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seniorscholar
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« Reply #2 on: August 31, 2006, 04:48:26 PM » |
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I would imagine my R-1 is fairly typical: we can not hire someone as an associate professor with tenure unless the person is already tenured at a comparable institution. We do hire advanced assistant professors and bring them up for tenure in their second year (first year is a mistake, since there needs to be some record on this campus and also some name recognition across campus); in rare instances we can hire as untenured associate and (again) have a tenure process in year #2. I would therefore advise you to apply for positions at both assistant and associate (or open) rank, but not to raise the "starting over" or "how much credit can I get towards tenure" questions until you're at the campus visit stage -- though if there is a preliminary interview (conference or phone) and someone asks, you should of course be quite open about what you would need in order to accept the job if it were offered. ("What would it take to get you here?" is a question sometimes asked of experienced faculty at a relatively early stage, since if someone wants to head an institute that will be created for his/her work, there's no point in our going further.)
I'd emphasize the importance of indicating in your cover letter that you are looking for a position that will provide better research facilities, or more doctoral students, or the opportunity to secure grant funding, or the other academic and professional relationships that can be forged in a bigger city, or whatever it is that makes the school you're applying to appropriate for you at your career stage, and assume that the weaknesses of your current school will be recognized by people on the search committee. (We've certainly been known to look at websites, google for gossip, and otherwise try to figure out, without asking anyone who is there, why someone wants to leave a particular department -- particularly if we are worried that the person is doing a search-for-matching-offer and isn't serious about moving.)
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