2007
DOI: 10.1007/s10734-007-9063-7
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From apprentice to colleague: The metamorphosis of Early Career Researchers

Abstract: While the studies of Early Career Researchers (ECRs) have contributed politically important insights into factors hindering ECRs, they have not yet achieved a theoretical understanding of the causal mechanisms that are at work in the transition from dependent to independent research. This paper positions the early career phase in a theoretical framework that combines approaches from the sociology of science and organisational sociology and emphasises the transitional process. In this framework, the early caree… Show more

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Cited by 275 publications
(223 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
(13 reference statements)
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“…Once a graduate student has been fully socialized into the profession, the next major developmental task is to transition from the dependent researcher status of graduate school to the independent status of an academic career (Laudel & Gläser, 2007). Unfortunately, there is often a substantial disconnect between graduate school and the realities of faculty positions (Austin et al, 2007).…”
Section: Traditional Views Of Graduate Student Socialization and Earlmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Once a graduate student has been fully socialized into the profession, the next major developmental task is to transition from the dependent researcher status of graduate school to the independent status of an academic career (Laudel & Gläser, 2007). Unfortunately, there is often a substantial disconnect between graduate school and the realities of faculty positions (Austin et al, 2007).…”
Section: Traditional Views Of Graduate Student Socialization and Earlmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Lease, 1999; Petersen, 2011; Salmela-Aro, Tolvanen, & Nurmi, 2011). These early years, i.e., the years spent on PhD studies, are usually associated with a transition from dependence to independence, i.e., from the student role to the professional academic role (Laudel & Gläser, 2008), and it is in the intersection of this transition, and its associated decisions and uncertainties, the future well-being of aspiring academics possibly develops (Schmidt & Umans, 2014; Stubb, Pyhältö, & Lonka, 2011). …”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While there seem to be different perspectives on the needs of ECAs, there is a common understanding that many ECAs lack research networks and remain poorly informed about the structures and culture of academic institutions (Geber, 2009;Hemmings & Kay, 2010). Resonating with Hemmings and Kay (2010), Laudel and Gläser (2008) stressed that ECAs continue to be the most defenceless group in universities because they more easily experience anxiety compared to experienced scholars; they experience job insecurity, workload pressures, and professional isolation (Price et al, 2015). This possibly also resonates from "the pressure to publish and increased demands for accountability" (Pithouse-Morgan, Naicker, Pillay, Masinga & Hlao, 2016, p. 3).…”
Section: The Context Of Ecas and Professional Learning And Developmenmentioning
confidence: 99%