Over at Daily Nous the other week, Carolyn Dicey Jennings (UC Merced) provided a 10-year update on the Academic Placement Data and Analysis (APDA) project, the purpose of which "is to collect, analyze, and distribute data on job placement for graduates of PhD programs in philosophy."
As a member of the ADPA's board of advisors, I volunteered to discuss the ADPA's findings on non-academic job careers for philosophy PhDs. Eric Schwitzgebel (UC Riverside) should be discussing demographic data at The Splintered Mind.
What, then, has the ADPA found about non-academic careers for Philosophy PhDs? Here is a quick summary:
(1) How many philosophy PhDs pursue non-academic careers?
Over the past ten years (2011-21), the ADPA surveyed 6030 PhD graduates. Of those surveyed, 2606 (or 37.6%) are now in permanent academic jobs, and 846 (or 14%) are in non-academic jobs. The remaining philosophy PhDs are either in part-time academic positions or did not report.
(2) What kinds of non-academic careers are philosophy PhDs in?
Top-ten words used to describe positions (in order of frequency): Director, Manager, Senior, Associate, Assistant, Analyst, Research, Software, Teacher, and Consultant.
Top ten industries (in order of frequency, of around 800 in database): education, technology, law, health, consultancy, government, university administration, finance, non-university education, and non-profits/NGOs.
(2) What kinds of salaries do philosophy PhDs make in non-academic industry?
- Mean salaries reported
- Academic: $79,237 (n = 477)
- Non-Academic: $179,833 (n = 42)
- Median Salaries
- Academic: $73,000
- Non-Academic: $100,000
(3) What kind of job-placements do PhDs prefer: academic or non-academic?
Of those who received academic jobs, 84.8% reported academic placement as their priority. However, of those who entered non-academic jobs, only 52.9% preferred academic placement, 17.6% percent preferred non-academic placement, and 29.4% reported no strong preference.
(4) Do PhD programs support students seeking non-academic placement?
- Of those who received non-academic employment (n = 63), only 17.5% felt unsupported by their graduate program.
- A plurality of (all) respondents felt their program was neither supportive or unsupportive (n = 27 or 42.9%).
- However, individuals without placement information (n = 11) unanimously indicated that they felt their graduate program was very unsupportive of pursuing non-academic careers.
- Some qualitative responses:
The faculty of my department were unprepared to offer support for students pursuing non-academic jobs. If anything, they looked down on such students.
Nonacademic jobs were mentioned in the professional development seminar, but no real guidance was offered beyond that. There may have been other resources available, but I did not know about them.
Pursuing professions other than teaching philosophy is discouraged. Several of my fellow students did not disclose that they were interested in professions other than teaching, for example, pursuing a law degree.
Program officials and some professors have made comments supporting non-academic jobs and they occasionally offer a talk on this. However, there is no focused and continued support.
My department has taken some pretty good steps to help us with this. But during the times where I have thought about not pursuing an academic career I have felt like I had to keep it secret or the department would take me less seriously, give me less support, etc.
(5) Are philosophical skills and knowledge job-relevant?
84.1% of those in non-academic jobs found philosophical skills to be relevant to their non-academic career (n=63). Only 53.2% found philosophical material to be relevant (n=62).
Some qualitative responses:
My work in narrative ethics informs everything I do from managing business functions such as HR, to fostering community values, developing student leadership as well as developing our marketing strategy and posting on Instagram. Everything we do as humans involves stories and sharing experiences - I have never doubted that my PhD research was valuable, practical and of ongoing benefit to me as a person and as a CEO.
Doing logic and looking at formal systems made the transition into coding and data analysis quite easy.
None of my research was directly applicable, but studying logic helped prepare me for a career in tech.
The vast majority of the topics you study in philosophy are irrelevant to work in the business world. However, the skills you develop and the techniques you learn through the practice of philosophy are invaluable. Being a strong and logical thinker is a huge asset in a business environment.
I engage in textual analysis and rational argument on a regular basis in my employment as a business lawyer -- skills that I acquired and honed in my philosophy graduate education.
The skills of reading and thinking carefully, and communicating well orally and in writing, have helped make me more effective in my position as an academic administrator.
In a generic way, the critical thinking, writing, teaching and public speaking skills I have gained have all set me apart in the workplace.
What should we take away from these findings? As with any study using non-randomly collected samples, we must be careful making strong inferences about the total population. Still, bearing this in mind, here are a few hot takes:
1. About 1 in 7 philosophy PhDs in this sample report working in non-academic careers: that's a good number of people!
2. Philosophy PhDs can end up in a variety of good non-academic careers, some of which involve learning computer programming, but many of which appear to be in well-paying, non-STEM areas (government jobs, consulting, etc.).
3. Philosophers can make a lot of money outside of academia: of course, it is hard to know exactly how accurate this sample is, as the sample sizes are small and those who are underemployed could be less likely to report. Further, there is presumably wide variance among the salaries of those in non-academic industries. Still, the fact that philosophers can achieve high-salary positions in industry shouldn't be too surprising. Philosophers are as a rule highly talented, conscientious people who can think slowly and carefully as well as quickly on their feet; can understand and grapple effectively with very complex problems, speak persuasively in front of groups (viz. experience in teaching and seminars), etc. Moving from academia to non-academic industry can be difficult for philosophy PhDs--but clearly, it can have real upside, as my Philosophers in Industry Directory also suggests.
4. There is significant variance on the kinds of jobs that philosophy PhDs want: Yes, according to the ADPA's 10-year sample, a supermajority of those who have academic jobs desire and academic job. And yes, a slim majority of those who leave academia have a strong preference for an academic job, as well. Still, a significant proportion of PhDs in the sample report being less invested in academia, either wanting non-academic work or reporting no strong preference either way.
5. Most PhDs reported that their programs were neither supportive nor unsupportive of non-academic employment, and a significant proportion reported that their programs were very unsupportive. Further, qualitative responses suggest that PhD students may fear even disclosing an interest in pursuing a non-academic career -- and in general (with a few exceptions), it doesn't seem that many departments do very much to help their PhDs pursue non-academic jobs.
6. Philosophical skills (and, to a lesser extent, philosophical knowledge) seem to be job-relevant outside of academia: the kinds of skills philosophers cultivate (reading, writing, thinking, speaking, logic, creative problem solving) are widely reported by those outside of academia as directly relevant to their careers. And over 50% of those who reported said that philosophical material is job-relevant too (such as knowledge of ethics, etc.).
Finally, here's one more hot-take, to echo some points I made a few weeks ago:
7. It probably behooves academic philosophy (and grad programs) to do far more to support students seeking non-academic work. Placing students into good careers not only reflects well on the discipline (including to administrators, parents, prospective students, taxpayers, etc.). It may also be conducive to philosophy-supporting philanthropy. Humanities departments (including philosophy departments) are being closed and or otherwise threatened left and right--and like it or not, for better or worse, we live in a time when public and philanthropic support for academic disciplines are increasingly crucial. Many other academic disciplines realized this long ago, and have cultivated industry ties in ways that help their disciplines and departments thrive. The more that philosophers thrive outside outside of academia, the more likely (it seems to me) the philosophy will survive and thrive in academia. Or so it seems to me.
But these are just my hot takes. What are yours?
The mean non-academic salary seems pretty high, perhaps a result of some selection bias and small sample size (maybe people with very high salaries were more likely to respond to the survey). However, I only have anecdotal knowledge.
I agree with Marcus's take that departments should support students seeking non-academic work, but including students who leave before completing the PhD. If we want philosophy to thrive in academia, we need it to thrive in the world beyond academia. The data seems to indicate that between a quarter and a third of admitted PhD students leave before completing the PhD, and the vast majority of them will look for non-academic work. These students are more likely to be dissatisfied with their grad studies/programs, they may have left because of dissatisfaction, and more likely they won't paint a great picture of academic philosophy out in the non-academic world. It may be hard to track them, but we shouldn't forget this significant group.
Posted by: David | 10/15/2021 at 12:45 PM
Great post, Marcus!
Posted by: Carolyn Dicey Jennings | 10/15/2021 at 04:54 PM
Thanks for this Marcus.
You write, "Over the past ten years (2011-21), the ADPA surveyed 6030 PhD graduates. Of those surveyed, 2606 (or 37.6%) are now in permanent academic jobs, and 846 (or 14%) are in non-academic jobs. The remaining philosophy PhDs are either in part-time academic positions or did not report.
One question that I think bears in a significant way on how to read the conclusions you draw above is the no-report rate. Could you tell us the breakdown for the remaining two categories (part-time academic and DNR)?
Posted by: Alex Bryant | 10/15/2021 at 05:09 PM
David, your points certainly echo my experience. I would not be doing the work I am now were it not for my time in grad school. But that's because my dissatisfaction with grad school as it's presently structured led me to spend far more time working with my union than on my dissertation, and when I was offered a chance to do that full-time it was an easy decision. And indeed, one of the things that I find very wrong with grad school as presently structured is how few people want to reckon honestly with attrition rates. I would be very interested to know what the other washouts like me are up to!
Posted by: Ben Serber | 10/16/2021 at 10:12 PM
David,
For what it is worth, that mean salary (~$180k) was about what I made after leaving professional philosophy, a few years back. I did not respond to that survey.
If anything, non-academic salaries may be getting even better owing to a very tight labor market.
Posted by: AnonymousPlease | 10/17/2021 at 11:31 AM
I don't doubt non-academic salaries for former philosophers can be quite high, since there's all kinds of stuff former philosophers can go into, especially tech in the bay area, but it's probably not the norm.
When the mean differs from the median drastically (80% higher in this case), it's a sign that you could have some significant outliers. Someone over at Daily Nous pointed out that the survey data includes a CEO and a lawyer.
Those contemplating leaving probably shouldn't do so because they expect to make $180k. Something closer to the median seems pretty reasonable though.
Posted by: David | 10/17/2021 at 05:17 PM
A request for clarification: are university administrative positions included here? (I’m employed in one of the wide variety of careers often called “alt-ac”.)
You do mention university administrative positions a few times, so it seems like the answer is yes. But then there’s a lot of discussion of what’s possible, valued, etc., “outside of academia.” It’s a bit frustrating to see my own category fall through the cracks.
Maybe more important than my frustration: alt-ac careers differ in important ways from wholly nonacademic careers. Being a Ph.D., understanding how to navigate academic culture, etc., can be highly valuable to employers and colleagues, help you be successful, and make the job satisfying (if there’s anything you like about academic culture) in a way that probably doesn’t apply to most non-academic jobs.
Posted by: A different David | 10/18/2021 at 10:08 AM
Ben Serber, I'm a washout like you, though I wasn't dissatisfied with my grad program. I stumbled back into academia with a permanent FT teaching position in a CS department, and I split my time in a research position out in industry.
In some ways, I think the washouts fare a bit better than those who finish but spend some years touring the adjunct circuit before leaving. Some of the other washouts I know retrained in another field and are doing pretty well. But I'm curious about the overall trends too.
Posted by: David | 10/18/2021 at 01:28 PM