Damn! The world really needs this woman to get the job! [View all]
From the Science careers section:
Combining teaching with research made me a better scientist
Subtitle:
Even research-focused faculty job searches should value teaching, this Ph.D. student writes
E. Celeste Welch
Science, Working Life,
Science 21 APRIL 2023 VOL 380 ISSUE 6642 Page 314.
I arrived at the future faculty workshop hoping to glean tips on how to apply for tenure-track jobs. But when the time came to discuss my application materials, I was taken aback by the advice. Cel, the faculty mentor said hesitantly, Im going to give you some harsh advice that I think you need to hear. Try to tone down your service and teachingit doesnt make you look serious about research. I felt my cheeks burning in embarrassment as some of the other attendees nodded their heads in agreement. And I left feeling bewildered. Id spent years building up my teaching and mentoring skills and devoting myself to serving as a positive role model for students. Shouldnt that hold value in a faculty job search? Why would I be penalized for it?
During graduate school, I had become passionate about making engineering accessible to everyone. I did not want others to feel like an imposter, as I did. As an undergraduate, advisers had told me I wasnt cut out for a career in engineering. Convinced an academic position was off the table, I planned to pursue a position in industry after graduating. I submitted applications to graduate school on a whim. I was floored when I was accepted.
When I became a teaching assistant, I started out badly. I mirrored the methods that had been used on me for all my liferelying on traditionally structured lectures and high-stress assignmentsand was frustrated when students did poorly. I expected a lot from them but was not sure how to give them the resources they needed to succeed.
In my third year, I decided to pursue a teaching certification. I learned that the methods Id been using had long been debunked as ineffective, as they exacerbated performance gaps in students from marginalized backgrounds. I remembered that I excelled in courses with interactive lectures, small group work, low-stakes assignments, and caring professors who led with empathy. Such approaches, I realized, could help other marginalized students succeed...
...When I asked my mentors how to ensure Id be competitive on the academic job market, they always said the same thing: be excellent in research, teaching, and service. But in the same breath they would remark on my teaching and service work, hinting that those who pursue such activities are best suited to serving as teaching faculty members or diversity, equity, and inclusion officers.
Then, at the future faculty workshop, it happened again. The advice rattled around my head long after. At first, I responded by reducing some of my nonresearch commitments. But then a mentee would need advice and I could feel the teaching skills I had spent time cultivating coming out. I vowed to not push those activities to the side to placate nearsighted views about how researchers on the academic track should allocate their time.
As I apply to faculty positions, I hope to land in a place that values my commitment to teach, serve, and care for my students. Im not hiding my track recordIm embracing it...