The Nature of the Beast Field guide to computer scientists slide 1.
-
Upload
jacob-watts -
Category
Documents
-
view
216 -
download
1
Transcript of The Nature of the Beast Field guide to computer scientists slide 1.
The Nature of the Beast
Field guide to computer scientists
slide 1
Computer Scientists
They come in two flavors• Industrial• Academic
Many similarities Key differences: How they are evaluated
The Ecology of Academia
Two kinds of faculty Tenure track
• Assistant Professor• Associate Professor• Full Professor
Non-tenure track• Lecturers• Adjunct Professor• Research Professor• Visiting Professor
Tenure Track Faculty
How do you become one?• Get a PhD• Submit an application• Get an interview• Wow them on the interview• Congratulations! The tenure clock starts
ticking . . .
About Me (pre-PhD)
Grew up in a country that does not exist anymore
1994: undergraduate degree in
mathematics and computer science from the University of Washington
• Prior to that, a few years at Moscow
University
2000: PhD in computer science from Stanford
About Me (post-PhD)
2000: Bell Labs Silicon Valley• Fired 3 months after joining (Lucent shut down the lab)
2001-04: SRI International• Researcher at a “think tank”• Active in research, kept publishing
Since 2004: assistant prof. at UT Austin• Just received tenure• Promoted to associate prof. effective September
How Did I Get a Faculty Position?
UTCS is a top-10 computer science department
Why did they hire me? Must have done something right
• Publication record• Important people said good things about me
(more about this later)
Some amount of luck• Worked on interesting problems in the “right”
area• Was in the right place at the right time
What is Tenure?
A system with a long probationary period Two outcomes:
• Tenure: A job for life• No tenure: Good luck! Have a good life
The tenure decision: evaluation of teaching, research, and
service
Teaching• Teach (and design) organized classes• Advise students (very time-consuming)
Research• Do research (usually with graduate students)• Write papers• Attend scientific meetings
Obtain grants to fund more research (10% hit rate at NSF)
Life of a Tenure-Track Professor
Success Factors (at a research university)
1.RESEARCH2.RESEARCH3.RESEARCH4. Teaching5. Service
“Evaluation by Rumor”
External letters are extremely important in the tenure review process
The department asks prominent researchers in your field for their opinions about your research• Typically, senior faculty at leading universities in the
field (MIT, Stanford, Berkeley …)
Your letter writers know you by your reputation• If they do not know you, you are in trouble!
Logical conclusion: the goal of a tenure-track faculty member is to acquire a stellar research reputation
Acquiring Research Reputation
High-impact publications in top-notch venues
Impact = excitement of other researchers in the field• Did you solve a long-standing open problem?• Do other researchers cite your work and build on
it?
Top-notch venues = where is the best work in your field typically published?• CS is unique: conferences (with brutal peer
review) matter more than most journals
But Wait, There’s More!
Service• To the department• Graduate admissions• Faculty recruiting• Undergraduate curriculum• Run honors program• Develop departmental policies• . . .• To the college and university• To the academic community
External Service
Organize and run scientific meetings• Evaluate submitted research papers
Serve on editorial boards• Evaluate submitted journal papers
Make funding decisions• Evaluate submitted grant proposals
You affect people’s tenure cases and their lives
When I Am Not In My Office…
Non-Tenure Track Faculty
Typically focus on teaching and service rather than research
Take Home Points
The faculty love their job They have high expectations They expect some of these traits in the
students who they work with Be somewhat prepared before you
approach them