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The business of becoming a professional sociologist: Unpacking the informal training of graduate school

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Abstract

While one can be labeled a sociologist in name by fulfilling formal institutional requirements, that is only part of the necessary work involved in graduate training. What is also required is mastering the informal professional culture associated with academic sociology. In this paper, we offer practical advice about informal norms in graduate school—norms we know now that we wish we’d known then. Our reflections upon our own experiences in graduate school are guided by our common research and teaching interests in informal organizational culture. What is the potential salience of informal norms, such as particularistic relations with faculty and graduate students, ceremonial versus actual practices regarding research and teaching, and emotional labor around one’s work, for better understanding the professional socialization of graduate study in sociology? Our emphasis here is to offer advice on how to navigate the graduate school realities these norms present. We also believe that sociologists should turn a more focused eye on the profession, one in which the presence of such norms is readily acknowledged and more formally considered for the benefit of teaching graduate students.

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Shulman, D., Silver, I. The business of becoming a professional sociologist: Unpacking the informal training of graduate school. Am Soc 34, 56–72 (2003). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12108-003-1021-y

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12108-003-1021-y

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