Is a careers consultant for researchers a ‘third space’ professional in higher education?

Authors

  • Kate Murray University of Cambridge

Keywords:

third-space professional, careers consultant, careers consultant for researchers, employability

Abstract

In the limited research about the roles of careers professionals in higher education, very little has been written about careers consultants who specifically support academic researchers such as postgraduate research students and early career researchers, including postdoctoral research associates. This article sets out to create a better understanding of the role of careers consultants for researchers, drawing on the debate on ‘third space professionals’ to shed light on this complex and perhaps surprisingly challenging job in higher education institutions. After outlining a standard careers consultant’s work with reference to some of the available literature, the article uses a personal case study to highlight the realities of working across institutional boundaries. The author uses Daubney’s (2020) KASE framework drawn explicitly from careers work, work from Whitchurch (2013) from the third space literature, and a description from UKRI, the UK national funder, to describe and discuss their specific role (UKRI, cited Imperial, 2025). The article argues that, by performing many of the activities associated with an academic, the role-holder could be seen as an academic, but the author concludes that the notion of ‘third space professional’ fits well with the work of CCRs.

Author Biography

Kate Murray, University of Cambridge

At the time of writing, Kate Murray was a Careers Consultant for Researchers, working on a research project at the University of Cambridge, as well as in the university’s Careers Service. Kate was previously co-lead of the UK’s university careers sector working group for researcher careers and a Deputy Head of King’s Careers & Employability at King’s College London. She is now Partnerships Manager at King’s Clinical Academic Training Office.

References

AGCAS (2023) AGCAS Members Services 2023/24 Resources Report. Available at: https://www.agcas.org.uk/Knowledge-Centre/AGCAS-Member-Services-2023-24-Resources-Report (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

AGCAS (2024) Jobs. Available at: https://www.agcas.org.uk/jobs (Accessed: 26 January 2024).

Ali, L. and Graham, B. (1996) The counselling approach to careers guidance. London: Routledge.

Association of Graduate Careers Advisory Services (AGCAS) (2020) Supporting research staff and students. Available at: https://www.agcas.org.uk/Knowledge-Centre/SupportingResearchers (Accessed: 13 January 2025).

Close the gap (n.d.) About the project. Available at: https://www.closethegap.ox.ac.uk/home (Accessed: 13 January 2025).

Daubney, K. (2020) ‘“Teaching employability is not my job!”: redefining embedded employability from within the higher education curriculum’, Higher Education, Skills and Work-Based Learning Emerald Publishing Limited, 12, pp. 92–106. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1108/HESWBL-07-2020-0165.

Denney, F. (2022) ‘Building bridges and connections: the languages used to connect and define communities in the third space’, in E. McIntosh and D. Nutt (eds.) The impact of the integrated practitioner in higher education: studies in third space professionalism Abingdon: Routledge, pp. 48-60. Available at: https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003037569-7.

Denney, F. (2023) The power of the third space — third space perspectives - exploring integrated practice. Available at: https://www.thirdspaceperspectives.com/blog/powerofthethirdspace (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy (BEIS) (2021) R&D people and culture strategy: people at the heart of R&D. Available at: https://assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/60f804228fa8f50c768387c5/r_d-people-culture-strategy.pdf (Accessed: 13 January 2025).

Gilworth, B. (2020) ‘Foreword’, in R. Hewitt (2020) Getting on: graduate employment and its influence on UK higher education, Higher Education Policy Institute Report 126, Available at: https://www.hepi.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Getting-on.pdf (Accessed: 13 January 2025).

Gilworth, B. (2021) Careers registration: starting points and journeys. University of Huddersfield. Available at: https://blogs.hud.ac.uk/hudcres/20-21/feb/careers-registration/ (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

Gough, J. and Neary, S. (2020) 'The career development profession: professionalisation, professionalism, and professional identity', in P.J. Robertson, T. Hooley and P. McCash, (eds.) The Oxford handbook of career development, pp.257-268. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190069704.013.19.

Guccione, K. et al. (n.d.) The hidden curriculum in doctoral education. Available at: https://drhiddencurriculum.wordpress.com/ (Accessed: 13 January 2025).

Hooley, T., Sultana, R. and Thomsen, R., (2021) ‘Five signposts to a socially just approach to career guidance’, Journal of the National Institute for Career Education and Counselling, 47(1), pp.59-66. Available at: https://doi.org/10.20856/jnicec.4709.

Ibarra, H. (2023) Working identity - nine unconventional strategies for reinventing your career. 2nd edn. Boston: Harvard Business Review Press.

Imperial (2020) Imperial’s full-time MBA programme in London ranked top 10 in Europe in 2021 QS World University Ranking. Available at: https://www.imperial.ac.uk/business-school/blogs/features/imperials-full-time-mba-programme-london-ranked-top-10-europe-2021-qs-world/ (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

Imperial (2025) Scholarly communication: narrative CVs. Available at: https://www.imperial.ac.uk/research-and-innovation/support-for-staff/scholarly-communication/bibliometrics/narrative-cvs/ (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

Jackson, P. (1968) Life in classrooms. New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.

Law, B. (1981) ‘Community interaction: a “mid-range” focus for theories of career development in young adults’, British Journal of Guidance and Counselling, 9(2) pp.142-158. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/03069888108258210.

Manoharan, A. (2020) ‘Creating connections: polymathy and the value of third space professionals in higher education’, Perspectives: Policy and Practice in Higher Education. 24(2), pp.56-59. Available at: https://doi.org/10.1080/13603108.2019.1698475.

Neary, S. (2011) ‘A careers adviser? So what do you do exactly?’, Journal of the National Institute of Career Education and Counselling, 27, pp.40–46. Available at https://doi.org/10.20856/jnicec.2707.

Prescott, H. (2023) “Questioning what is normal”: a message to ‘researcher careers people’ everywhere. Available at: https://phd-careers.co.uk/2023/01/09/questioning-what-is-normal-a-message-to-researcher-careers-people-everywhere/ (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

Prospects (2025) Higher education careers adviser job profile. Available at: https://www.prospects.ac.uk/job-profiles/higher-education-careers-adviser. (Accessed: 13 January 2025).

REDS Conference (2023) Career transitions for researchers. University of Leeds, Leeds 11 October. Available at: https://conferences.leeds.ac.uk/reds/archive/past-conferences/reds-2023/ (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)(2025) Missing elements: racial and ethnic inequalities in the chemical sciences. Available at: https://www.rsc.org/policy-evidence-campaigns/inclusion-diversity/surveys-reports-campaigns/racial-and-ethnic-inequalities-in-the-chemical-sciences/ (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

Thambar, N. (2016) ‘‘‘I’m just a plain old careers adviser” – recognising the hidden expert’, Journal of the National Institute of Career Education and Counselling, 37, pp.26–32. Available at: https://doi.org/10.20856/jnicec.3705.

Thambar, N., Neary, S. and Zlatic, F. (2020) ‘The 21st century HE careers professional’, Luminate. Available at: https://luminate.prospects.ac.uk/the-21st-century-he-careers-professional (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

Tupper, H. and Ellis, S. (2020) The Squiggly Career, London: Penguin.

Vähämäki, M., Essi, S. and Palmunen, L.M. (2021) ‘Doctoral supervision as an academic practice and leader–member relationship: a critical approach to relationship dynamics’, The International Journal of Management Education, 19(3) Available at: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijme.2021.100510.

UKRI (2022) UKRI Strategy 2022-2027: transforming tomorrow together. Available at: https://www.ukri.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/UKRI-210422-Strategy2022To2027TransformingTomorrowTogether.pdf (Accessed: 13 January 2025).

UKRI (2024) Statement of expectations for doctoral training. Available at: https://www.ukri.org/publications/statement-of-expectations-for-doctoral-training/ (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

UKRI (2025) Research Excellence Framework. Available at: https://2029.ref.ac.uk/ (Accessed: 13 January 2025).

UUK (2021) Higher education in facts and figures: 2021. Available at: https://www.universitiesuk.ac.uk/what-we-do/policy-and-research/publications/higher-education-facts-and-figures-2021 (Accessed: 17 January 2025).

Whitchurch, C. (2013) Reconstructing identities in higher education: the rise of third space professionals. London: Routledge.

Whitchurch, C. (2022) ‘From “working in third space” to “third space professionals”’, third space perspectives–exploring integrated practice. Available at: https://www.thirdspaceperspectives.com/blog/tothirdspaceprofessionals (Accessed: 13 January 2025).

Downloads

Published

30-01-2025

How to Cite

Murray, K. (2025) “Is a careers consultant for researchers a ‘third space’ professional in higher education?”, Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, (33). Available at: https://journal.aldinhe.ac.uk/index.php/jldhe/article/view/1235 (Accessed: 12 February 2025).

Issue

Section

Careers and professional development