A window into academia – via a resignation letter

This post contains excerpts of a letter sent to staff at the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL, English: Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Lausanne) is one of the two Swiss Federal Institutes of Technology and is located in Lausanne, Switzerland.

I wonder how many more letters like this we will see after AR5 is released. – Anthony

An Aspiring Scientist’s Frustration with Modern-Day Academia: A Resignation

Dear EPFL,

I am writing to state that, after four years of hard but enjoyable PhD work at this school, I am planning to quit my thesis in January, just a few months shy of completion. Originally, this was a letter that was intended only for my advisors. However, as I prepared to write it I realized that the message here may be pertinent to anyone involved in research across the entire EPFL, and so have extended its range just a bit.

While I could give a multitude of reasons for leaving my studies – some more concrete, others more abstract – the essential motivation stems from my personal conclusion that I’ve lost faith in today’s academia as being something that brings a positive benefit to the world/societies we live in. Rather, I’m starting to think of it as a big money vacuum that takes in grants and spits out nebulous results, fueled by people whose main concerns are not to advance knowledge and to effect positive change, though they may talk of such things, but to build their CVs and to propel/maintain their careers.

(1) Academia: It’s Not Science, It’s Business

I’m going to start with the supposition that the goal of “science” is to search for truth, to improve our understanding of the universe around us, and to somehow use this understanding to move the world towards a better tomorrow. At least, this is the propaganda that we’ve often been fed while still young, and this is generally the propaganda that universities that do research use to put themselves on lofty moral ground, to decorate their websites, and to recruit naïve youngsters like myself.

(2) Academia: Work Hard, Young Padawan, So That One Day You Too May Manage!

I sometimes find it both funny and frightening that the majority of the world’s academic research is actually being done by people like me, who don’t even have a PhD degree. Many advisors, whom you would expect to truly be pushing science forward with their decades of experience, do surprisingly little and only appear to manage the PhD students…Rarely do I hear of advisors who actually go through their students’ work in full rigor and detail, with many apparently having adopted the “if it looks fine, we can submit it for publication” approach.

(3) Academia: The Backwards Mentality

A very saddening aspect of the whole academic system is the amount of self-deception that goes on, which is a “skill” that many new recruits are forced to master early on… or perish. As many PhD students don’t truly get to choose their research topic, they are forced to adopt what their advisors do and to do “something original” on it that could one day be turned into a thesis.

(4) Academia: Where Originality Will Hurt You

The good, healthy mentality would naturally be to work on research that we believe is important. Unfortunately, most such research is challenging and difficult to publish, and the current publish-or-perish system makes it difficult to put bread on the table while working on problems that require at least ten years of labor before you can report even the most preliminary results. Worse yet, the results may not be understood, which, in some cases, is tantamount to them being rejected by the academic community.

(5) Academia: The Black Hole of Bandwagon Research

Indeed, writing lots of papers of questionable value about a given popular topic seems to be a very good way to advance your academic career these days. The advantages are clear: there is no need to convince anyone that the topic is pertinent and you are very likely to be cited more since more people are likely to work on similar things. This will, in turn, raise your impact factor and will help to establish you as a credible researcher, regardless of whether your work is actually good/important or not.

(6) Academia: Statistics Galore!

“Professors with papers are like children,” a professor once told me. And, indeed, there seems to exist an unhealthy obsession among academics regarding their numbers of citations, impact factors, and numbers of publications. This leads to all sorts of nonsense, such as academics making “strategic citations”, writing “anonymous” peer reviews where they encourage the authors of the reviewed paper to cite their work, and gently trying to tell their colleagues about their recent work at conferences or other networking events or sometimes even trying to slip each other their papers with a “I’ll-read-yours-if-you-read-mine” wink and nod. No one, when asked if they care about their citations, will ever admit to it, and yet these same people will still know the numbers by heart. I admit that I’ve been there before, and hate myself for it.

(7) Academia: The Violent Land of Giant Egos

[He must be talking about Mannworld here -Anthony]

I often wonder if many people in academia come from insecure childhoods where they were never the strongest or the most popular among their peers, and, having studied more than their peers, are now out for revenge. I suspect that yes, since it is the only explanation I can give to explain why certain researchers attack, in the bad way, other researchers’ work. Perhaps the most common manifestation of this is via peer reviews, where these people abuse their anonymity to tell you, in no ambiguous terms, that you are an idiot and that your work isn’t worth a pile of dung. Occasionally, some have the gall to do the same during conferences, though I’ve yet to witness this latter manifestation personally.

(8) Academia: The Greatest Trick It Ever Pulled was Convincing the World That It was Necessary

Perhaps the most crucial, piercing question that the people in academia should ask themselves is this: “Are we really needed?” Year after year, the system takes in tons of money via all sorts of grants.

What’s bothersome, however, is how long a purely theoretical result can be milked for grants before the researchers decide to produce something practically useful. Worse yet, there often does not appear to be a strong urge for people in academia to go and apply their result, even when this becomes possible, which most likely stems from the fear of failure – you are morally comfortable researching your method as long as it works in theory, but nothing would hurt more than to try to apply it and to learn that it doesn’t work in reality. No one likes to publish papers which show how their method fails (although, from a scientific perspective, they’re obliged to).

read it all at Pascal Junod

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September 16, 2013 8:03 am

As presented here the anonymous letter is fraudulent. If it had really been written to the EPFL it would have been written in French. So where is the French version and who is the writer (and translator)? –AGF

September 16, 2013 8:55 am

@agfosterjr: The letter is not fraudulent. Like many schools across the world, EPFL admits a lot of international students/faculty, some of whom don’t speak French. Everyone, however, understands English. This is why the letter was written in English.

September 16, 2013 9:08 am

“Firstly, I strongly urge you to finish your PhD study.”
I suspect that the reason he’s quitting is that his advisors are indicating that he’s going to fail. If he can’t pass his thesis defense then he may as well quit now. Perhaps he’s being ujnfairly drummed out for reasons expressed here, perhaps his thesis is just bad and not working out.
We can’t really know.

September 16, 2013 9:15 am

FeuDRenais says:
September 16, 2013 at 8:55 am
@agfosterjr: The letter is not fraudulent. Like many schools across the world, EPFL admits a lot of international students/faculty, some of whom don’t speak French. Everyone, however, understands English. This is why the letter was written in English.
=========================================================================
So tell me, if you were writing to the Swiss faculty at large, what language would you use? The writer’s native language is almost certainly English. Why should the writer of a protest letter choose to remain anonymous? He says he’s quitting. Without an author this remains internet gossip regardless of the validity of the message. Fraud has little to do with the message but much to do with delivery. My guess is the author never attended a Swiss school. –AGF
REPLY: Guessing doesn’t cut it, sorry. – Anthony

September 16, 2013 9:28 am

agfosterjr says:
Your comment is awaiting moderation.
September 16, 2013 at 9:15 am
=============================================================
So you are “Pascal Junod” and you are the author. Where are you from? –AGF

September 16, 2013 9:31 am

FeuDRenais says:
September 16, 2013 at 8:55 am
======================================================
So you are “Pascal Junod” and you are the author. Where are you from? –AGF

September 16, 2013 9:38 am

@agfosterjr: I highly recommend that you read the letter in the original blog, as well as the comments there (which are quite interesting). If you want to learn more about me concretely, then Google is your friend (and no, I am not Pascal – Pascal simply posted my letter on his blog).

richardscourtney
September 16, 2013 9:38 am

agfosterjr says:
September 16, 2013 at 9:31 am
==========================================================================
So you are asking questions of the author. What institution are you in? -RSC

September 16, 2013 10:19 am

If only Gates, Jobs and Zuckerberg had finished their college degrees and gone on to get PhDs they might have really accomplished something.

September 16, 2013 10:33 am

richardscourtney says:
September 16, 2013 at 9:38 am
==============================
I’m with the Interpol agency for the containment of upstart undergrads. Just curious to know if English is his native tongue (yes) seeing his French nom de guerre–means something like “firefox” I guess. –AGF, MA

Mark Cashman
September 16, 2013 10:52 am

Here’s the thing. There is actually a marketplace for research and science. And like any other market, it’s imperfect. But its purpose is to identify what’s valuable – not in an objective sense, but what is valuable to someone because they can use it – for a device, a patent, a next step, an improvement in something, or even the aesthetic pleasure of understanding. But there’s also research that’s tiny, irrelevant, misdirected, or useless.
In the real marketplace of goods, the producers of the tiny, irrelevant, misdirected or useless are typically put our of business by those who produce the useful and cost-effective thing customers want.
In the world of academic research, it seems to me that the marketplace is the world of publications. You can stay out of the marketplace, polishing your gem of knowledge, but, really, who’s going to care? You can do research that yields results in ten years, but who will support you with nothing to show for it over a decade and with the ultimate risk of the complete uselessness of the result? Or you can perform research that has an incremental benefit, get it published, and, as your reputation increases, gradually put the puzzle together to solve what you want. Maybe it will take twelve years instead of ten – so what? Show your value, earn promotion, get better grants and support.
It seems to me that this writer wants to do science in some perfect, crystalline world where research isn’t subject to the complex, difficult, apparently chaotic and self-interested process of the marketplace of ideas. Just doesn’t work that way, good to leave if you can’t deal with it.
And when we look at things like global warming, is it any different that the distortions government wreaks on real markets through regulation, bailouts, or subsidies? Is tenure that different from union featherbedding? This is why government should not be allowed to pay for research, why tenure is a bad idea, and why freedom is a good idea – even though it allows both success and failure and even though it is so hard for those who want to participate.

Bill Taylor
September 16, 2013 11:02 am

seems to me after reading here for a good while MANY folks with those advanced degrees either are not very bright or are 100% dishonest(hansen and mann leap to mind)……….credentials to me are like the shania twain song, that dont impress me much!

Tim Clark
September 16, 2013 1:01 pm

To further the point I made above….
Writing, period, bores the crap out of me. i wasn’t cut out for it. Following my abdication of academic BS, I went into corporate research where the tertiary degree is unnecessary. I’ve made considerably more money than I would have with the nth degree. The only regret that I have is the old cliche……But you don’t have a PhD so you can’t comment.
I reply, “I was too smart for that”.

David L.
September 16, 2013 5:08 pm

As an academic refugee (although I stayed long enough to be awarded a PhD) I agree completely with this letter. I threatened to leave midway through for the same reasons outlined but just wasn’t brave enough. I got the degree and then got “a real job” much to the disappointment of my advisors who did all they could to give bad recommendations to ruin my employment chances. Sorry, didn’t work.

September 16, 2013 5:55 pm

Wow, talk about burning your bridges and blasting the foundations with several pounds of C4!

September 17, 2013 5:05 am

There was a time when I planned on an academic career in electrophysiology and pharmacology. What made me decide otherwise was the issue of research funding. I spent years working at a university where I’d be wondering every year if I’d have a job because of the need to obtain grant funding. The whole grant application process is a political one where one has to pad ones grant application with material the granting agency wants to hear. One has to specify exactly what one is going to find which is ludicrous since, by definition, fundamental research is venturing into the unknown.
The prof I worked for was a master at the grant application process and managed to get grant funding which allowed us to carry on a long term project which was bleeding edge electrophysiology; when I see our work being quoted far more 20 years after we published our papers rather than immediately after I know it was good original work. However, that’s not the type of research that is encouraged.
My solution was to switch from a research career to medicine. I was far more interested in the human neuropharmacology than the effects of drugs on single ion channels studied via patch clamping of chunks of membrane (where the labs research focus ended up going). I now have the ability to fund my own research or carry out simple observational research on my patient population. Getting my medical degree was my last contact with academia and I suspect that I’ll likely never set foot on a university again as what used to once be an organization dedicated to the pursuit of free inquiry and truth has since become the primary disseminator of a doctrine of political correctness and statist ideology. Universities have dispensed with the notion of objective truth and replaced it with socially acceptable truth. I refused a clinical associate position at UBC because to do so I would have to submit to the dictates of a state which considers certain lines of inquiry totally off limits. In Canada, the truth is considered to be no defense in matters dealing with “hate crimes” which one can be charged with for simply noting that HIV is almost exclusively a homosexual disease.
What is needed is a return to the self-funded researcher. By prostituting themselves to the state, universities have as a result become extensions of the increasingly totalitarian state. Once the education bubble bursts it might be possible to rebuild universities in a form where free inquiry is the norm rather than indoctrination of students into acceptable modes of thought as well as providing junk “science” to support statist ideology (most noticeable in the area of climate “science”).

tobias
September 18, 2013 12:02 am

I agree with most of you one way or the other but it made me tired, I am sure glad I am RE-tired

tobias
September 19, 2013 10:57 pm

I have to add some thing here. In the 80’s I worked on a farm that was dissected by a heavily (and narrow) traveled road. One early winter cold snap there was tremendous winter kill to over 75% of vineyards in our region. ( primary and secondary buds)
But for some reason rows on either side of the roads were not damaged. Scientist, delegations and farmers from all over came to see this, at the time I was not “one of the chosen”. But in earshot of everyone I said ” what effect does all this traffic with their exhaust and other heat emissions have on these vines right besides the road??
Well the reaction I guess in hind sight was priceless , instruments were set up observations made, air movement , temperature, etc, etc were done for weeks until??…….
I told everyone the difference was that those vines were actually grown on a cold resistant root stock, even after all these years none of those guys ever forgave me LOL LOL!

September 22, 2013 11:21 am

I’m just relieved at how distant from my own experince of academia this is. At the same time, it’s a shame that the author thinks his experiences characterise the whole of academia.

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