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How much money are physics professors in the US making? |
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| Jun16-12, 04:34 PM | #1 |
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How much money are physics professors in the US making?
Just asking because I love physics so much but i am just wondering on the average salaries...
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| Jun16-12, 07:51 PM | #2 |
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According the faculty survey of the American Association of University Professors, the average salary for a new assistant professor in physics is $56,483.
http://chronicle.com/article/Chart-A...Faculty/64500/ Some schools pay a lot more than that - and many pay less. |
| Jun17-12, 09:34 AM | #3 |
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Oh ok, is being a physics professor a lot of work. It's not like i am a lazy person :P but i am thinking that i should also be a pharmacist for i want to study pharmacy and physics...
So, can you do both. |
| Jun17-12, 09:58 AM | #4 |
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How much money are physics professors in the US making?
Yes, it's a lot of work. You need a PhD in physics (8-12 years of college) to apply, and many schools also require one or more postdocs (additional 2-6 years of work). Most new professors work 60+ hour weeks between teaching, office hours, class prep, their own research, advising students, reading, writing, reviewing, and publishing papers, grant proposals, and committee work. Pharmacists make more money in less time and have set job hours. Sounds like that might be a better choice for you. No, you can't be a pharmacist and a physics professor at the same time.
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| Jun17-12, 10:18 AM | #5 |
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And being a professor is a ton of work. |
| Jun17-12, 10:19 AM | #6 |
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It should also be noted that there is a great deal of competition for professorships (and equivalent), and most people who make it through grad school will not realize the dream of a faculty position.
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| Jun17-12, 12:12 PM | #7 |
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eri, i know the requirements to be a professor however what disappoints me is the salary however i love physics. Will being a professor in physics and another subject raise my salary...
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| Jun17-12, 12:23 PM | #8 |
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You can be crosslisted in two departments but I think the salary stays the same. Since you are only a high school student, I'd suggest you consider a career in physics only after you have had some serious physics classes in college. Even if you can be among the top 5% in the fresh PhDs when you get out of grad school(Note:I'm not sure about physics but I vaguely remember in math around 95% of PhDs stop doing original work after 5 years of their PhD, which means the percentage of PhDs going into academia is less than 5%), you still get at least 9 years to go till then. |
| Jun17-12, 04:41 PM | #9 |
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After spending 4-8 years in grad school, 40k a year seems like a fortune. But dcpo certainly is correct that even getting a job as a professor can be hard; I recently went through the process, and every job I applied to had between 100 and 300 qualified applicants. They only interview a few people. Many of my friends didn't get positions; some didn't even get interviews. Sounds like you're not up for the work to become a professor or the job itself. That's fine.
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| Jun17-12, 06:54 PM | #10 |
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My tenured professor tells me he made more 20 years ago working in the industry.
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| Jun17-12, 07:09 PM | #11 |
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Probably true. Did you ask him why he became a professor?
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| Jun17-12, 07:17 PM | #12 |
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He told me he did it because he wants to feel like he is making a difference helping young people succeed and because he genuinely enjoys the research. He really is a nice person.
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| Jun17-12, 10:45 PM | #13 |
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Mentor
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Karimspencer, there are two important points here: it's not a good idea to go into academia for the money, and getting a tenured position really is a long shot.
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| Jun17-12, 11:20 PM | #14 |
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| Jun17-12, 11:23 PM | #15 |
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1. You don't go into this for the money. Although I don't like people that emphasise this TOO much. I think there's nothing wrong in informing yourself what you're in for in the economic side.
2. Salaries vary a lot. A noble prize winner in my department has a salary of about 560K a year (his salary is visible to everyone because he works in a public university). Of course this is far from the norm, but other professors make around 150K - 260K. Assistant professors make 80K - 100K. This is for my university. 3. Yes, it is a lot of work. If you love the intellectual challenge it can be very rewarding. |
| Jun18-12, 07:11 AM | #16 |
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Recognitions:
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My previous institution used 12-month contracts, but part of that agreement required me to 'recover' a certain percentage of my salary through grants- the specific number varied by rank, but ranged from (IIRC) 60% for full tenured professor to 100% for postdocs and non-tenure track faculty of any rank. Part-time and adjunct appointments are structured completely differently. |
| Jun18-12, 07:58 AM | #17 |
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You guys are getting me wrong... I love physics and i am not thinking of the money more than i am thinking about my love to physics and being a professor.
I don't really care about the money. I was just curious and i can't lie about being a little disappointed at first however i then learned that salaries vary. I am very dedicated to physics. I am also thinking and studying quantum electrodynamics and i am only 13 years old. |
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