Claims of academia being out of touch with the “real world” are hardly new. This week, it was the turn of a Conservative MP?in the UK to draw the ire of many after a Twitter attack on the profession.?
Personally, never thought of academics as 'experts'. No experience of the real world.
— Glyn Davies (@glyndaviesmp)
Glyn Davies, MP for Montgomeryshire, posted the tweet on 29 October, inspiring vast numbers of academics to defend their honour, uniting under the hashtag , a term coined by Times Higher Education's very own editor-at-large, Phil Baty.
Feels like a hashtag is needed for this. Are you a ? Let your MP know!
— Phil Baty (@Phil_Baty)
Some scholars' responses to the inflammatory tweet featured plain statements of fact…
>50% of US's economic growth since WWII attributable to science & technology. That's real world.
— Scientists for EU (@Scientists4EU)
...while others focused more on tried-and-tested academic wit.
That moment when you just can't choose the window of your ivory tower from which to throw scraps to the peasants.
— Ben Stanley (@BDStanley)
In fact, light-hearted mocking seemed to be the preferred method of expressing disapproval…?
Since Waitrose started accepting rambling lectures about Foucault as payment for expensive cheeses I've no need to be a
— Harriet Palfreyman (@hjpalfreyman)
Sometimes I reload the printer with paper I've opened all by myself
— Scott Hames (@hinesjumpedup)
I've seen things you people wouldn't believe. Attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion...and I worked in Asda once
— Martin George (@martingeorge)
Mr Davies’ tweet also allowed for some lovely online academic bonding…
yeah, 5 years at the SPAR, one as Asst Manager, one as Manager
— Dan Horsfall (@DanHors83)
?...while some chose to highlight the irony in a well-paid MP attacking academics for lacking the “common touch”, either through precise, poignant comparisons…
Dear I could have funded my whole project on chemo side effects in kids for same ? as your annual expenses
— Dr Vicky Forster (@vickyyyf)
...or through the use of a somewhat blunter instrument:
Dude, you literally work in a palace.
— Jonathan Healey (@SocialHistoryOx)
Beyond the humour, the serious implications of dismissing and demoralising people who have chosen to dedicate themselves to a life of the mind, cannot and should not be ignored.
- you need a reality check, so here's my bio. We all now need an apology.
— Claire Nally (@tinyhippo1979)
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Read next: Real World Academics – a response to Glyn Davies MP
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Print headline: A lesson from Twitter: don’t dismiss academics’ work