When it comes to hiring in higher education, scientists and officials are obsessed with the notion of capital far above the different qualities of quality, performance, and decision, new research shows.
Employers seeking faculty focused on “equity ” vastly outpaced the terms those seeking faculty focused on “quality, ” “efficiency ” and “choice ” within roughly 67,000 job postings published by the Chronicle of Higher Education since 2017, the research found.
A team of University of Pittsburgh researchers found that 48 percent of the roughly 67,000 job messages within the grounds of education, business administration, and social and behavioral sciences “were identified as having collateral as the principal value, ” their report states.
“ In contrast, excellent was identified as the main benefit in less than 5 percentage of postings, while selection and performance are present even more often. ”
The occurrence of capital beliefs also increased dramatically over time, peaking in 2022 before declining notably in 2023 and the first piece of 2024.
Led by Sean Kelly, a teacher in the School of Education, along with Diana Litman, professor of computer technology, the study team used advanced automated techniques to peel and analyze tens of thousands of job opportunities, known as a text-as-data method.
Titled “Changing Value Dimensions in Higher Education? Evidence from Job Postings in Education, Business, and the Social Sciences, ” the project was supported by the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression’s Free Inquiry Grant Program.
The forthcoming paper is under review by a journal but is available upon request from Professor Kelly.
“The findings of this study are remarkably clear. Equity values are for more prevalent than other values in higher education job postings, ” the paper states. “…The simplest explanation is that the administrators who composed these postings, the committees that approved them, etc. , are themselves preoccupied almost exclusively with equity values, and thus, the postings logically reflect carefully crafted efforts to express that preoccupation. ”
Kelly, in a recent telephone interview with The College Fix, said the key to making this research effective was by comparing the preoccupation with “equity ” with the prevalence of “quality, ” “efficiency ” and “choice. ”
“ Unless you look at the prevalence of the other values that might be there you don’t know if there is an imbalance, ” he said.
While some might argue no amount of emphasis on equity is too much, Kelly said that other positive traits should matter, too.
“We all are concerned with equity, ” he added, “but when most of us think about school, society and other facets of our life, we are also concerned with quality and efficiency and choice, ” yet the latter three are “vanishingly rare in postings. ”
He said he hopes the study ’s results give hiring committees pause. “ I hope they ask themselves, ‘Do we need to have a preoccupation with specific values here? Maybe not. ’ ”
Asked to weigh in on the findings, University of Pittsburgh Professor M. Najeeb Shafiq said the focus on equity might have its downsides.
“ Universities should value things like equity ( also known as ‘fairness’ ), but they also need to make sure they hire the best teachers and researchers, ” he told The College Fix via email.
“For example, it might discourage talented people with different viewpoints from applying for jobs because they feel pressured to show they strongly support equity in their applications, even if it ’s not their top priority, ” said Shafiq, a professor of education, economics, and international affairs. “This could limit the range of ideas and perspectives in universities, which is crucial for a healthy learning environment.
“This could also damage people’s trust in universities, ” he added. “If it seems like universities only care about equity, people might start to question whether they’re truly focused on pursuing the truth and finding the best teachers and researchers. ”
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IMAGE: Sean Kelly, University of Pittsburgh
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