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Women in Physics |
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| Jan7-13, 04:13 AM | #18 |
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Women in Physics
This is a bit more of a general question I think - the difficulties posed by having a career alongside a family. I don't think there's a single answer that suits everybody. It certainly seems that getting a science job is difficult for most people in most areas and the work is hard, but I think from my experience that is probably true of any professional job. I'm not sure a career in physics specifically is any different. Personally I decided not to have children, but did for a while consider egg freezing as a 'just in case' option. Other post-doc friends of mine (in their mid thirties now) in other fields have had busy careers, but still managed to start families from their late 20's onwards. Yes, the risks to mum and babe are usually greater with increasing age but there are other arguments for being an older mum too - greater experience, financial stability etc etc. Its not an easy decision to make, I know, good luck with the decision!
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| Jan7-13, 07:02 AM | #19 |
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Both of these, publising papers and networking, is difficult if you can't work, regardless of the circumstances or the reason. Whether or not the funding agency takes into acount personal circumstances that might explain a "bad" track record varies, but I think the general answer (at least in Europe) is that they don't since proposals are mainly ranked based on grades from referees which (at least in theory) won't have any information about your personal life. Things get a bit easier once you have a permanent position. However, unless you manage to bring in external money you could still end up in a situation where you don't have enough resources to do research (experimental work in particular is expensive) and the university/institute tells you that you now have to spend almost all your time teaching or doing admin, which is in effect a career killer if your goal is to do research. And yes, academia is quite ruthless. |
| Jan7-13, 09:12 AM | #20 |
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Thanks Rooted :)
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| Jan7-13, 11:38 AM | #21 |
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| Jan7-13, 12:39 PM | #22 |
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| Jan7-13, 12:47 PM | #23 |
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I appreciate everyone's time to make a feedback.
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| Jan7-13, 02:40 PM | #24 |
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![]() I have a couple of friends who are professional dancers/choreographers and their lives are not THAT different from that of a scientist from a career point of view. |
| Jan7-13, 06:22 PM | #25 |
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Really...? I have a friend who's an excellent breakdancer for many years now. Sure it's not her career, but I can't see the similarities that an expert breakdancer has with a physicist.
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| Jan7-13, 06:29 PM | #26 |
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As an anecdote, physicists with several years of experience and good publication records apply to dozens of postdocs or more. As a statistician with less than 6 months experience and a limited track record, I started getting calls from recruiters and unsolicited job offers. I've had a steady stream of job offers since. Its a totally different experience, night and day. |
| Jan7-13, 06:57 PM | #27 |
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| Jan8-13, 02:35 AM | #28 |
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The other half is demand. There is a large need for nurses to take care of the sick and engineers to design and build things. I wouldn't say there is zero need for physicists... but it's a *much* smaller number. |
| Jan8-13, 04:33 AM | #29 |
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Also, they in turn have friends who had to give up their career relatively late in their lifes (mid- to late twenties) to start a new career. Some of them went into teaching. Note that the people I know are ballet dancers or into modern dance (i.e. "arty" stuff)). Note that I wrote "similarities", dancing is much more competitive than physics, their careers are even in the best case short, and they never get a decent salary, so it is a much harder career than physics. However, when considering a career in research it is probably good to realize that a career in academic research in many ways similar to being a dancer, professional athlete, author or some other career where they are many more people that are passionate of their work than there are actual jobs. |
| Jan8-13, 05:51 AM | #30 |
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I think f95toli has hit the nail on the head - supply and demand. The fewer jobs there are available must drive up the quality of applicants and make people easier (and cheaper) to replace if they don't produce good results. |
| Jan8-13, 08:20 AM | #31 |
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| Jan8-13, 08:43 AM | #32 |
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Hi 123PleasentSt,
Our decision was based on the uncertainty of concatenated postdoc contracts and working in different countries. There is one caveat I want to mention: In addition to artists already mentioned in the thread more and more classical corporate jobs are turned to 'global working nomad jobs'. At least in IT it is not uncommon now to be employed by a large corporation, but nonetheless being 'based' in your 'home office' or travel the globe all the time. Some time ago IBM has e.g. publicly announced they consider to lay off the majority of their global services staff and hire them again as self-employed contractors. Of course this is paid much better that postdocing or creative jobs, but I feel that corporations try to utilize all the benefits of the global competition among potential contractors. I do not feel that this is 'women's problem', as I see an increasing number of young male colleagues who opt for paternity leave, 'follow their wife', and rather ask an employer for flexible work options than for classical career opportunities. But this might be a European thing. |
| Jan8-13, 08:42 PM | #33 |
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| Jan8-13, 09:57 PM | #34 |
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Mentor
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Parental_leave In Canada, we get a year of combined parental leave. |
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