A colleague at another university recently told me a long sad story about his department's numerous failed searches owing to the high housing prices and cost of living in his university's region. He said that unless an assistant professor is married to someone with a similar or higher salary, is willing to spend their life in decrepit rental properties, or enjoys long commutes, they decline the job offer.
Then he said BUT .. one way the university has found to get out of the situation is to hire couples, and in fact what used to be seen as a problem is now an opportunity. This doesn't mean that single people or members of non-academic couples are at a disadvantage -- his department still goes after the candidates it thinks are the 'best' -- but if one of those candidates is a member of an academic couple, the department and university are now more active in trying to make that situation work, rather than doing nothing, or even penalizing members of academic couples by weeding them out during the interviews.
14 years ago
1 comment:
That's really interesting. Many people (including my family) don't seem to realize how academic salaries are not as affected by cost of living changes from a smaller town to a larger city as some other jobs seem to be. I know when searching for jobs I crossed so many areas off just because of the lack of being able to afford to live there without still living like a graduate student.
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