who transferred into mainframe computer programming. I remember sitting under his desk, playing with the punch cards and making necklaces out of them. I had a PC when I was 11. My friends had never even seen one.
When you became an architect, what did you prefer ā doing it or teaching it?
I taught my first class in 1994, about three years before I graduated from my bachelorās course. They computerised architecture faculties in the early 1990s, as computers were appearing in architectsā offices. Because of that time sitting under my dadās desk, I wasnāt afraid of computers. They put these things in the lab. They didnāt really know what to do with them, but they let us students loose in there. We formed what Iād now call a community of practice, and they made us teach because they didnāt have anyone else ā no one had the skills. After I graduated, I was still going back and teaching at night ā computers for the most part, construction and project management and a few other things. I knew how to teach, and I was cheap. Iād come home from work after a whole day of dealing with architects, and Iād be really down. But Iād come home after teaching at night and be really energised. My husband said, āThe only time youāre happy is when you come home from teaching, so perhaps you should just do that.ā
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When you wrote forĀ 51³Ō¹ĻĀ in 2017, you likened doctoral graduates to plane crash survivors. Things have become worse with Covid. Will anybody do a PhD?
People just hanging on by the skin of their teeth ā we are definitely going to lose a larger proportion of those people than we normally would. But I still think weāre going to see strong enrolments because itās a job ā a shitty job, but a job. Perhaps weāre going to have a more clear-eyed generation of PhD students who are going to take less shit. People take a lot of shit because they are cognisant that supervisors can affect their academic careers. Not that every supervisorās an arsehole; far from it, but there are enough of them. But people who are not aiming for academic careers are going to demand better. And that, along with a shift towards more millennials, is creating a really interesting context. For most of my career in this space, Iāve seen people accepting levels of bullying, harassment and general neglect that they wouldnāt accept in other walks of life. I see that probably being less the case going forward. That will be an interesting point for the system to think about itself and how it treats people. We are going to see students who are more active, more vocal, more demanding. Iāll be chewing popcorn on the sidelines and cheering, frankly.
What articles and books have particularly influenced you?
Barbara Lovitts, who is a really interesting scholar, wrote a book called Leaving the Ivory Tower. She never finished her PhD. There seems to be a history of people starting PhDs about why people donāt finish, and not finishing themselves. Iāve known at least three people to do that. Another paper that influenced me early on was called āForged in Fireā [by Carolyn Williams and Alison Lee]. It was about how trauma is carried as a badge of honour in the PhD. Supervisors make this assumption that unless youāre suffering, youāre not really doing the PhD right. The trauma becomes a sort of trophy of the PhD experience. I saw that all around me the whole time I was studying.
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Your blog has struck a chord. Why is there such a need for a service like that?
Iām a believer in the PhD. I made the best friends of my life during my PhD. My University of Melbourne buddies are still buddies today. But while I was doing my PhD, I watched a phenomenon that Barbara Lovitts called āpluralistic ignoranceā, where youāre feeling a lot of self-doubt ā āI canāt do this, Iām not cut out to be hereā.Ā You donāt realise that other people around you feel exactly the same way.Ā The pattern then is to leaveĀ in silence. I watched it play out in real life. Iād be the one who would ask people: āHow are you feeling? What are you up to? How are you going?ā Iād provoke these discussions in the tearoom that I think were really helpful. I realised that a blog could fill that hole.
What do you like most about academia?
I love it for its weirdness; for its strange medieval ways that still exist in the modern world. And I love the community. I just love being around smart people all the time.
If you were higher education minister for a day, what would you do?
Iād knock on the door of the minister for defence and say: āGive me half your money and Iāll fix the country.ā
john.ross@timeshighereducation.com
Appointments
Arlie Petters has been named provost of NYU Abu Dhabi. Professor Petters is currently Benjamin Powell distinguished professor of mathematics at Duke University, having previously served at Duke as associate vice-provost for undergraduate education and dean of academic affairs at Trinity College of Arts and Sciences. Vice-chancellor MariĆ«t Westermann said that Professor Petters āwill provide outstanding academic leadership as we embark on NYU Abu Dhabiās second decade of growth and accomplishmentā.
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Andy Cook has been appointed vice-chancellor of Ravensbourne University London. He was previously acting vice-chancellor at the university and worked as deputy chief operating officer and chief information officer at the University of East London. Mr Cook said he was ālooking forward to building upon the considerable strengths that our creative institution and community has to offer and shaping our vision to deliver a successful future as a leading creative institutionā.
Lucy Meredith has been named deputy vice-chancellor at the University of the West of Scotland, where she has been interim vice-principal (learning, teaching and students) since February. She has worked in a range of roles at institutions that include Bath Spa University, the University of South Wales and the Royal Agricultural University.
The University of Chicagoās Booth School of Business has appointed 10 new faculty members, including Matthew Notowidigdo as professor of economics, who returns to the school from Northwestern University, and Alexander Todorov as professor of behavioural science, a new recruit from Princeton University.
Steve Lo will join the University of Hong Kong as executive vice-president (administration and finance).
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Diana Beech will be the new chief executive of London Higher, which represents universities in the UKās capital. She is currently head of government affairs at the University of Warwick.
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