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Dr. Gail P. Taylor. Asst. Program Director MBRS-RISEResearch Training Program SpecialistProfessional Development Coordinator. . Beyond the Beakers: SMART Advice for Entering Graduate Programs in the Sciences and Engineering. Gayle R. Slaughter, Ph.D. Baylor College of Medicine/National Science
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1. Research Career Development-Introductions, Motivators and Strengths Gail P. Taylor
Spring 2007
2. Dr. Gail P. Taylor Asst. Program Director MBRS-RISE
Research Training Program Specialist
Professional Development Coordinator
3. Beyond the Beakers: SMART Advice for Entering Graduate Programs in the Sciences and Engineering. Gayle R. Slaughter, Ph.D. Baylor College of Medicine/National Science Foundation. 2005
Survival Skills and Ethics Program:
Beth Fischer
Michael Zigmond
www.pitt.edu/~survival
The Leadership Alliance –
Graduate School Guidehttp://www.theleadershipalliance.org/pdf/grad_guide.pdf
Tips on Preparing for and Applying to Graduate School
http://www.theleadershipalliance.org/pdf/tips.pdf
Careers in Science and Engineering: A Student Planning Guide to Grad School and Beyond (1996). Committee on Science, Engineering, and Public Policy (COSEPUP) http://books.nap.edu/books/0309053935/html/11.html
Acknowledgements:
4. Purpose of Class Learn about personal attributes and strengths
Evaluate your personal priorities
Learn about career paths/options
Evaluate your compatibility with various careers
Learn how to plan for a successful career
Learn where to find information about careers
Understand critical scientific integrity issues
5. Meeting Times and Grades Meets every Monday 2-5 PM
Final Exam: Thursday May 10, 1:30 – 4:15
Grades based on:
Attendance (20%)
Workbooks and Assignments (50%)*
Ethics Discussions (10%) and Exam (5%)
Final Examination and Notebook (15%) – TIMED, but open notes.
On Workbook assignments, if an significant initial effort is observed, they may be turned in a second time, to improve your grade.
6. Final Examination Thursday, May 10.
1:30 – 4:15.
In Techlab
Take WebCT quiz
Show Dr. Taylor your completed Careers notebook
Syllabus/schedule
Workbooks
PowerPoints
WebCT quiz printouts
Other corrected assignments).
7. Grading Scale 90% or above = A
80% or above = B
70% or above = C
60% or above = D
Less than 60% = F
* On Workbook assignments, if sufficient effort is observed, they may be turned in repeatedly until a desired grade is reached.
8. Expectations We are adult professionals
Please arrive on time
Please turn off cell phones (minimal, vibrate)
Academic Honesty with all assignments
9. Textbook StrengthsQuest: Discover and Develop Your Strengths in Academics, Career, and Beyond. The Gallup Organization. https://www.strengthsquest.com/Content/?ci=23734
On Being a Scientist: Responsible Conduct in Research, Second Edition (1995)PDF chapters: http://books.nap.edu/books/0309051967/html/index.htmlhtml chapters: http://www.nap.edu/readingroom/books/obas/index.html
10. Missed Classes Try not to!
Heavy Attendance Component to Class
May have up to two excused absences
Call before class if missing
Or…if sick, email!
11. What do I want to do for a Career???
12. Selecting a Career May feel like entering the “unknown”
Path often not straight or predictable
My have serial careers
May be intentional or accidental
Planning helps
L. Pasteur: “Chance favors the prepared mind”
13. Where to Find out about Careers? Work on laboratory
Programs such as RISE/MARC
Volunteer
Take courses
Mentor, friends & acquaintances
Shadowing someone
Summer programs & internships Internet
Placement offices
Professional societies
Advertisements
14. Career selection and satisfaction influenced by match between: Personal Attributes/Values
Life experience
Background
Education
Mentoring
Opportunities
Strengths
Temperament
Values/Priorities
Life responsibilities
Work environment
Job Impact
Challenge/growth
Recognition
Hours/stress
Human interaction
Buy-in on direction
Overall job stability
Annual income
Percent growth/job availability
15. General Motivating Factors for Pursuing Science Love science
Benefit world/humanity
Disease
Hunger
Pollution
Green Chemistry
Curiosity
Kids who ask “why”
Thrive on intellectual stimulation
“Explorers”
Space; How works?
“Inventors”
Next best laser Autonomy
You carry your career
Set your own hours…
Financial
Companies
Not hugely, but comfortable
Educators
Only way to be college fac.
Want to educate others
Want to mentor others
Public Policy
Want to impact nation…
16. Which is Most Legitimate? ALL!
17. Focus of this Course
This course looks at Careers in Science and Engineering
Focuses on the Ph.D.
Highest Degree that can be earned…
Examines “match” between careers and personality/values
18. Why Earn an Advanced Degree? It “fits” your values/strengths/priorities
Learn to perform research
Further field
Love doing it
Skills sets
Specific
Non-specific
Critical thinking
Administration
Planning, etc.
Opportunity
Teach at College/Univ.
Required for running research programs
Can be “in charge”
Required for advancement
Financial
Prestige/authority
Highest degree
19. Why NOT to enter Grad School Prestige/Impress others
Boost weak ego
Job guarantee (not)
For your parents
Personal intelligence test
Delay entry to work force
Wealth
20. What are Your Values? What is important to you?
Value Card Exercise:
Choose 20 values
Half these
Half these
Rank the rest
How best can these be applied to a particular career path in the sciences?
21. Where are the careers? Colleges, Universities and Medical Centers
State and Federal Agencies
Industries
Now, approximately 50% outside of academia
Different paths have different characteristics
22. Ph.D. Career Paths Research
Academic
Government
Industry
Teaching
All levels
Journalism
Technical writing
Publishing
Intellectual property
Patent law
Public policy Museum curating
Investment banking
Research admin
Educational admin
Grants admin
Program admin
Public Health
Bioinformatics
Biotechnology
Independent consulting
… and much more
23. Training… All of these come out of basic training as a research scientist, in an academic institution
24. Standard Ph.D. Training Path
25. Don't let the fear of the time it will take to accomplish something stand in the way of your doing it. The time will pass anyway; we might just as well put that passing time to the best possible use. ~Earl Nightengale
26. Attributes of a Successful Scientist Depends on whom you ask….
27. Characteristics of Scientists Scientists are people of very dissimilar temperaments doing different things in very different ways. Among scientists are collectors, classifiers and compulsive tidiers-up; many are detectives by temperament and many are explorers; some are artists and others artisans. There are poet-scientists and philosopher-scientists and even a few mystics.—PETER MEDAWAR, Pluto's Republic, Oxford University Press, New York, 1982, p. 116.
28. Attributes of a Scientist I Graduate Programs are arduous…
Do rewards and compensations outweigh disappointments and toil?
Yes, if hooked…
Exhilaration of discovery
Satisfaction of solved problems “One does not have to be terrifically brainy to be a good scientist…”
Virtues:
Common sense
Application
Diligence
Sense of purpose
Concentration
Perseverance in adversity…
29. Scientist Characteristics II S tudy skills (discipline to learn and maintain field)
C uriosity and flexibility in adjusting beliefs
I ntelligence (knowledge base/critical thinking)
E nthusiasm to overcome disappointments
N ever-ending attention to detail
C ommittment to personal and professional honesty and responsibility
E nduring respect and appreciation of foundation work
30. Scientist Characteristics II 1. imagination
2. concentration
3. integrity
Peter Faletra Ph.D. Office of Science Department of Energy
31. Scientist Characteristics III 1. A keen sense of curiosity
2. Natural skeptic-
strong reliance on "the data“
“show me your numbers".
3. Tenacity
4. Analytical skills
5. Critical thinking
32. What are YOUR Strengths and Attributes? Your path will be influenced by your strengths
Perform the StrengthsQuest Analysis!
http://www.strengthsquest.com