A green drought: the challenge of mentoring for Australian accounting academics
Abstract
Purpose
The purpose of this paper is to expose the impact of the shortage of senior academics, particularly professors, in Australian accounting schools, to relate the way one school addressed this shortage through a mentoring scheme, and to challenge existing institutional arrangements.
Design/methodology/approach
This is a contextualised qualitative case study of a mentoring scheme conducted in an Australian accounting school. Data collected from semi‐structured interviews, personal reflections and from Australian university web sites are interpreted theoretically using the metaphor of a “green drought”.
Findings
The mentoring scheme achieved some notable successes, but raised many issues and challenges. Mentoring is a multifaceted investment in vocational endeavour and intellectual infrastructure, which will not occur unless creative means are developed over the long term to overcome current and future shortages of academic mentors.
Research limitations/implications
This is a qualitative case study, which, therefore, limits its generalisability. However, its contextualisation enables insights to be applied to the wider academic environment.
Practical implications
In the Australian and global academic environment, as accounting professors retire in greater numbers, new and creative ways of mentoring will need to be devised. The challenge will be to address longer term issues of academic sustainability, and not just to focus on short‐term academic outcomes.
Originality/value
A mentoring scheme based on a collegial networking model of mentoring is presented as a means of enhancing academic endeavour through a creative short‐term solution to a shortage of accounting professors. The paper exemplifies the theorising power of metaphor in a qualitative study.
Keywords
Citation
Irvine, H., Moerman, L. and Rudkin, K. (2010), "A green drought: the challenge of mentoring for Australian accounting academics", Accounting Research Journal, Vol. 23 No. 2, pp. 146-171. https://doi.org/10.1108/10309611011073241
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2010, Emerald Group Publishing Limited