As promised, here is a thread about #DiversityStatements for scholars on the job market based on a conversation Sarah Pierce Taylor and I had last week at @UChiDivinity and my experience participating in a ton of searches at @Northeastern which takes DEI VERY seriously:
1/When I went first on the market a LOOOOONG time ago, diversity statements were not a thing, and unfortunately a lot of senior faculty who mentor doctoral students have zero experience writing them, so folks often feel on their own trying to figure them out.
2/But higher ed has changed (thank GOD!) so now many jobs require a some sort of statement of commitment to DEI/or will ask an interview question about this topic.
3/Here is my first advice: these are not one size fits all, committees are not looking for "the right answer" or a couple of buzz words...in fact the hiring committee might not even know what THEY mean by DEI...so you REALLY have to be thoughtful.
4/When I was on the market in religious studies years ago I had to write a faith statements to explain my relationship the mission of a Div school. That was the place in my dossier where MY values and commitments were expressed, and that is what a Diversity Statement does today.
5/And don't make the mistake of thinking search committees don't take the ability to articulate a commitment to DEI seriously. At least at my R1, we DEFINITELY DO, and folks who "bomb" this question in an interview do not made it to the final round.
6/What did a "diversity statement fail" look like?
-A canned answer
-An answer that only talks about diversity in terms of learning styles FOR A RACE AND JUSTICE HIRE
-An answer that tries to make diversity an abstract intellectual debate about the merits of Foucault or Marx
7/ Statements/answers that succeeded made it clear applicant understood the hiring institution's commitments to DEI, made clear they had grappled w/ the lack of diversity in higher ed (b/c there is A LOT to fix) and even better, it was an answer the committee learned from.
8/If there have been learning moments, moments when institutions failed at supporting DEI (or YOU failed) or moments where changes improved DEI, share. We are all trying to make higher ed better, and these statements are you thinking out loud with us about this challenge.
1/Let’s start with the word: “Namaste.” It is a Sanskrit word deriving from the verb namaha, meaning “to bend.” The te at the end means “to you.”
In the Vedas namaste was used to show respect
to a divinity. But the word evolved over time….
2/In everyday use namaste evolved to mean “salutations to you” or “greetings to you,” a sign of respect, but without necessarily referencing divinity. This is how namaste, and its other regional forms, such namaskar and namaskaram, are commonly used in South Asia today.
I’ve gotten asked a bunch about negotiating a tenure-track job offers this month, so time for a thread.
1/My first piece of advice is simple: negotiate the terms of a TT offer you receive. Negotiation is expected, it’s the norm, even if no one ever taught you how to do it.
2/Approach the negotiation with a positive attitude (not entitled). Let them know you are excited to be their colleague.
3/Overall, don't frame your ask as "I need/deserve more" but more like "there are just a few things I need to do THE BEST JOB I CAN FOR YOU."
PLS RT: Now accepting applications from religion scholars for a @Sacred_Writes media partnership with @pritheworld on role of religion in India’s current political climate.
Applications are due 1/10.
We are working on an official announcement but here are the details:
@Sacred_Writes@pritheworld This partnership requires graduate level training in religious studies, theology, biblical studies, or a related field and is open to faculty, independent and contingent scholars, and graduate students.
@Sacred_Writes@pritheworld This is to help shape a MAJOR radio news report about the role of religion in India’s current political climate and work with @pritheworld's brilliant correspondent @RupaShenoy while doing so on 2-4 profile stories for radio and online.
I'm helping lead a workshop on #publicscholarship for humanities faculty at @Carleton_PW tomorrow, and preparing a handout with tips for writing for non-academic audiences. Sharing here, including a list of further reading at the end, b/c twitter threads with GIFs are my jam:
@Carleton_PW First the "Dos": 1/ Do read more popular writing, and then as @SarahEBond has said, try to imitate that style with citation habits of scholars. You are likely a scholar because you are good a learning things...so learn from the best writers out there!
@Carleton_PW@SarahEBond 2/ Do identify which publics you want to reach. Perhaps there are conversations you what to shift or communities you want to reach/advocate for? Who you want to speak to will determine where you want to pitch.
I’ve been involved in mentoring a lot of TT folks, so here is thread about being strategic with PUBLISHING in case it is helpful:
I’m tenured and promoted to full. I’ve written ltrs for colleague’s dossiers for our depart, served on my college’s P&T committee & as an outside reviewer for tenure cases.
Norms will differ by discipline. I think my experience will mostly resonant with humanities folks.
1/ You NEVER know how long you will be at an institution, so be sure to produce work that is legible elsewhere. Great if your current home base is like “three outputs before tenure, any form or forum” but just know that if you follow that it will be harder to move.
Here’s a thread with some practical tips abt writing fellowship proposals bc no one taught me squat abt this in grad school.
Fellowship = an award that gets you released from teaching and service, usually for an academic yr, so you can focus on your research = THE BEST THING!
I’ve won 4 fellowships since graduating, but I also serve on review panels for national competitions and also help faculty in my college w/ their proposals—folks who have won everything from Guggenheims to "boutique" fellowships. I have read & edited A LOT of proposals!
Before you get started: 1) Buck up butter cup. The chances of winning a fellowship are NOT good. If you expect to win, this is going to be miserable. Instead just TRY. Good news: writing proposals often helps develop new ideas/refine research plans. It is not a waste of time.