Universities and research institutes should make the “implicit rules” of academia explicit in order to improve access for first-generation academics, .
The Netherlands’ Young Academy interviewed 15 first-generation scholars, defined as “university researchers or lecturers whose parents did not obtain a university degree”, on their experiences in academia and their recommendations for institutions, compiling the results in a report titled First but not least.
“Starting a conversation about ‘first-generation academics’ will make the academic world more accessible and promote equal opportunity,” said the Young Academy, an independent division of the Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW), describing the perspectives of these scholars as “largely neglected” by research.
Because first-generation academics “often have less prior knowledge about how academia functions”, the report states, they may be unaware of “unwritten rules”, among them “university hierarchies, career progression, networking [and] the expected language and etiquette at receptions, social gatherings and other informal events”.
Interviewee Robin Vernooij, an assistant professor in clinical epidemiology at the University Medical Center Utrecht, commented, “There’s a checklist of implicit rules that isn’t publicly available but everyone knows and follows behind the scenes.”
Other respondents said they weren’t sufficiently informed about more formal procedures, such as how to be admitted into a PhD programme or how to apply for a grant. “I was well into my master’s programme before I learned that I could get a PhD and how to go about it,” said Renée Vulto, an assistant professor of cultural history at Utrecht University.
While information programmes for first-generation academics can be helpful, the Young Academy notes, they also situate responsibility with the scholars themselves, rather than with the academic system that excludes them. “That is why people in positions of authority”, such as department heads and rectors, “need to work on making structural changes to the academic system,” the report states.
Removing “trivial requirements such as certain dress codes and language requirements” could help to “de-elitise” the academic environment, the report advises, as could efforts to seek “closer alignment with the rest of society, such as in projects involving children”.
Universities should also address rules that may disadvantage first-generation students, such as restrictions on resits, the Young Academy recommends. Durwin Lynch, a PhD candidate in health and life sciences at Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, said, “Institutions like universities should acknowledge that not everyone has the same opportunities upon entry,” noting that Utrecht University, for instance, limits resit scores to a maximum of six out of 10. “Think about it from first-generation students’ perspective: not everyone can perform perfectly on day one.”
The report further emphasises the need for diversity in university boards and committees, stating, “It is crucial to consider not only gender and migration background when selecting board and committee members, but also less visible forms of diversity, including first-generation status.”
Encouraging mentoring and promoting role models could also be beneficial, the Young Academy advises, while universities and research funding bodies should ensure that “the skills of first-generation academics are recognised and rewarded” in their selection procedures. ?
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