Navigating the academic hiring process

(🇺🇸) 🇬🇧 (🇨🇦)

Guilherme D. Garcia (gdgarcia.ca)

Université Laval

2022-08-17

My timeline

  • PhD at McGill (2012–2017)
    • 1 semester at Concordia (LTA)
  • 4 years at Ball State (US, TT)
  • 1 semester at Newcastle (UK, TT*)
  • Now at Laval (TT)
  • About 50 TT applications between 2016 and 2021

First things first

  • There’s a lot of “randomness” in academic hiring

  • “Best candidate” is a highly subjective term

  • The actual process is at least in part a black box

  • Of course, a great CV is key

  • But there are things you just can’t control

Applications: UK vs North America

  • Overall, applications aren’t that different. But:

  • Faster and simpler process (= less tiring)

  • Less waiting after you apply/are interviewed

Applying

Interviewing

Waiting

Applications: UK vs North America

  • More objective/transparent (or less subjective?)
  • Also less flexible (little to no negotiation)
  • Typically required:
    • cover letter, statements, writing samples, course evals
  • Job talks often on the same day
  • My case: job talk + discussion of a course I’d propose

Some important points (you can control)

  • Visit these regularly: linguistlist.org and jobs.ac.uk
    • Also professional associations related to your subfield
  • Have a strong web presence (self-marketing)
  • In interviews/job talks, read the room:
    • Approachable - fancy - approachable structure
    • Sweet spot depends a lot on the department/position
    • Knowing faculty and student profile will help

Some important points (you can control)

  • Get papers out asap (e.g., OSF)
    • But also materials (handouts, tutorials)
  • What’s the current/next big trend? E.g., data science in the past decade or so for linguistics. This helps you “package” and sell your application
  • Teaching can matter a lot depending on the dept
  • Technical skills → good for research and teaching

Reading suggestion

Thanks!

Extras: Academia in the UK (vs US)

  • Russel Group (🇬🇧) = R1 (🇺🇸) = Medical Doctoral (🇨🇦)
  • Lecturer > Senior lecturer > (Reader) > Professor
  • Much more homogeneous (salaries, teaching loads)
  • Less teaching than an R3/R2, but more service
  • Also more bureaucratic
  • Tenure doesn’t exist (technically): contracts are open-ended
    • In practice, basically the same thing