Title: Tomorrows Professor
1Tomorrows Professor
2Section I
3The Academic Enterprise
- Unlike any other institution
- Carnegie Classification Changed in 2000!
- Doctoral/Research Universities Extensive
- Doctoral/Research Universities Intensive
- Masters I II
- Baccalaureate Colleges-- Liberal Arts
- Baccalaureate Colleges General
- Baccalaureate/Associates Colleges
4The Academic Enterprise
- Institutional Governance
- Bottom-up governance structure
- The institution of tenure
- The multiuniversity
- Challenges Facing Academia
- Budget cuts
- Demands for increased productivity
- Implications of University-Industry collaboration
5Key Points
- The academic institution is different than other
business institutions - There are many different types of academic
institutions the important thing is to know what
kind of institution you are dealing with - Academia is currently going through a period of
transition
6Sci. and Eng. in Higher Education
- Faculty are more loyal to their discipline than
their department, and more loyal to their
department than their university - There are many differences between departments,
even in one institution - Interdisciplinary collaboration
- Scholarship across the disciplines
7Key Points
- Many factors that academics are affected by vary
across departments and schools within a
university - While most faculty are most loyal to their own
discipline, interdisciplinary collaboration and
scholarship continues to increase in importance
8New Challenges to the Professoriate
- Forces for change in teaching and research
- Increasing use of communications tools
- Increasing use of computational tools
- Increasing focus on interdisciplinary programs
- Prospects of decreased government funding
- Increasing costs of doing research
- Changing role of industry in academic research
9New Challenges to the Professoriate
- Implications for Faculty Scholarship
- Balance between cooperation and competition
- Balance between basic and applied research
- Balance between high-risk and low-risk behaviors
10Key Points
- As mentioned before, academia is facing plenty of
new challenges - This means that, as new faculty, we must balance
ourselves between extremes in several ways
11Section II
- Preparing for an Academic Career
12Chapter 4
- Your Professional Preparation Strategy
13Decisions, Decisions, Decisions
- Follow your passion
- Understand what you are getting into
- Make a calculated decision.
- Its a marathon, not a sprint.
- Do not try to forecast supply and demand
- Well, Im going to get my PhD in so-and-so cause
that field is really hot right now
14Supply and Demand
- The Myth
- Got PhDs?
- 675,000 jobs!!! Where do I sign?
- Reality Bites
- Somebody call William Sherden.
- Graduate Student Birth Control.
15Three-Pronged Preparation Strategy
- Breadth-on-Top-of-Depth
- Capital T approach.
- Drilling for oil.
- Next-Stage
- Look Ahead.
- Research, Proposal Writing, Publishing
- Multiple-Option
- Concurrently prepare for academic and industry
careers.
16Chapter 5
- Research as a Graduate Student and Postdoc
17Summary
- Choosing a Research Topic
- Choosing an Advisor
- Writing Research Proposals
- Publishing
18Choosing a Research Topic
- Can it be enthusiastically pursued?
- Can interest be sustained by it?
- Is the problem solvable?
- Is it worth doing?
- Will it lead to other research problems?
- Is it manageable in size?
- Can you make an original contribution to the
literature? - Will the results be reviewed well by scholars in
the field? - Are you, or will you become, competent to solve
it? - Will you have demonstrated independent skills in
the discipline? - Will the research prepare you in an area of
future demand or promise?
19Choosing an Advisor
- Considerations
- Accomplishments in teaching and research
- Enthusiasm for advising students
- Experience in advising students
- Management and organization of his/her research
group - Reputation for setting high standards in a
congenial atmosphere - Compatible Personality
- Types of Advisors (Smiths classification)
- Collaborator
- Hands-Off
- Senior Scientist
- Types of Advisors (Martins classification)
- Authoritarian
- Coach
- Laissez Faire
20Writing Research Proposals
- Next stage activity
- Begin by reviewing others proposals and by
contributing drafts of sections of others
proposals - Show drafts to others
- Academics in your specialty area
- Academics outside your specialty area (but in
your field) - Academics at other institutions
21Publishing
- For co-authored papers, be able to give a talk
and answer questions at conferences on any paper
for which you are listed as an author - Author checklist (abbreviated)
- Is the article complete?
- Is the article authoritative?
- Is the article singular (does it make a
contribution)?
22Key Points
- Get involved in research early
- Choose research topics that are narrowly focused
and carefully defined, but are important parts of
a broad-ranging, complex problem - Choose your advisor carefully
- Be involved in as many next-stage activities as
possible - Writing research proposals
- Attending conferences
- Supervising other researchers
- Managing research projects and programs
23Chapter 6
- Teaching Experiences Prior to Becoming a Professor
24Why is it important to teach as a Graduate
Student?
- Confirm teaching is what one wants to do.
- Help prepare for ones first teaching assignment
as a professor. - Makes one more marketable.
25What can I do?
- Look and volunteer for teaching experiences
- Remember that the time spent teaching will
generally be 3x the amount you expect - Create a teaching portfolio
26What can I do NOW? (key points)
- Stay aware of teaching opportunities around you
- Start compiling your teaching portfolio now
- Make it a habit to file samples of your work
27Section III
- Finding and Getting the Best Possible Academic
Position
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29Chapter 7
- Identifying the Possibilities
30Deciding what you want
- Your type of institution
- Research, Doctoral, Masters Baccalaureate
- Different Institution characteristics
- Your type of appointment
- Full-time, Tenure-track
- Temporary, Part-time, Consulting , Adjunct etc.
- Your setting
- Physical and cultural environment
- Personal preferences and family considerations
- Relationship between the institutions you are
considering and other local colleges and
universities
31Research what is out there
- Background reading
- Guidebooks
- Program description
- College catalog
- Internet
- Talking to others
- Using the contact database you constructed
- Do not make information querying into position
applying - Visiting other institutions
32Preparing for the search
- Consolidate the information together and focus
on a plan of the specific schools you want to
apply - Nonacademic positions?
33Chapter 8
34Setting the Stage
- How New Positions are Established
- Vice president for academic affairs
- Dean
- Department
- What Departments Look for in New Faculty
- Teach
- Specialty
- Funding
- Finding out What is available
- Advertisement
- Known to a few faculty
- Internet
- Drawing on your Network
35Preparing your Application Materials
- The Cover letter
- The Curriculum Vitae
- Letters of Recommendation
36The Application Process
- Conferences
- Talk about research / teaching
- Keep in touch with your faculty and students
- Follow-up
- The Campus Visit
- Know the institution
- Seek info from the people you known in that
institute - Know more about the schedule
- Interview
- Other considerations
- The Academic Job Talk
- What do they want to see
- Customization
- Practice
37Positions Outside the Academia
38Chapter 9
- Getting the Results You Want
39Principles for responding to an offer
- Make sure you have an offer
- Know what you want ,And what you dont want
- Clearly communicate what you want but only to
the right people - Use your work quality/productivity to negotiate
- Make requests informally
- Negotiate hard on things that are out of bound
- Learn about the Tenure process
- Start as High as you can in institutional
prestige - Be realistic about salary but go as high as you
can - Keep options open dont say yes right away
- Combine logic and emotion when deciding
Dual-career couples
40Did not get the offer you want?
- The Decision to Try Again
- Try again?
- Find out what you did wrong
- Multiple-Option
- Staying
- Moving on to are temporary position
- Moving on to are permanent position
41Section III
- Deciding what you want
- Researching what is out here
- Setting the stage
- Preparing your application materials
- Applying for positions
- Negations
- If you do not get the job you want
42March-August
Continue to apply for positions Consider
interests and needs Consider negotiations
strategies Consider Multiple-Option approach
November-February
Continue to apply for positions Practice
interviews Prepare job talk
!! Explore earlier !!
September-December
Talk to your advisor Attend conferences Apply for
positions
August-October
Develop CV Obtain letters of reference Obtain
Employment packet
43Section IV
- Looking Ahead to your First Years on the Job
Advice from the field
44Chapter 10
- Insights on Time Management
45Manage your time efficiently. Do the things right
and do the right things
The Problem
- Doctoral Student
- If I can just find a good problem
- Assistant Professor
- If I can just find the time
46The solution
- Set Long-Term Goal
- Establish Your Absence
- Keep things on the burner
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48Key advices
- Be a Quick Starter, achieve balance.
- Set limits on lecture preparation
- Find time to do scholarly writing very week
- Social networking
- Involve in the campus community early on.
- Manage tasks to take time for the long term
important things.
49Chapter 11
- Insights on Teaching and Learning
50Teaching and Learning Styles
- Learning Styles
- Sensory or Intuitive
- Visual or Auditory
- Inductive or Deductive
- Active or Reflective
- Sequential or Global
- Teaching Styles
- Concrete or Conceptual
- Visual or Verbal
- Inductive or Deductive
- Active or Passive
- Step by Step or Global
51Key Advice
- Motivate Learning
- Provide a balance of concrete information and
abstract concepts - Provide explicit illustrations of intuitive
patterns and sensing patterns, and encourage all
students to exercise both patterns. - Use pictures, schematics in verbal presentation.
Show films. Provide demonstrations, hands-on, if
possible. - Use computer technologies in teaching.
- Provide opportunities for students to do
something active, like brain storming.
52Develop a teaching portfolio
- The Teaching Portfolio Capturing the Scholarship
of Teaching, by Russell Edgerton. - The process of preparing teaching portfolios may
be more valuable because (1) someone was very
interested and concerned about their teaching,
(2)the portfolio captured evidence that looked
like their teaching, and (3) selecting evidence
and writing captions and reflections had impelled
their to clarify their intentions and beliefs
about teaching and students.
53Chapter 12
54New Priorities
- Doctoral Student
- Problem solving
- Conduct research
- Find projects w/funding
- Assistant Professor
- Problem finding
- Direct research
- Obtain funding
55Sources of Funding
- Gift or grant in aid - 10-50k, no oversight
- Grant substantial but you are accountable
- Coop agreement with government agencies (e.g.,
USDA, EPA) that are hands on - Contract timelines and deliverables
- Fellowships and Scholarships provide support for
graduate students - IRIS (Illinois Research Information System)
provides info on sponsors, programs and deadlines
56Preparing Research Proposal
- Do your homework before making contact.
- Build long term relationship with the funding
agency. - Or you can start your research with under the
tutelage of an experienced faculty member who has
funding. - Try to find help on searching funding from
colleagues or universities. - Elements of Found in Most Successful Proposals.
See Appendix F.
57Key Advice
- Connect with experts in adjacent areas
- Seek out colleagues within institution
- Attend and present at conferences
- Publishing gains acceptance for your ideas while
telling world the results of your hard work - Peer reviewed journals are best
58Chapter 13
- Insights on Professional Responsibility
59Areas of Professional Responsibility
- Service to department and profession
- Ethics in teaching and research
- Authorship and scholarly reviews
- Consulting and other industry relationships
60Ethically Problematic Behaviors
- Falsifying data
- Fabricating experiments
- Misrepresenting funding requests
- Giving undue or no authorship credit
- Misleading research competitors
- Failure to secure informed consent
- Failure to ensure fair play in lab
- Plagiarism
- Demeaning competitors work
- Using findings in harmful way
- Publishing in Least Publishable Units
- Failure to blow the whistle
- Failure to carefully review paper when referee
- Biased reviews of funding requests
- Gaining financial advantage by biasing others
research
61Key Advice
- Do not over commit, especially in your pre-tenure
period. Focus on departmental committees. - Review papers for journals
- Develop working relations with industry
- Be aware of impact of behavior on reputation of
self, school, and field - Ask older colleagues for advice in ethical gray
areas
62Conclusion
- Engage in activities having value in themselves,
but that also contribute to your primary mission
of teaching and other forms of scholarship.
63Chapter 14
64Paths toward-and away from-tenure
- The traditional path
- The accelerated path
- The delayed entry path
- The late practitioner path
- The late career child-bearing path
- The from-one-school-to-another-school path
- The fail to get tenure try again path
- The fail to get tenure other career path
- The walk-away-from-tenure path
- The never-try-for-tenure path
65Key Advice
- It is important to understand the tenure process
and requirements for your university. - Establish a strategy to meet the requirements.
- Consulting your tenured colleagues. ASK HELP!
- Contribute to departmental service but avoid
university-wide commitments until after attaining
tenure
66Chapter 15
- Insights on Academia Needed Changes
67Conclusion Help Us!
- Help graduate students and postdocs prepare for
academic careers - Help graduate students and postdocs find academic
positions - Help beginning faculty succeed
68Tomorrow's professor! It is your turn!