- #1
Simfish
Gold Member
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So it's often said that the prestige of the grad school does matter when it comes to getting a postdoc at a prestigious institution (and that the prestige of the postdoc matters the most when it comes to getting an assistant professorship).
One thing I've noticed though - a lot of foreign students had to settle for mediocre grad schools, but were then able to get postdocs in prestigious universities.
Is this mostly because the foreign students at a grad school tend to be analytically stronger than domestic students at the same school? (simply since it's harder for foreign students to get in?). And does this tend to show when it comes to performance in graduate school? Do postdoc-hiring institutions take that international status into account, sometimes? (perhaps an extra "bump" wouldn't be needed at all, although strong people at weaker grad schools sometimes do have somewhat weaker opportunities)
One thing I've noticed though - a lot of foreign students had to settle for mediocre grad schools, but were then able to get postdocs in prestigious universities.
Is this mostly because the foreign students at a grad school tend to be analytically stronger than domestic students at the same school? (simply since it's harder for foreign students to get in?). And does this tend to show when it comes to performance in graduate school? Do postdoc-hiring institutions take that international status into account, sometimes? (perhaps an extra "bump" wouldn't be needed at all, although strong people at weaker grad schools sometimes do have somewhat weaker opportunities)