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Education Science

Many Junior Scientists Need To Take a Hard Look at Their Job Prospects (nature.com) 152

In its careers section this week, science journal Nature surveyed more than 5,700 early-career scientists worldwide who are working on PhDs. Three-quarters of them, they told the journal, think it's likely that they will pursue an academic career when they graduate. How many of them will succeed? The editorial board of the journal wrote in a column published on Wednesday. Most PhD students will have to look beyond academia for a career, the editorial board added. From the article: Statistics say these young researchers will have a better chance of pursuing their chosen job than the young footballers. But not by much. Global figures are hard to come by, but only three or four in every hundred PhD students in the United Kingdom will land a permanent staff position at a university. It's only a little better in the United States. Simply put, most PhD students need to make plans for a life outside academic science. And more universities and PhD supervisors must make this clear. That might sound like an alarmist and negative attitude for the International Weekly Journal of Science. But it has been evident for years that international science is training many more PhD students than the academic system can support. Most of the keen and talented young scientists who responded to our survey will probably never get a foot in the door. Of those who do, a sizeable number are likely to drift from short-term contract to short-term contract until they become disillusioned and look elsewhere.
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Many Junior Scientists Need To Take a Hard Look at Their Job Prospects

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  • by swan5566 ( 1771176 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @03:09PM (#55439563)
    But in my experience it was a blessing. Academia is so political now - not just to get in, but to stay in (tenure). Also they expect you to work yourself to death until you get tenure. Otherwise, your just a permanent postdoc wondering why you spent so long and so much to get the pay you're getting.
    • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @03:35PM (#55439829)

      I work in a STEM department at a US university, and it is my opinion that tenure needs to die. Faculty should get a generous stipend during those quarters when they teach... but otherwise they should have to support themselves from their research funding, and pay into retirement like “normal” people (university funds pay our emeritus faculty, at least).

      Many of our faculty pull in lots of money and stay active in research; but there are a few who seem to think getting a big salary for doing next to nothing is a god-given right for reaching full professor. I’ve watched several chairs attempt to “fix” this, e.g. by requiring non-funded faculty to teach more - but political pressure always kills any reforms.

      Alternatively, I suppose tenure could stay if the rights to all publicly-funded research were given back to the public - meaning, for example, if you get a multi-million-dollar patent, or if you commercialize a company and a VC buys it, that money goes back to NSF or ONR or whatever agency provided the funding.

      (Let’s see if I still have a job tomorrow, haha)

      • Tenure has/had a place, mainly to ensure that a professor that states an unpopular viewpoint won't get run out as a knee-jerk reaction. Is it still relevant? With the insane political divisions in the US, where stating something about a hot button issue can have grave consequences, tenure is definitely a must.

        Maybe it needs redone, but it seems to work, and it is better than just having universities just be an echo chamber for a small set of political beliefs.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          Just means the only professors to reach tenure will agree with the echo chamber.

          Also, when I was in school, they let go of two great teachers because they were nearing tenure. It's a special club they don't want anyone else to enter.

          • Not true. I am one of those professors who has been pain in the butt for many - in the department and other units. Yes, it was a split decision in the department for my tenure but everybody else up the chain of command supported me. You do have to be reasonably successful for that (papers, grant money). Otherwise, of course you get booted out. For me, tenure protects me against the system, so I can state when faculty or administration does wrong things. Or simply when I disagree scientifically.
      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Hahaha...you expect the Trump administration to generously fund science for research grants, an administration who believes science just a dodge, not unlike what they are turning the executive branch into.

      • by mikael ( 484 )

        Then universities would become just like startups. There wouldn't be anyone over 30 there, except for administration.

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Academic politics is not a new thing. There is an old saw that goes like this: Academic politics are so vicious because the stakes are so small.

      A quote investigation site recently traced the origin of this back to Samuel Johnson, writing in 1765.

  • In an equilibrium, on the average every tenured professor would have exactly one graduate student that goes on to become a tenured professor.

    To the extent that professors train more than one graduate student, the number of graduate students who become tenured professors will decrease.

    (In today's world, what is going to happen is that they take slots as underpaid adjunct professors teaching introductory undergraduate classes for a few years, then eventually turn to something else.)

    • by sycodon ( 149926 )

      Seems to me that the majority of PhDs should be going into the private sector.

      • Seems to me that the majority of PhDs should be going into the private sector.

        I agree. My university has a much higher proportion of graduates entering faculty positions, yet it also helps students enter suitable industry positions, fosters industry contact, and provides several ways for students to pursue their own entrepreneurship. There's certainly demand for highly trained individuals from all STEM fields across multiple industries.

        I'd also add that in my experience, which includes a Master's program at a lower-tier school and a PhD program at an elite one, students are actually

        • The way I wrote that makes it sound like more students enter faculty positions than not, which is incorrect. The national average (US) is ~8%, whereas at my school it's closer to ~35%.
    • Only if the number of students (and thus the need for professors) remains constant. Increase the number of students, and you need more than one grad student per professor.

  • Define young footballer. I suspect most children want to play futbol or football. Even at the high school level, I bet more kids end up with jobs in research than in paying jobs in sports.

    In any case, working in your chosen field is hardly even an issue. There are a lot of engineers, chemical, electrical, civil, who I know who code. They did not want to code, but that is where the money is. Likewise, most people with doctorates I know are making a living. I wonder what the percentage of people who a

  • This should be totally obvious. If you are just training PhDs to train other PhDs to train other PhDs, you basically just have a pyramid scheme. But actually, there is work to do! Not everyone can train more of themselves, some people just need to settle down and do research! This is an expectation/logic problem. (Or a very smart ploy on the part of institutions to bring down the cost of hiring PhDs...why would PhD holders participate in that? Failure to reason!)

    Signed,
    A dropout of the academic system that

  • Changing the student loan system will fix a lot of the issues with academic.

    Any ways PHD level CS people can be very clueless working in tech to the point of not even knowing how to turn a computer on.

    • How about a college system like a lot of European countries? When I was in school, my German friend had his tuition paid for by the Fatherland. The Russian student? By the Motherland. The Chinese engineer? By his country. The guy from Chile? Paid for by his government. Compare that to Americans which have to mortgage their future and have to earn significantly more to maintain the same lifestyle, and it is no wonder why there are economic issues in the US.

      • by sycodon ( 149926 )

        Substitute, "taxpayer" for all those terms and then you get it right.

        • by Anonymous Coward

          thats right my UStax dollar goes to killing people instead.

      • Your friends were also told which field they would be training in and at what school. Only the top 2% get to choose for themselves.

        • What? Surely you're not talking about Europe here. Aside from not passing any applicable entrance exam for X, nobody tells you that you can't study X.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        I have a friend whose company does US Defense Department research. He spent the better part of the last 20 years building up a network of academic connections to help staff an internship program with several paid slots for STEM post-graduate students. The kind of research this company does is classified, so the candidates for this program have to pass security checks.

        Two years ago, he had to shut down the program because he was unable to find enough qualified candidates to fill the open internships. Not bec

      • If you can't get someone else to pay for your phd, then you probably shouldn't get one,
    • Generally speaking, STEM PhD students don't take out student loans. Every STEM PhD program worth its salt offers a stipend and tuition waiver. Grad students earn their keep by doing research or teaching.
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @03:19PM (#55439649)
    the drugs that kept a family member of mine alive were made in Europe at public Universities. Most drugs are (and then they're packaged up my big Pharma into profits). The computer I'm typing on wouldn't exist without massive public spending.

    We're cutting all this back so we can give more and more money to the elites. Let's stop that. I get it, everybody's afraid of tax raises because even at $250k/yr a lot of us are paycheck to paycheck (60-80% depending on how you run the numbers). But here's a crazy idea: We can raise taxes on the wealthy elite without raising taxes on the workers? I know, crazy right? All it takes is to stop voting for your friendly neighborhood right winger. Oh, and make sure you show up at your Primaries so they don't sneak an economic right winger in because they're socially left wing.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Except for the fact that politics in the US presents us with a false choice; Democrat or Republican. The idea that this is a choice is an illusion created and fostered by the establishment to keep us believing that we have a choice. In reality, both parties are essentially the same and it doesn't matter what you choose, you're always gonna gets screwed.

      • is there's no choice at all. All you have to do is show up at your primary. Do you have any idea how much power there is a in a primary vote? Jeff Sessions just shut his career down because he's going to lose his primary challenge (sadly he's being replaced by an even bigger nutter, since the voters know Sessions isn't helping them but they don't yet know what else to do, so they're doubling down on right wing politics).

        Show up at your primaries and vote for the most left leaning candidate you can. If ev
      • In reality, both parties are essentially the same

        Well, almost, perhaps? [reddit.com]

    • by sycodon ( 149926 )

      If you are living paycheck to paycheck while taking down $250k a year, you are an idiot.

      And yes, that includes if you live in Silicon Valley or Manhattan where a 300st foot apartment/home goes for a quarter mil.

      • Comment: spot on. How the hell do you live paycheck to paycheck on $250K except in the most insane markets?

        Sig: no. When fascism comes to America (learn to spell it maybe?), it will be waving a flag and talking about how it is here to protect your freedoms.
        • Sig argument: you two are not disagreeing.

          Fascists are waving a hammer and sickle flag and talking about protecting your freedoms.

        • and you're trying to hold onto the standard of living you've had as your wages have stagnated. Yes, somebody in that bracket can downsize. Sell their home and start running a 2-3 hour commute. Buy an economy car. Stop taking vacations. Eating crap food.

          Yeah, somebody in that income bracket has a lot further down to go, but they're still going down. When you start talking about tax raises you lose them and their vote. This is exactly how the ruling elite keep us at each other's throats. Whatever you have
      • by hey! ( 33014 )

        Well, that's kind of the poster's point. People are afraid of investing in the common good because they can't make ends meet even on practically unlimited money.

    • by m00sh ( 2538182 )

      the drugs that kept a family member of mine alive were made in Europe at public Universities. Most drugs are (and then they're packaged up my big Pharma into profits). The computer I'm typing on wouldn't exist without massive public spending. We're cutting all this back so we can give more and more money to the elites. Let's stop that. I get it, everybody's afraid of tax raises because even at $250k/yr a lot of us are paycheck to paycheck (60-80% depending on how you run the numbers). But here's a crazy idea: We can raise taxes on the wealthy elite without raising taxes on the workers? I know, crazy right? All it takes is to stop voting for your friendly neighborhood right winger. Oh, and make sure you show up at your Primaries so they don't sneak an economic right winger in because they're socially left wing.

      Living paycheck to paycheck on 250k/yr? How do you even spend roughly $500-$600/day, 20K/month on?

    • made in Europe at public Universities. Most drugs are

      Can you please provide a citation, because it was pretty easy for me to discover that isn't the case.

      http://www.xconomy.com/seattle... [xconomy.com]

  • by Steve1952 ( 651150 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @03:20PM (#55439673)
    Having gone through all this myself, my advice would be: "assume you will be average". Will this particular career let you have a decent life if you end up being about average in your field? If not, consider something else.
    • That would be a good idea, if not for the fact that in America, we have basically all just agreed that average people should be able to make ends meet. Because we are all above average! If you, like me, are above average, you will pull yourself up by your bootstraps to be a millionaire!

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        qmtcorrect: average people should NOT be able to make ends! That's how below average I am, I don't proof read till after I post!

  • Only 3-4%!? (Is that similar in other countries?)
    I'm *so* happy now that I picked a Masters degree where I can either choose to work directly after getting it or still do a PhD anyway (which would be more for fun than $$$ at this point...)

    • Sounds a bit low, but about right. From a UK perspective:

      Each faculty member is typically supervising 2-12 PhD students, let's say an average of 4 to be conservative. It takes 3-4 years to complete a PhD, so that works out at one PhD per year. A faculty position is typically 20-30 years, so that's an average of about 25 PhDs produces per faculty member. Assuming a static faculty size, only 1/25, or 4% will get faculty jobs. Most good science faculties are growing, but only by a few percent a year, so

  • Whatever the department - physics, journalism, drama, or "human performance" (athletes) - professors and department chairs need lots of students in order to keep their own jobs, regardeless of whether there are enough job opportunities in the field for the students upon graduation.
  • by WrongMonkey ( 1027334 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @03:41PM (#55439887)
    I always say that being a scientist is like being an artist: it is a privilege just to be able to pursue my passion, even if it isn't a great career choice. I didn't get a PhD because it made financial sense, I did it because I have this insatiable curiosity and academic research gives me access to resources that I wouldn't have any other way.
  • I went through grad school in a similar illusion of going into a strictly academic position. Then I went through a postdoc position and hit a wall. There are lots and lots of PhDs running around out there who tried the same and failed the same.

    Thankfully a lot of advisers now are more receptive to their students announcing early that they want to follow a non-academic track (many before used to reject prospective students who wanted that). However not many are great at steering their grad students towards it. If the faculty advisers were even honest about the time commitments expected of junior faculty in the hard sciences (generally starting around 80 hours a week) that would steer many students down another path.

    That said, I have a non-academic position and I am very happy. I'm making more than junior faculty at the school where I did my undergrad or PhD and I only work 40 hours a week.
  • Very old news (Score:3, Informative)

    by avandesande ( 143899 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @03:53PM (#55439991) Journal
    It's been this way since the 90's, possibly earlier.
    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      I think the newsworthy part is, even after 30 years, the facts still haven't gotten through to the students.

      I blame it on the universities for not drilling this fact to prospective students. Graduate programmes take in groups of new students every year, knowing most of them have unrealistic expectations of an academic career afterwards, and universities did NOTHING to made them aware such expectation is unrealistic.

    • The difference, at least in Belgium, is that they are churning out much more PhDs since the 2000s. 2016 sees a 70% increase vs 2005, and it has been increasing since the 90s. It has doubled in 15 years. That's because Universities get more funding based on more PhDs.
      The same article says that only 20% of these can stay in academics, which means postdoc stuff, and if you're very good and/or lucky tenure and/or prof.
  • If people stop going for PhDs, what criteria will Google use to cut the pile of applicants for their job openings?

  • plenty of opportunities in this hot new growing field.

  • 1. Declare the sky is falling due to (something you can blame on humans)
    2. Get someone to fund your long-range study.
    3. ....
    4. Profit! (Or at least have permanent employment and probably tenure.)

    Unfortunately, most of them have already been picked:
    http://dailysignal.com/2009/11... [dailysignal.com]

    Although there is a strong second-order field opening up, like "how the ocean ate my global warming expectations" or better, "attribution science" where your entire existence is about proving how weather = climate, as long as it

    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      Strangely, people who push this kind of conspiracy theory don't seem to think there would be funding for scientists who could show that humans weren't contributing to climate change.

      They also don't know any working scientists. It's not about money, it's about reputation, and the way you make your reputation is you prove other scientists wrong.

  • > will land a permanent staff position at a university

    I have no doubt it's dire, but it's a bit of misleading statistic. Most academic positions are relatively short-term contracts, often 2-3 years.
  • Look, the article makes a view that all those who seek PhDs not only want to go into tenure-track academia, but will continue to want to do so.

    And it conflates working in top-tier academic tenure with working in academia at the college and non-tenure tracks.

    And it presumes, that after ten years in academia being paid half of what industry pays, they won't want to switch to corporate with some academic participation (e.g. associate faculty at nearby locations, institute work with campus seminars, or more con

  • by Yergle143 ( 848772 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @05:16PM (#55440591)

    The science job system is broken. The main problem is the federal subsidy of Graduate Student Stipends and Postdoctoral Fellowship salaries from grants. This has led to the situation of an oversupply of bright people in what amount to full time jobs with no benefits with little chance to achieve a rare faculty post. The fix is to stop the subsidy. Institutions need to take on fewer graduate students, pay them more and train them fully. Bolster the Master's degree for the less committed. The Postdoc should be eliminated and replaced with the term Contract Researcher which should be treated like a job. These people should be paid market rates so they can move to whomever is smart enough to get a grant.
    For the kids out there, the current system is a sort of feudal concoction built to maximize imperious egos and is fundamentally exploitive.
    Advise: go into science if you have the desire. Go to a good undergraduate school but if you do not get into one of the best institutions for grad school DO NOT GO.
    It's that bad out there and it's winner take all.
    Science is a rewarding profession but the hardest thing to understand is that even if you do everything right your career can still fail so you have to be brave. You also have to have GENERAL/VERSATILE knowledge to adapt with the times.
    The parent article is predicated on the assumption that Science equates with dollars for science. Once basic science in an area is well formed it becomes technology and society has no compelling reason to keep paying for it. Tenured faculty who continue to burn out grad students working on subjects "understood" decades ago are part of the problem here.
    Finally: biology is a vast frontier but the NIH wants cures. You don't have to fully understand cancer to kill it.

    • by slew ( 2918 )

      Finally: biology is a vast frontier but the NIH wants cures. You don't have to fully understand cancer to kill it.

      Interesting, that's the same line of reasoning that hawks take before promoting a war.

      Geopolitics is a vast frontier, but the Military wants wins. You don't have to fully understand your enemy to kill them.

      I guess that shows that sometimes things are more similar than you think.

  • by 140Mandak262Jamuna ( 970587 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @06:35PM (#55441025) Journal
    I was there.

    It was particularly bad for me. Friends and family and random strangers pumped up my ego since leaving high school, using terms like, "creme-de-la-creme" "got through JEE? life is made man!". Then ended up in a PhD program in hypersonic flow when that baldie with a blotchy birthmark pulled perestroika and glasnost out of a hat and dissolved USSR. Having defeated the enemy USA cashed in its peace dividend, which essentially meant all those PhDs in hypersonic rocket science are totally surplus. People with 10 and 20 year experience in hypersonic CFD were coming around begging for temp positions. People whose papers I used to read with great reverence and admiration were standing in line ahead of me fighting for a 12 month post doc position.

    Visa running out, with a baby, all those non creme-de-la-creme were all on great jobs and career path ... never felt more depressed.

    Then, finally, the waves of economic growth finally lapped up on that isolated island I was marooned in. Feb 1994. Worst month in life. March 1994. Had three job offers, three count them, one, two, three! Purely lucked into taking up an offer from a startup just on the verge of take off and IPO.

    But, it was luck. Not perseverance, not hard work, not impossibly high IQ, not my careful career choices. Bad luck followed by good luck. That is all it was. L.U.C.K.

  • by laughingskeptic ( 1004414 ) on Thursday October 26, 2017 @06:48PM (#55441099)

    I had to dig this up:

    http://blogs.lse.ac.uk/impactofsocialsciences/2013/12/11/how-academia-resembles-a-drug-gang/

  • Postdoc in math here. Most people with a PhD in progress already either already know they want to do something else besides academia or are unsure, so the numbers aren't that grim.

    On the flipside, those that do want to go into academia are still facing an incredibly hard time. In math, there are about 200 permanent, reasonable positions that actually let you do research and there are at least 700 people applying for them.

    The sad thing is, a huge factor that determines whether you get such a position is not

  • Do you want fries wit dat Mac?

    Oh wait, that's the punch line for English majors.

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