Section contents
Faculty issues
starting out
general
community college
publishing
grants
teaching
tenure
senior searches
dept chairs
leaving
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If you haven't got the position, information about career planning including the academic job hunt is on a different page. Related pages on this site:
General issues
- What happened to the professoriate? We have lost a sense of commonality as professors, the sense that we are all in this together -- "this" being a dedication to undergraduate teaching and not just specialized research. We have lost a belief in the relevance of teaching undergraduates for the health of our democracy. We have lost confidence that what we do in teaching and research is inherently good, and not primarily a utilitarian occupation. We have lost the conviction that we have a calling, that as professors our duty is to profess.
- On the tenure track: a collection of articles from The Chronicle of Higher Education
- The realities of soft money positions, from Science's Nextwave.
- Non-tenure track faculty positions:
pros and cons. These are commonly called "research track".
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Managing your time by establishing your
absence.
- How to get what you want from academe
- Shameless self promotion: no one else will do it for you.
- Should I move on? or, just get over it and seize the day. Ms Mentor counsels three people to whom life has given lemons.
- Keeping your research alive amidst other faculty responsibilities.
- Winning and retaining faculty through a culture of support
- Departmental politics as a foreign language
- The seven deadly sins of professors
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The American Association of University Professors, founded in 1915, defends
academic freedom, faculty rights, and tenure. Publishes an online version of its print journal,
Academe.
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Nice work if we can keep it: Confessions of a junior
professor. Describing stories of junior faculty life and feelings, the author writes:
"My conclusion after compiling these stories is that the anxieties of the junior
professoriate fall into two categories: "Is this all there is?" and "What if we lose it?" ....
These sentiments reflect the disappointment that comes from realizing that having a job means, well,
having a job. But at another level they reflect the fear we have of losing that job, and of rejoining
the ranks of the highly educated unemployed. Disappointment and fear. Detachment and paranoia.
Disengagement and anxiety. These sentiments, working together, have a tendency to tear at the
soul."
The author, an English professor, calls for junior faculty to unite together to control their careers.
This may work in the humanities, but in the sciences, I think that too many junior faculty are forced to
compete directly with one another for resources.
- The Project on Faculty Appointments at Harvard will develop a national resource for academic policies. Studies described here address the role of tenure and governance in faculty lives.
- Fiscal realities in academe.
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A dissertation:
The Fiscal Crisis of the American Public Research University and its Impact on Faculty: A Case Study of Factors Influencing Recruitment and Retention of Academic Personnel
- Attributes of
effective and ineffective advisors
- To compete or collaborate in research?
- They will not comfort you, a realistically cynical column from Ms Mentor about dealing with those who are not honest. In academe, as in the real world, you need a public face of competence and cheer, no matter how much you're churning inside. Inotherwords, don't let them get you down.
- Surviving a professional slide. Didn't get the promotion? Paper got scooped? Some generally applicable strategies for how to get back on the horse.
- Faculty involvement with fundraising. It may be useful to participate.
- Asking for a raise: playing an odd academic game. Note; for negotiating a new job, see careers page. This is negotiating for more after you've had the job for a while.
- Don't do it: offers and counteroffers in academia. What's a counteroffer? " When I replied that in the academy it was the practice first to solicit an outside offer and then to bring it to one's present institution in the expectation that it would be matched or bettered, my new advisers were incredulous. "
- Why Can't I Get a Raise? from The Chronicle. The author wonders: "You want me to get offered another job when I don't want another job? ... Do you really want me to apply for a better job, go to interviews, meet campus officials, have lunches with people I'm desperately hoping never to see again -- to prove that I am valuable? Doesn't it prove, instead, that I am wholly unethical?". You'd think. One of academe's great peculiarities.
- Counter offers: A loyalty tax
- For how this ridiculous practice hinders women, see section on equal pay.
- Feeling stuck in academe? Small ways to make life better.
- Dual career couples and job sharing section on a separate page
- Search committees from both sides on the jobs page
- Publishing see also gender effects in publishing
- Small colleges and community college experience.
- Small colleges or universities:
What's wrong with academe?
- Careers and Rewards in Bio Sciences: the disconnect between scientific progress and career progression, a new report from the ASCB. This economics-based look at the academic biology makes you wonder why anyone chooses this profession, where career earnings are low, work hours are long, and tangible rewards are limited to a very few survivors.
- The mythical scientist shortage, from The Scientist (free registration required). For an academically astute American, better ways abound to make a living.
- Your faculty, reluctantly. Why would anyone want an academic career? The hours are long, the pay is poor, the stress high, the rewards few. The students drive better cars than the professors. What can be done to renew the profession?
- Attracting the best: Jan 2003 article about the attrition of the top students from science for more lucrative and supportive careers.
- A PhD and a failure?
- An alarm about the exodus from research. Although written about MD-PhDs, the same concern (stemming from the funding crisis) applies to basic scientists as well. From 2007.
- The real science crisis: bleak prospects for young researchers
A MUST READ
Starting Your first position
- Navigating the Postdoc to PI transition
- Academic lingo: a glossary of terms particularly for aspiring science faculty
- Learning the lingo in academe: the jargon is defined in this glossary, and further examples described in the sequel
- The realities of How to swim with sharks. Essential advice for the aspiring academic.
- Microcosmographica academia: Being a guide for the young academic politician (ca. 1908)
- Ms Mentor gives the low down on how to get started in the new place and new heirarchy. Ms. Mentor also advises you not to say no to anything, unless it is illegal, toxic, or hopelessly lewd. Do not reject food, or offers of any kind of help, or invitations to social events. Being a good receiver is a social trait not widely practiced among awkward academics, and you'll be known as the one charmer who adored Professor Francophile's snail salad. (You may, of course, be fed that snail salad at social gatherings forever after, but think of your term as only six years. Once you get tenure, you can conveniently develop an allergy or an unspecified queasiness.)
- What they didn't teach you in grad school, from Inside Higher Education
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Setting up
your new lab, picking up skills on the fly, and a list of
six common mistakes
- Managing your lab. Funny thing about science, you get rewarded for being
good at the bench by getting removed from the bench.
- How to welcome new faculty members
- In service to talent : not yours, your students.
- Making a name for yourself
- Discretion, especially on matters sexual: faculty rules from Ms Mentor
- Academic fledglings:
common sense for the junior professor. From Ms. Mentor.
Managing your time pre-tenure
- The assistant professor's guide to the galaxy
- Advising students
- Treating graduate students with dignity
- Along those lines, minding the student client
- What to wear when you want a job or tenure. From Ms Mentor. Shouldn't matter. Does it?
- More about dressing the part
- Surviving faculty meetings
- The battle for good graduate students: essential for an academic lab.
- The wrong geography
- It's a job. Make the best of it!
- Also see section on leaving
Getting grants
Teaching
Getting tenure
Senior (or junior) faculty career changes . Also see the section on the wrong place
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