How Professors Think: Inside the Curious World of Academic Judgment

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scholar describes as “spouting opinion.” It is also frequently con-
trasted with the haphazard collection of evidence and with super-
ficial “trendiness.” A sociologist compares losers and winners this
way:


This one proposal on eighteenth-century Romanian national his-
tory was highly scholarly, absolutely in [the] forefront of debates
on nationalism. It was empirically sound in particular research
lights. And it seemed very detailed and he got the money because
the Good Lord lives in details...Someofthetrendyones[that
were not funded] were so much concerned with concepts...
They were more about how we address certain things rather than
actually the things themselves.

A political scientist concurs, describing scholarship she likes as
work that “brings a lot of evidence to their arguments...Ilike
Adam Przeworski’s work, although it, like mine, takes a different
form. I like projects where the author has really gone to a lot of trou-
ble to legitimate what they said. And they can do that with case stud-
ies or through large and quantitative studies.” In teaching her gradu-
ate students how to produce high-quality research, she directs them
“to look at their variables very critically,” “to look carefully at feasi-
bility,” to marshal “lots of evidence,” and to bring many “different
kinds of lenses” to their research problem.


Originality, Significance, Methods, and Feasibility


In discussing what defines the substantive quality of a project, re-
spondents from all three disciplinary clusters seem to draw on shared
“scripts” of excellence—sets of definitions and decision pathways in
which originality and significance play a central role, with methods
and feasibility also in crucial, but less widely agreed-on, positions.
No clear patterns differentiate humanists, social scientists, and histo-


170 / Recognizing Various Kinds of Excellence

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