Career building: set up your own networks

I was invited to give a talk last week in Liverpool about how to maximise your chances int he academic job market. Although I am not a trained careers adviser I do have a lot of personal experience and obviously have been involved in the career development site for jobs.ac so I jumped at the chance. I found it very rewarding and inspiring and hopefully my experience might give you some ideas too.

The event I went to was the New-ACE workshop held in Liverpool’s Engineering Department. The organisers had been awarded money by the EPSRC to set up a typical sort of academic network, where people sharing the same interests from all sorts of institutions get together periodically to discuss their research. However, this network also had a second aim of helping boost the job prospects of new academics. I think this is a great idea, not only giving a forum for people to share their experiences, but also giving a chance for an ‘expert’ like me to come in and give a basic tutorial in how to get an academic job.

I enjoyed attending the workshop very much. It felt a little like I had landed in some sort of alternate reality! The format of the day, chaired speakers followed by questions, coffee breaks, free lunches etc was exactly what I am used to in history circles, but I had landed in a parallel universe where everyone was discussing control engineering! We had a great discussion after my talk about employers looking on social networking sites for ‘dirt’ on prospective employees, about research versus teaching portfolios and the position of overseas applicants. I would heartily recommend anyone thinking of setting up this sort of network to include a career development aspect as a balance to the intellectual work you do. And if you’d like me to come and share some of my experiences, well, you only have to ask!

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About Catherine Armstrong

Dr Catherine Armstrong is a Senior Lecturer in History at Manchester Metropolitan University, specialising in North American History. She is a former teaching fellow in History at the University of Warwick and Oxford Brookes University. Catherine was also Director of Historical Studies in the Open Studies department at the University of Warwick. Her first book ‘Writing North America in the Seventeenth Century’ was published by Ashgate in June 2007. As a long-time jobseeker for an academic role herself, Catherine is in a unique position to understand and offer her knowledge and experience to those developing an academic career.

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