Changing Academic Life

Scott Robertson on missing tenure, persevering, and connecting to mission & community

7 snips
Jul 27, 2017
Scott Robertson, a Professor in Information and Computer Sciences at the University of Hawaii at Manoa, shares his inspiring journey through academia. Having faced tenure denial twice, he discusses the importance of perseverance, community, and mentorship in overcoming setbacks. Scott reflects on how his early career as a child actor enriched his understanding of human interaction and ties this to his research in Human-Computer Interaction. He also explores shifts in his academic focus toward civic engagement and the insights gained from failures, urging others to define themselves by their mission rather than their positions.
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ANECDOTE

Tenure Denial In A Psychology Department

  • Scott Robertson was in a psychology department publishing in HCI and failed to get tenure there because colleagues didn’t recognize CHI publications.
  • He describes the tenure denial as incredibly devastating and surprising given prior positive reviews.
ANECDOTE

Second Tenure Denial After Returning

  • After industry roles at IBM and US West, Scott returned to academia in an information school and again missed tenure the second time.
  • He attributes part of the failure to changing research area to electronic voting and civic tech, which slowed his publishing track record.
INSIGHT

Focus On Decision Support Over Devices

  • Scott realized the critical civic problem is voter information and decision-making, not just the voting machine interface.
  • He shifted toward technologies that help citizens learn and make decisions before voting.
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