2012
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0036307
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Science PhD Career Preferences: Levels, Changes, and Advisor Encouragement

Abstract: Even though academic research is often viewed as the preferred career path for PhD trained scientists, most U.S. graduates enter careers in industry, government, or “alternative careers.” There has been a growing concern that these career patterns reflect fundamental imbalances between the supply of scientists seeking academic positions and the availability of such positions. However, while government statistics provide insights into realized career transitions, there is little systematic data on scientists' c… Show more

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Cited by 295 publications
(329 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
(35 reference statements)
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“…However, in spite of the number of scientists remaining in long postdocs in the hopes of landing a tenure-track faculty position, the data show clearly that academia is an “alternative” career, not the default. In 2010, less than 15% of US-trained science, engineering and health sciences postdocs had obtained a tenure-track faculty position within 5–7 years of completing their PhD ( Sauermann & Roach, 2012). The rest of the job market encompasses many fields that are expanding and can benefit from the trained minds of PhDs and postdocs.…”
Section: Genesis Of the Future Of Research Symposiummentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…However, in spite of the number of scientists remaining in long postdocs in the hopes of landing a tenure-track faculty position, the data show clearly that academia is an “alternative” career, not the default. In 2010, less than 15% of US-trained science, engineering and health sciences postdocs had obtained a tenure-track faculty position within 5–7 years of completing their PhD ( Sauermann & Roach, 2012). The rest of the job market encompasses many fields that are expanding and can benefit from the trained minds of PhDs and postdocs.…”
Section: Genesis Of the Future Of Research Symposiummentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The data show that by the end of their PhD training, only 50% of graduate students want to become academics, and that expectations change over time: a faculty position becomes less attractive over the course of a PhD, in spite of active encouragement by advisors ( Sauermann & Roach, 2012). …”
Section: Genesis Of the Future Of Research Symposiummentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In many graduate programs, the main career goal following a Ph.D. is an academic, tenure-track position, and student training reflects this goal (Freeman et al 2011, Sauerman andRoach 2012). Non-academic positions, including science positions within government, non-governmental organizations, and the private sector, are perceived by many as less desirable or prestigious, and such positions have traditionally been characterized as "alternatives" to the primary career path for doctoral students.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In considering the academic community involved in introductory courses, the members who need to have input about the learning outcomes go beyond instructional faculty to also include graduate student instructors of introductory labs and discussions (Sundberg, Armstrong, & Wischusen, 2005) and the undergraduate students who take these courses. Engaging graduate students in curriculum reform is particularly important because many of them will design and implement courses when they move into future faculty roles (Brownell & Tanner, 2012;Sauermann & Roach, 2012). Bernstein & Greenhoot (2014) reported on a project that paired faculty with graduate student fellows and specialists across campus to make curricular changes to courses.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%