When: Fri July 24, 12:00 pm
Where: Zoom https://ucsc.zoom.us/my/jferna10
PLEASE REGISTER here: https://forms.gle/8ehPEkgnNXRkHvKE6
We will be holding a Zoom seminar on “A survey-based analysis of the academic job market“, a collaborative effort between Jason and postdocs at other institutions from around the country that was just published in eLife. This paper is likely of interest to students, postdocs and staff considering faculty career paths, as well as faculty interested in faculty hiring practices (please note most of our data is related to the life-sciences). We hope to have members of the audience share their thoughts, experiences and feedback during this informal presentation.
Abstract: Many postdoctoral researchers apply for faculty positions knowing relatively little about the hiring process or what is needed to secure a job offer. To address this lack of knowledge about the hiring process we conducted a survey of applicants for faculty positions: the survey ran between May 2018 and May 2019, and received 317 responses. We analyzed the responses to explore the interplay between various scholarly metrics and hiring outcomes. We concluded that, above a certain threshold, the benchmarks traditionally used to measure research success ā including funding, number of publications or journals published in ā were unable to completely differentiate applicants with and without job offers. Respondents also reported that the hiring process was unnecessarily stressful, time-consuming, and lacking in feedback, irrespective of outcome. Our findings suggest that there is considerable scope to improve the transparency of the hiring process.