Season 3, Episode 3: Creating a Scholarly Identity

Podcasts,
Black Button Image with White Text and Spotify Logo. Text: Listen on Spotify
Black Button Image with White text and the Apple Podcasts Logo. Text: Listen on Apple Podcasts

In This Episode:

Drs. Commodore and Johnson engage with scholars at different stages of their careers—ranging from early-career assistant professors to a senior research associate outside the tenure track—to discuss the diverse ways they navigate the field after earning their doctoral degrees. The conversation will explore how they continue to shape their scholarly identities, address the challenges facing higher education, and contribute to the future of the field from both within and beyond traditional academic roles. Access the full episode transcript (.pdf).

Panelists

Wayne Black, PhD
he/him/his
Assistant Professor
University of Cincinnati

Daniel Corral, PhD
he/him/his
Assistant Professor
University of Toronto

Marjorie L. Dorimé-Williams, PhD
she/her/hers
Senior Research Associate
MDRC

About the 2024 Presidential Podcast Season "I Am A Scholar"

The intent of the 2024 conference theme, “I Am A Scholar,” is to not only consider our own identities as scholars, but to consider who we are as a scholarly community. As you reflect upon your own ideas about what makes you a scholar, I invite you to consider dismantling the hierarchies that have been constructed about who is worthy of the title “scholar.” I believe these often create barriers to better policy, practice, and scholarship.

This is a project to welcome and learn from a community of scholars from a variety of institution types, associations, policy settings, unique identities, geographies, methodologies, epistemologies, positions within and beyond academe, and myriad other locations. Collectively, we can stake our claim as scholars who continue to transform higher education through the work we do.

Moreover, if inclusion, equity, and organizational diversity are among our values, we must be willing to consider the ways in which assumptions about who can and should be a scholar limit what we can accomplish as a community. We must critically interrogate the exclusionary practices in which we engage regarding be(com)ing a scholar and how those practices compromise the integrity of our scholarship. We become better scholars by doing so—and in that way, we create better scholarship. Higher education, and the communities in which we work and live, are faced with vexing, complex, and wicked problems. We need all of our scholarly selves to find solutions and actively work toward our purpose and the purpose of higher education.

With this theme in mind, the 2024 podcast series will focus on what it means to be a scholar in this socio-political moment and consider our responsibilities as scholars within this context and moment.