Sabbatical

Sabbatical

A sabbatical (from the Latin "sabbaticus", from the Greek "sabbatikos", from Hebrew "shabbathon", i.e., Sabbath) is a rest from work, a hiatus, typically 2 months plus. The concept of a sabbatical has a source in several places in the Bible (Leviticus 25, for example), where there is a commandment to desist from working the fields in the seventh year. In the strict sense therefore, a sabbatical lasts a year. However, in recent times, a sabbatical has come to mean any extended absence in the career of an individual. In the modern sense, one takes a sabbatical typically to merely take a break from work or to fulfill some goal, e.g., writing a book or traveling extensively for research. Some universities and other institutional employers of scientists, physicians, and/or academics offer a paid sabbatical as an employee benefit, called sabbatical leave. Some companies offer an unpaid sabbatical for people wanting to take career breaks — this is a growing trend in the UK, with 20% of companies having a career break policy, and 10% considering introducing one. [Confederation of British Industry survey, 2005]

Sabbaticals are often taken by professors, pastors, cartoonists (e.g. Gary Larson and Bill Watterson), musicians (e.g. Cindy Wilson, Bobby McFerrin) and sportsmen (e.g. Alain Prost) and fund managers (e.g. Geoffrey Brianton). Academic sabbaticals typically follow every six years of full-time employment. The most common arrangement is for a half year at full pay, or a full year at half pay.

In UK and Irish students' unions, particularly in higher education institutions, students can be elected to become "sabbatical officers" of their students' union, either taking a year out of their study (in the academic year following their election) or remaining at the institution for a year following completion of study. Sabbatical officers are usually provided with a living allowance or stipend.

abbatical experience

# pre-application reflection and planning
# the application process
# pre-sabbatical preparation
# the leave period itself
# reentry and follow-through

ee also

* Gap year
* Career break

References

*Eells, Walter C. "The Origin and Early History of Sabbatical Leave." "Bulletin, American Association of University Professors", XLVIII (1962), 253-256.
*cite book
last = Zahorski
first = K.J
title = The Sabbatical Mentor: A Practical Guide to Successful Sabbaticals
publisher = Anker Publishing
date = 1994

External links

*


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  • sabbatical — sab‧bat‧i‧cal [səˈbætɪkl] noun [countable, uncountable] HUMAN RESOURCES a period of time when someone, especially someone in a university teaching job, stops doing their usual work in order to work in business, to study, or travel: • He spent… …   Financial and business terms

  • Sabbatical — [sə bat′i kəl] adj. [< Fr sabbatique < LL(Ec) sabbaticus < Gr sabbatikos < sabbaton (see SABBATH) + AL] 1. of or suited to the Sabbath 2. [s ] bringing a period of rest that recurs in regular cycles n. [s ] 1. a recurring period of… …   English World dictionary

  • sabbatical — 1640s, of or suitable for the Sabbath, from L. sabbaticus, from Gk. sabbatikos of the Sabbath (see SABBATH (Cf. Sabbath)). Meaning a year s absence granted to researchers (originally one year in seven, to university professors) first recorded… …   Etymology dictionary

  • sabbatical — ► NOUN ▪ a period of paid leave granted to a university teacher for study or travel (traditionally one year for every seven years worked). ► ADJECTIVE 1) relating to a sabbatical. 2) archaic of or appropriate to the sabbath. ORIGIN from Greek… …   English terms dictionary

  • sabbatical — (izg. sebètikl) m DEFINICIJA razg. slobodna studijska godina koju sveučilišni nastavnici mogu koristiti svake sedme godine radi daljnjeg usavršavanja ETIMOLOGIJA engl. ← grč. sabbatikós: koji se odnosi na Šabat, v. prema Bibliji, razdoblje od… …   Hrvatski jezični portal

  • sabbatical — [n] leave break, furlough, holiday, leave of absence, liberty, recess, time off, vacation; concepts 802,807 …   New thesaurus

  • Sabbatical — Das Sabbatical ist ein Arbeitszeitmodell. Im neuzeitlichen, übertragenen Sinn des aus den USA stammenden Begriffs sabbatical, auch Sabbatjahr, bezeichnet es entweder ein Jahr der Teilzeitarbeit oder ein Jahr der Auszeit (das wäre dann das… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • sabbatical — n. 1) to give, grant a sabbatical 2) to get; have; take a sabbatical 3) (to be, go) on a sabbatical (she was on a sabbatical) * * * [sə bætɪk(ə)l] grant a sabbatical have take a sabbatical to get to give (to be, go) on a sabbatical (she was on a… …   Combinatory dictionary

  • Sabbatical — Langzeiturlaub * * * Sab|ba|ti|cal [sə bɛtɪkl̩], das; s, s [engl. sabbatical, zu: sabbatical = Sabbat…; zum Sabbat gehörig < spätlat. sabbaticus < griech. sabbatikós]: (neben dem jährlichen Erholungsurlaub) einmal in einem längeren Zeitraum …   Universal-Lexikon

  • sabbatical — noun (C, U) a period when someone, especially someone in a university job, stops doing their usual work in order to study or travel: be on sabbatical: Dr Watson s not here at the moment, she s on sabbatical. sabbatical adjective: a sabbatical… …   Longman dictionary of contemporary English

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