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Academic Career in Physics. Sophomore Seminar. Path to an Academic Career. Undergraduate Physics Major Graduate School Postdoctoral Research Faculty Position. Undergraduate. Main goal: Prepare for graduate school Take as many physics courses as you can (within reason)
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Academic Career in Physics Sophomore Seminar
Path to an Academic Career • Undergraduate Physics Major • Graduate School • Postdoctoral Research • Faculty Position
Undergraduate • Main goal: Prepare for graduate school • Take as many physics courses as you can (within reason) • Get advice from your class advisor on courses • Try to get as much as possible out of each course • Prepare to take the Physics GRE • General + Physics subject exam (physics most important) • First step: learn as much physics as possible • At some level, your Physics score will determine graduate schools you can get into • The best schools use strict cuts on GRE as starting point to filter applicants
GRE (Continued) • GRE Information online: • http://www.ets.org/gre/subject/about/content/physics • http://www.ets.org/gre/ • Take the exam in Fall of senior year, or Junior Spring if you feel comfortable with the material • Allow time to take exam twice if possible, in case you have trouble • e.g., illness, some other sort of disruption • Senior seminar and Dept. study groups will help you prepare • Can download free practice exam • No reason not to download and flip through now, just to get an idea what to expect
Physics GRE Topics … some of the questions are, well, random and very specific. Best to review broadly
Physics Graduate School • Apply late fall/early spring of senior year • Keys to getting accepted: • Transcript and grades • Letters of recommendation • Especially from research experience/summer REUs • GRE scores (especially physics) • Picking a graduate school: Important decision • Depends a lot on field(s) of study you think you might want to pursue • Intangibles are important • Relationship with advisor (more in a moment) • Graduate student classmates • Departmental atmosphere • (happiness is important) • Ask professors for advice!
Graduate School Basics • Most physics programs focus on Ph.D. • Stay at one school the entire time • Typically takes 5-7 years • Physics graduate school should befree • In fact, you usually are paid a modest stipend while a student • In return, you serve as either teaching assistant or research assistant • If you are not offered a TA or RA, probably don’t want to go to that school • If you can win a national fellowship (i.e. NSF) for graduate study, big plus! • Higher salary, no teaching responsibilities • Applications for these are due before the grad school ones • Take classes and do research • Classes mostly done in first 2 years • Focus is on research with a thesis advisor • End goal: Produce a Ph.D. thesis • Original research • Guided by a professor who serves as advisor to research (and often career and life….)
TimeLine • Year 1 • Taking core graduate classes (Quantum, Math methods, E&M—Jackson, mechanics) • Typically supported by TA • Exploring research areas, looking for a graduate advisor • Year 2 • Taking advanced classes, especially in subfield (e.g. particle, nuclear, condensed matter, etc.) • Continue TA or start RA (if working with an advisor with sufficient funding. • Year 3-5+ • Done with most classes • RA, unless advisor doesn’t have enough funds (otherwise TA) • Note: Typically work on research through summers—no more summer break!
To Graduate • Exact requirements vary among institutions • Courses: • Core graduate curriculum • Electives: both within specialty and outside (breadth) • Qualifying Exam (sometimes called other names) • Written physics exam that must be passed in early years • Focuses on advanced undergrad/core graduate curriculum (i.e. mechanics, E&M, stat mech., quantum. • Difficulty and scope varies widely among institutions • Candidacy exam (some schools don’t have this): • Oral (and sometimes written) in specialty • Usually: purpose to evaluate whether you’re pursuing a viable thesis • Ph.D. Thesis • Written document: ~100-400 pages • Defense: oral presentation and Q&A session • By this point, you are THE world expert on topic!
Theory vs Experiment Theory Experiment Measuring things Need to have good grasp of statistics, electronics, and computer programming Often better funding: more chance of RA, less of being TA as senior student • Working on calculating/solving • VERY math intensive: Study all the math you can! • May be more computational or pen and paper Typically choose theory vs experiment early on
After Graduate School • You are now “Dr. So-and-so” • You can make your friends/siblings call you “Dr.” • Your parents maycall you this whether you want them to or not • You are not a professor yet! • Need a faculty position • Depending on goals, may need to do one or more post-doctoral research positions. (Postdocs for short) • Analogy: • Grad Student = “Apprentice” • Postdoc = “Journeyman” • Professor/Scientist = “Master”
Postdoc • Perform research full time under guidance of faculty member • Temporary position: 2-6 years • Sometimes will do two (or even three) before finding permanent position (e.g. faculty, lab scientist) • Salary typically about 2x greater than graduate stipend • Often asked to do research tasks faculty can’t do because of teaching responsibilities: • Live at remote experimental facility • Travel to different labs for experiments • “Visibility” or “becoming known” to other members of the field is a big part of this stage • Should include high-profile talks at conferences, leadership positions • Forms basis for “next step” in career
Faculty Position • Teaching and research performed at university • Balance between teaching and research determined by type of institution (see next slide) • Timeline • Assistant Professor: Initially hired for limited term contract: either 6 years or 3 years + 3 years (with renewal decision in between) • After 6 years: tenure decision • Establish national research reputation + sufficient to excellent teaching: given permanent position: Associate Professor • Fail to do so: contract not renewed—dismissed from university • Full Professor: • Establish international research reputation • Service to the university • Typically after ~6 years as associate professor
Faculty Position Research University Liberal-Arts School Postdoc optional Research often “on your own time” or limited to summers Teach ≥2 courses per semester Only work with undergraduates Limited access to teaching assistants • Postdoc required • Spend ≥ ½ time on research • Teach 1 course per semester • Supervise graduate students • Teaching assistants to help with grading, help sessions etc.
Job Prospects • Frankly, challenging to get academic job • Numbers: • Physics Ph.D.’s graduated per year in US: 1554 (2009) • Number of Physics faculty retirements per year (2006-8): 378 • Number of Physics faculty openings per year in US: 705 (2008) • Number of new Physics faculty hires per year: 563 (2007) • Openings in field can vary significantly depending on circumstances • Example: plunge in HEP openings when SSC canceled • May not have luxury of being picky about where in country (or world) you seek employment • Will need a back-up plan • Luckily, physics is good training for lots of things…
Another Perspective • If you want a teaching and research position at a top university (like ND), cannot apply for any faculty openingonly opening in your specific field • Take (as example) my field (experimental high energy physics) • Over last few years: • ~ 15 faculty offers made per year in US HEP experiment • Compare to • NFL draft: 24000 Div 1 players: 224 players / year (32 in first round) • NBA draft: 4800 Div 1 players: 60 players / year (30 in first round) • Getting a faculty position at a research university is not easy • You can do it, but be prepared for the challenge • Work hard! • Have a backup plan
Timeline for a Faculty Position • Graduate School: 4-6 years • Postdoc: 2-6 years • Assistant Professor (before tenure): 6 years • Total: 12-18 years from undergrad • You will “finish” the process at age 34-40 (assuming you graduate from college at age 22), where “finish” just means “tenure” • Be prepared to be significantly “behind” your peers who go into private sector in terms of career advancement • Be aware that part of the way through the process, you may not be able to move to next level (e.g. unable to find faculty position after 6 years of postdoc) • Being aware of this timeline is key to avoid disappointment
Benefits of Academic Career • Absolutely best job in the whole world! • Job responsibilities include: • Plumbing the depths of the universe to wrest away its secrets • Interacting with and guiding brightest young minds US has to offer • Communicating your enthusiasm and excitement regarding physics to the world at large • Other benefits • Complete freedom regarding research path (and largely teaching too) • No one keeping track of hours, activities, etc. • Flexible schedule outside academic school year • Discounts on football tickets, tuition, bookstore, etc. • You will love your job and never be bored for rest of your life (many profs work past retirement age and then become professor emeritus: still have office and do research but no teaching/service—and of course, you’re retired…)
Cautions about an Academic Career • Constant need to self-fund • Research is paid for by grants you write • No productivity = no grant money = no research • So, being your own boss means that you work all of the time • Career/Family balance can be tricky • Many competing responsibilities • An academic department is a cooperative • Committees have to do work or nothing functions • Teaching: very important but time-consuming • All of this takes time away from research • Sort of like being an undergraduate again • Too many things to do in too little time • Priority/time management, triage techniques, efficiency become key • Exhilarating, but Exhausting!
Questions? The end