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Author Topic: Post doctoral opportunities in U.K.  (Read 1785 times)
tobephd
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« on: August 05, 2007, 02:10:55 PM »

Hi,
I plan to graduate in June '08 with a Ph.D. in Biological Sciences (Major Biochemistry) from a univeristy in United States. My husband is working in England  (Kent) and therefore I am planning to look for postdoc positions there. However I am not sure whether the postdoc experience in U.K. is comparable or  better than universities in U.S. I would appreciate if anyone could comment on the current postdoc opportunities and quality of research experience one had in U.K. labs.

Thanks
to be Ph.D.
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daniel_von_flanagan
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Works all day. Posts all night. Needs sleep.


« Reply #1 on: August 05, 2007, 04:34:53 PM »

I did a postdoc in the UK (many years ago), and never regretted it.  One thing you should be aware of, however, is that it will be harder later to get a US job from England than it would be from the US.  - DvF
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The U.S. Education Department is establishing a new national research center to study colleges' ability to successfully educate the country's growing numbers of academically underprepared administrators.
august_leo
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« Reply #2 on: September 06, 2007, 06:35:39 AM »

my fiance is looking for a UK postdoc (interviewed, now waiting). I'm hoping that if we still go to US conferences and publish and get grant money that we will be competitive in the US in a few years if we want to go back.

I did learn that you can still get a post-doc NRSA or write an RO3 or R21 while in the UK. But you can't get a K award (e.g., K99) or R01. These are all NIH grants, I should clarify. I haven't found anything at NSF that we still qualify for, but haven't looked as much.
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Your environment sounds vaguely toxic.  Or maybe just characteristically British.
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secretweapon
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« Reply #3 on: September 06, 2007, 10:58:55 AM »

I can't comment on the quality of biology research, but just a heads up that hiring happens on a different time scale in the UK - for one thing, the entire process moves much, much faster.  At least in humanities and social sciences, it's common to have a job advertised, a deadline 2-3 weeks later, an interview 2 weeks after that, and an response a day or two after the interview. 
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