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Most PhDs Desert Academe
More than half of UK PhD students quit academia
for industry as soon as they get their qualifications, according
to the first-ever detailed report on the early careers of those
with doctorates. While the report will quash fears that PhD
students are so specialised as to be unemployable, it will raise
concerns about the future supply of academics.
The report, What Do PhDs Do?, from the UK
GRAD programme, found that about 60 per cent of UK PhDs
in physical, engineering and biomedical sciences leave academia,
compared with about 30 to 35 per cent of arts, humanities, social
science and economic PhDs. The report says that over time these
proportions increase as, for example, PhDs on short-term postdoctoral
positions move into other employment sectors. Report author
Ellen Pearce said: "The figures will raise serious issues
about how universities retain PhD students and sustain the teaching
base of UK universities."
The report, which analyses what UK rather
than overseas PhD students do, found the students to be highly
employable. Nearly three-quarters got jobs - in or outside academia
- six months after graduating. This compared with 69 per cent
of masters students and 61 per cent of undergraduates. UK PhDs
are about 50 per cent less likely to be unemployed (3.2 per
cent) than first-degree graduates (6.6 per cent).
"It is hard to say whether this is
brain drain or brain circulation," Ms Pearce said.
The report also found that the percentage
of female PhD graduates had increased from 40 per cent in 1999
to 46 per cent in 2003. In all, 12,520 research students were
awarded PhDs in 2003. Between 1999 and 2003, there was a 31
per cent rise in the number of PhD students registering for
their final year.
"We interviewed employers from different
sectors and found them to be highly enthusiastic about PhD
students," said Ms Pearce. "Their response puts
all the emphasis on transferable skills into perspective.
It is clear that PhD students have a high value in the market."
Stephen Court, senior research officer for
the Association of University Teachers, said there had been
a sharp decline in the number of young entrants to academia
coming from the UK.
"It is not surprising that a high proportion
of people with PhDs do not choose a career in higher education,"
he said. "Universities are finding that the prospect
of fixed-term contracts and the low pay they offer are extremely
unattractive to potential academics."
In 2002, Sir Gareth Roberts' report SET for
Success put in motion a major programme of transferable skills
training for PhD students.
Morgan Kavanagh, a director at recruitment
consultants Huxley Finance, said: "We recruit for clients
who require high-level quantative skills, so we look only at
PhDs - first-degree graduates simply can't compete.
"PhDs are much more sophisticated in
their thinking and have a broader toolkit of skills to draw
on in the demanding roles we place them in."
The general manager in a private engineering
firm said: "We've found that PhD graduates have a combination
of maturity and autonomy that is more useful for our work than
engineering graduates with a similar length of experience in
industry."
Jocelyn Prudence, chief executive of the Universities
Colleges and Employers Association, said: "Higher education
recognises that recruitment and retention of academics is a
vital area and for that reason the framework agreement on pay
modernisation addresses work-life balance, career development
and renumeration. These have been shown to be the most important
issues people consider when making decisions about their working
life. The framework will deliver on all three. Real progress
is already being made to offer postgraduates an academic career
that is both attractive and fulfilling."
The UK GRAD report shows that 38 per cent
of PhDs are in the biosciences, 33 per cent in the physical
sciences (including engineering), 14 per cent in the arts and
humanities, and 11 per cent in the social sciences. Some 4 per
cent of PhDs were doing theses in other areas such as education.
Taken from the Times
Higher Education Supplement
Claire Sanders
Published: 08 October 2004
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