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Professional Development

Not for the faint hearted — but if you feel the calling...

Jim (James) Keen
By Jim (James) Keen
Feb. 1, 2013

In this time of continuing limited resources, most of us in the academic science community are straining to see a brighter horizon and hopefully even some upward funding foothills beyond the fiscal cliff and canyon of still uncertain size. If the tenured academic position was ever a guaranteed job for life (highly debatable), those days are long, long gone. Rather, someone considering a traditional academic research and teaching position had better have passion and a calling. If you do, and if you’re not faint of heart, what can you expect? Here’s a small collection of tips for those setting out on the exciting high-wire act.

Starting your research program

Essential to success in a new academic position is the development of an independent, substantial research program. This process has many moving parts, but it begins with the identification of important, unanswered questions in your field, the development of a well-formulated plan of attack to address the questions, and obtaining sound preliminary experiments to show feasibility of the plan. Usually this program will continue or branch from one of your completed research projects, but ideally it will benefit from the integration of perspectives derived from all your training experiences and result in a uniquely personal approach.

Managing your time and your human resources

Interaction with students is what draws many to an academic setting, so a commitment to teaching probably comes naturally. Teaching also provides an opportunity to identify trainees with whom you will enjoy mentoring and with whom you will enjoy working. Taking on a doctoral or even master’s degree student is a substantial commitment, and during the first year or two, your students will require more of your time and focus than you might expect (or remember!). But hopefully they will become independent and reward your effort with their own creativity and perspectives. Some graduate programs are now facilitating joint sponsorship of students, which may lessen the financial and time burdens. This also brings into focus the fact that one does not work alone, so being an astute human-resources manager is a useful trait as well. Attracting the best co-workers to your lab requires being a keen judge of capability and compatibility, conveying clear performance expectations and providing a rewarding work environment so colleagues at all levels share in the discovery process. When personal HR functions work well, it’s great! When they don’t, it can be a real drain. It often is worthwhile to have faculty colleagues interview prospective hires until your own lab can provide enough co-interviewer perspectives. Workshops to develop management skills, probably not part of the graduate curriculum, are also useful.

Keeping your research program going

Many young investigators report that getting a renewal for that first grant is even more difficult than getting it in the first place, as mechanisms supporting initial applicants don’t apply and productivity after only a few years may be modest. So getting a running start is important, along with perseverance. It’s also vital to temper the inclination to branch out with the awareness that keeping a primary program going while getting sufficient preliminary results to convince review panels to fund a second direction takes energy, time and often some luck.

Getting pulled in multiple directions

Most academic institutions strategically are developing interdisciplinary, collaborative research efforts to make the faculty sum greater than its component parts. Recruitment of interactive junior faculty members is often a tactic, and on stepping aboard, a new faculty member with unique experience may be sought to contribute to multiple research programs. This can be intellectually broadening, exciting and flattering – if it doesn’t materially dilute efforts toward the new faculty member’s own program. Should ongoing collaborations emerge, you should position yourself to become a recognized co-principal investigator on efforts (and grants!) and not a dependent associate whose contributions are hazy to the research community and to institutional promotion committees.

Asking for and accepting help

Formalized mentoring programs for junior faculty members are becoming widespread, sometimes leaving older faculty members bemused, as a random conversation at the bench or over coffee usually constituted mentoring when they were younger. Yet most of today’s new faculty members welcome active guidance, and both younger and older participants are reporting these programs to be rewarding. A new lab has myriad needs, many of which will become apparent in unexpected ways and will have difficult timeframes, so having a strong department chairperson on your side willing and able to make your case to higher administration is important.

Paying attention

It’s helpful to listen carefully for information you may not exactly want to hear but need to know. For example: Consider reaching out to review panel officers who can fill you in on the details of applications that failed to meet the funding bar, or examining teaching critiques that contain important feedback about your performance. Though doing so might make you uncomfortable initially, there are surely things to learn to make your next efforts go more smoothly.

Doing your community service

It’s also important and rewarding to be a good institutional citizen, perhaps through participation in curriculum development, graduate training, seminar planning or other committee work. Of course, if wrangling is a theme at your institution, it can distract you from your core efforts or, worse, have the same effect as seeing how sausage is made, as the saying goes.

In some ways, the junior faculty position is the ultimate meritocratic and entrepreneurial position for our business-focused times: a position with great independence of thought and few rigid limits to expansion when supported by truly creative thinking and execution, inner drive and an appropriate amount of self-promotion. Increasingly, a shrinking safety net makes the high-wire performance an intense experience. For many, it continues to be a fantastic experience to step into an empty lab and know that you can pretty much ask any scientific question that is important to you and have the unparalleled excitement of leading your own discovery team, perhaps in close collaboration with others, in a quest for answers that will benefit humanity.

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Jim (James) Keen
Jim (James) Keen

Jim Keen is a professor at Thomas Jefferson University’s biochemistry and molecular biology department and directs the university's Kimmel Center Bioimaging Facility.

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