首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Returning to Science Teresa Garrett was working part-time as a biochemistry postdoc (博士后). She had an infant at home, and sh
Returning to Science Teresa Garrett was working part-time as a biochemistry postdoc (博士后). She had an infant at home, and sh
admin
2012-08-05
47
问题
Returning to Science
Teresa Garrett was working part-time as a biochemistry postdoc (博士后). She had an infant at home, and she was miserable. She and her husband were considering having a second child. She didn’t like leaving her daughter with a daycare provider, and she wondered if her slim income justified the expense of childcare. She decided to stay home full time.
It was a lonely but practical decision, she says. She hadn’t ruled out the possibility but she did not expect to return to science: After all, the conventional wisdom would equate several years of parenting leave with the end of a research career. Garrett eventually had two daughters and spent their early years at home.
The challenge of managing a science career and personal family obligations is not a new issue, particularly for women. In a career where productivity and publications define your value, can you take a couple of years off and then make a successful return? When you do, will employers trust your devotion to your job?
For Garrett, the answer to both questions was "Yes." First, she found a short-term teaching tutor at Duke University, the institution where she had done her Ph. D. And then Christian Raetz, who had been her Ph. D. adviser, offered her a postdoc. The timing was perfect: She was ready to start a more regular work schedule, and her husband was interested in starting a business. Today, she is a chemistry professor at Vassar College. Garrett credits Raetz both for his faith in her abilities and his willingness to judge her contributions on quality and productivity and not the number of hours she spent in the laboratory. "People are always shocked to know that you can take time off and come back," she says.
Returning to research after an extended personal leave is possible, but it may not be straightforward. Progress can be slow and there may be some fallout from a break. The path back doesn’t come with a road map or a timeline. Your reentry will have a different rhythm than your initial approach because this time you have to balance your career with the needs of a family. The uncertainty can make you feel isolated and alone. But if you are persistent and take advantage of the resources that are available, you can get it done.
Stepping Sideways
After time away from the work force, it’s particularly easy to underestimate your value as a scientist and—hence—to take one or more backward steps. Don’t, says Ruth Ross, who nearly made that mistake after spending 4 years at home with her children. A Ph. D. pharmacologist with industry experience, she applied for a technician job at the University of Aberdeen in the United Kingdom as she planned her return to science. She would have taken the job if it had been offered, she says, but "that probably would have been a bad career move." As it turned out, the university decided she was over-qualified.
Instead of taking a step back, take a step sideways: If you left a postdoc, return to a postdoc, perhaps with a special career reentry fellowship. A faculty member at Aberdeen encouraged Ross to apply for a newly established career reentry fellowship from the Wellcome Trust. Funding from that organization supported her postdoctoral research until the university hired her into a faculty position in 2002.
After 2 years at home with her son and twin daughters followed by 3 years searching for project management jobs in the biotech industry, biochemist Pia Abola got wind of an opening at the Molecular Sciences Institute (MSI). An MSI staff scientist needed skills like hers but lacked money, so the two applied jointly for an NIH career reentry supplement. She’s now a protein biochemist and grant writer at Prosetta Bioconformatics.
Independence and Flexibility
Instead of stepping backward or sideways, physicist Shireen Adenwalla took a step forward. Instead of taking another postdoc, she set up an independent research program on soft money. Early in her career, Adenwalla took 15 months off, caring for her first child and then looking for another postdoc. When she and her physicist husband decided to move to the University of Nebraska, Lincoln--he had accepted a tenure-track position—Adenwalla turned down postdoc opportunities. Instead she arranged a visiting faculty position, followed by a post as a research assistant professor.
"I think that was a very smart thing," she says today. "Establishing an independent research program is very important. " Her starting salary was just $ 15 000, and she got just $ 5 000 in start-up assistance. She borrowed equipment, taught courses, took on graduate students, and published her research. She had a lab and an office, but both got moved around—her lab three times, her office twice.
Adenwalla missed having real start-up money, her own equipment, and the institutional investment that comes with a tenure-track position. On the other hand, she was her own boss, so she was able to take 6 months off when she had her second child and work part time for a while after her third child was born. Eventually she was hired to a tenure-track post.
Flexible or part-time hours can smooth the transition back into the scientific work force. Some reentry fellowships specify a part-time option and most are accommodating, but even if you don’t have a fellowship you can ask for a work schedule that meets your needs. Ross, for example, took advantage of the part-time provision of the Wellcome Trust Fellowship. When Garrett took the position on the Lipid Maps grant, she negotiated a 30-hour-a-week schedule.
Patience: an Essential Virtue
Two months before physicist Marija Nikolic-Jaric’s scheduled dissertation (专题论文) defense at Simon Fraser University, her husband was diagnosed with an aggressive brain tumor. Over the next 17 months, she focused on her husband and his cancer treatments. After his death, she moved with her little son to Winnipeg to be near family.
She tried to jump-start her thesis project several times, the first in 1998, but she wasn’t ready yet and became discouraged. Eventually, she found the motivation to return. She started from the beginning, with a new approach. She finished her Ph.D. in 2008. Now a postdoc at the University of Manitoba, she has moved into a new research area—biomicrofluidics. This year, her work is supported by an M. Hildred Blewett Scholarship, a career reentry grant from the American Physical Society.
Elizabeth Freeland. too, continues to work toward a permanent research position a decade after her return. When she followed her future husband to his postdoc at Brookhaven National Laboratory in Upton, New York, and subsequently to Chicago, Illinois, she wasn’t able to find a compatible research opportunity. Since then, she has cared for the couple’s two young children, taught part time, and found a few short-term research opportunities, some paid, others not.
Like Nikolic-Jaric, Freeland is a physicist, and like that other physicists she switched fields. Freeland moved from condensed matter theory to high-energy physics. She scraped together two one-year postdoctoral grants, the first from the American Association of University Women and the second is a Blewett Scholarship.
Unable to find a permanent position locally, in September she started a one-year postdoc at Washington University in St Louis. The location is challenging, she says, but she is encouraged by the support of her mentors (导师). And because her work is theoretical, she can spend alternate weeks at home with her husband and school-age children. It’s a great research opportunity, she says, one she hopes will someday yield a job closer to her family. She also runs a Web site for physicists navigating career breaks.
Finding Your Own Way Back
Though students sometimes see her as a role model, Adenwalla cautions that what worked for her might not be the best solution for others. "You have to find what’s right for you," she says, and ignore those with different circumstances and needs. Her own journey was a tradeoff, she says. On the plus side, she was able to pick her children up at school every day. On the minus side, she says, "there was a fear inside me that I would never make it. "
Garrett tells everyone about her journey, even noting it on her Vassar Web site. "Both young women and young men who are coming up through their career path need to know about the different ways that you can have a good and satisfying career in science. "
Shireen Adenwalla moved her lab and office frequently because______.
选项
A、her house moved to Nebraska
B、she kept getting promoted
C、the equipment was borrowed
D、she couldn’t get abundant funding
答案
D
解析
推理判断题。第二段第三句中的两个just表明资金不足,借设备、教课、带研究生、发表研究成果也都是为了筹钱,故D)为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/dEb7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
PartⅡReadingComprehension(SkimmingandScanning)Directions:Inthispart,youwillhave15minutestogooverthepassageq
Directions:Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowriteashortessayentitledLimitingtheUseofPrivateCars.Youshou
Agreatmanypeopleareafflictedwithshyness.Commonsenseindicatesthatitisacomplicatedbehaviorpattern【B1】______byps
Agreatmanypeopleareafflictedwithshyness.Commonsenseindicatesthatitisacomplicatedbehaviorpattern【B1】______byps
Heisgoodatworkingoutmathematicproblems,______(但是一谈到艺术,他就知之甚少了).
Climatescientistsneedtoswallowtheirmistrustsandsharetheirdataandworkingmethodswiththeircritics.Soconcludesan
Climatescientistsneedtoswallowtheirmistrustsandsharetheirdataandworkingmethodswiththeircritics.Soconcludesan
A、Theirworkingagenda.B、TVschedulesforbaseballmatches.C、Theirfavoritebaseballteams.D、Theirarrangementfortheweeken
随机试题
含有淀粉酶的囊肿是
A.硝苯地平 B.可乐定 C.卡托普利 D.氯沙坦 E.硝普钠直接作用于血管平滑肌的抗高血压药为
女性,20岁。乳房肿块的边缘清晰,活动度大,生长缓慢。最常见的是()
面部危险三角区感染禁用热疗是为了防止()
工程施工投标过程中,施工方案由投标人的()主持制订。
资产负债表是反映企业()的会计报表。
甲受乙胁迫开出一张以甲为付款人,以乙为收款人的汇票,之后乙将该汇票赠与丙,丙又将该汇票背书转让与丁,以支付货款。丙、丁对乙胁迫甲取得票据一事毫不知情。下列说法中,正确的有()。
托收承付结算每笔的金额起点为1000元,新华书店系统每笔的金额起点为10000元。()
设数列a1,a2,…,an,…中的每一项都不为0.证明{an}为等差数列的充分必要条件是:对任何n∈N*都有.
战争让无数人失去了生命。据不完全统计,第一次世界大战持续了4年3个月,有33个国家参战,卷入战争人口达15亿以上,军民伤亡3000多万人。第二次世界大战历时6年之久,先后有60多个国家和地区参战,20多亿人卷入战争,死亡7000多万人。而现代战争给人类造成
最新回复
(
0
)