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- 2009 nsf advance workshop:
- 2009 nsf advance workshop:
- Finding the right institutional
This presentation was designed to assist and educate the interviewee regarding campus culture and atmosphere, and was authored by Rebecca Richards-Kortum (BIOE) and Kathleen Matthews (BIOS).
Goals
- Understand what
you want to know
- What is essential for
your success and well-being in your career?
- Identify the pathway to find the information you need - be proactive and use your resources (e.g., Web)
- Reassess what is important in the context of reality
Three kinds of institutional support
- Tangible resources
- Space, salary, start-up, access to students
- Institutional policies
- Graduate study — reviews, support, opportunities to learn outside research
- Department and university policies
- Mechanism by which department operates
- Intangible department support
- Mentoring, advising
- Culture, spirit, collegiality
- Moral support, empathy
Tangibles
- Space
- How much do you need?
- What is reasonable in the institutional context?
- People
- What do you need? Graduate stipends? Technical support?
- What is reasonable in the institutional context?
- Start up costs
- What do you need?
- What is reasonable in the institutional context?
Institution/department policies
- Graduate student context
- Stipend, training in speaking/writing, opportunities to present their work and receive feedback
- Departmental context
- Opportunities to invite senior faculty in for seminars
- Mechanisms for effective mentoring (in or outside the department)
- Institutional context
- Leave policies (how are these viewed by Department?)
- Resources for learning
- Teaching
- Grant-writing
- Running a laboratory
Intangibles (may be most important!)
- Mentoring — what happened to others?
- Advice on grants/manuscripts
- Feedback mechanisms and support
- Advice and feedback on teaching
- Positive and supportive climate
- Moral support
- When the grant doesn’t come through…
- Quality of life in the community
- Public vs private institution
- Cost of living
- Daycare and schools
- Size of the city/town
- Job opportunities for a partner/spouse
- Weather
- Sports
- Arts
- Other interests
- Other……
Types of environments
- Supportive (understand what it means to be a junior faculty member)
- Provide strong mentoring and support for teaching and research
- Demand service, but do not overwhelm
- Neutral
- Don’t help, but not negative
- Not supportive (“sink or swim”)
- No support system
- Critical and sometimes demeaning
- Demand high levels of service
- Senior faculty “eat their young” or “favored few”
What do
you Want to know?
- About the department?
- This is THE MOST IMPORTANT
- About the School/College/Institution
- But the overall context matters
- How do you decide what to explore?
- Priorities for you may differ from others
- Think in many dimensions
Thinking about what you want
- Brainstorming
- What matters most to you?
- Why?
- Are you sure?
- Can you imagine taking a job that does not fulfill your expectation in this realm?
- What factors could compensate if this desire is not fulfilled?
Now that you know what you want to know...
- You don’t want to appear as if culture matters more than science, so...
- How do you find out this information
safely ?
Two examples
- How is TA support allocated?
- Ways to ask that get you snowed
- Ways to ask that get you the real answer
- Maternity leave policies
- Unsafe ways to ask
- Safe ways to ask
How do you ask?
- Brainstorming
- What information do you want?
- How can you think creatively about asking your questions?
- What if you can’t figure out a way to ask?
What if you end up in a challenging culture?
- Strategies for coping
- Identify supporters within the department
- Identify potential mentors outside the department
- Say “no” when it seems safe to protect your time
- Identify the value system and operate, to the degree possible, within that system
Questions?
- Think before you act
- Reach out to your mentors for input
- Reflect on your questions
- Reflect on the information that you receive
Source:
OpenStax, 2009 nsf advance workshop: negotiating the ideal faculty position. OpenStax CNX. Feb 24, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col11185/1.1
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