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- Rice university’s nsf advance
- Rice university’s nsf advance
- Negotiating an academic job
Space
How do you know if space will work?
- Look at the total square feet
- How is it laid out? Can you imagine/plan your work in that space?
- How close is the space to colleagues of interest to you? To requisite shared equipment?
- Is it near your proposed office? Far away? Which do you want (people vary a lot)?
- Think about what you envision doing and then put yourself and your research group in the proposed space
Questions to ask
Space may be “start-up” with the potential to expand when your group expands (it may also not be expandable)
- Ask if additional space will be possible when your group reaches critical mass
- Ask if “shared” space is feasible when you expand beyond current assigned space
Questions to ask
- Does your teaching assignment matter to you?
- Within what limits?
- What courses would you like to teach?
- What would you be willing to teach?
- Will you have a teaching “break” as you start your research program? How long?
- Will you have TA support?
Salary
SALARY SCALES VARY A LOT BY DISCIPLINE
How do you know if the salary is in the appropriate range?
- Hard to get salary figures from privates
- Can get national “averages,” but may not be informative
- Talk with faculty in your department to get a sense of the starting range in your field
- Think about what you need to live with some level of comfort in the community
- Salaries vary considerably depending on local cost-of-living
Can i ask for more?
Salary is the most sensitive of the issues in some ways
- The department wants you to come, so they’ll work hard to offer a good salary
- Your salary impacts the salary ladder in the department/school/institution
- Providing a salary higher than previously hired assistant professors (or worse still, associate professors/professors) creates long-standing resentments and problems
- If you ask for more, do it with good information and no expectations
State
vs. Private institutions
- State institutions have greater “rule-based” limitations
- Salary grades may be set and harder to negotiate
- Less flexibility in fund management
- Private institutions are generally smaller
- Stepping out of “salary lineup” has greater consequences
Appointment terms
Initial term of appointment is set by institutional policies
- 3 year, 4 year with renewal is common
- Renewal is determined by a review process
- Tenure decision at 6-8 years is common
- Tenure is determined by internal/external review process
- Definition of academic year/summer also may vary with institutions
When to talk about start-up
- You can inquire generally about research start-up during the interview process.
- If a faculty member (or the Chair) asks you about equipment needs, answer them clearly and concisely
- If the Chair initiates a discussion of start-up needs, provide detailed and clear information, keeping the option to give more information later
- Ascertain whether the information sought is for equipment/supplies (usual) or everything
- If the request is verbal, provide verbal answers and inquire if more detailed information would be useful
- If more detailed information is requested, give written information
Source:
OpenStax, Rice university’s nsf advance program’s negotiating the ideal faculty position workshop master collection of presentations. OpenStax CNX. Mar 08, 2012 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11413/1.1
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