Three months ago, I posted here about the addressing criteria when applying to Australian universities. I'm happy to report that I was offered (and accepted!) the position at a Go8 university, and I will be moving just after the new year. I defended my PhD already, and I will start at Level B (lecturer).
Congratulations!
1. The use of a grades/payscales. Much more straightforward than the US and (it seems) generous for those in humanities and social sciences.
Some US state universities use pay scales and/or the salary is publicly available.
2. Option for a 457 visa and relevant tax breaks for the first three to four years of my appointment.
As I understand it, there is only a tax break on non-Australian income. Be very careful though if you again leave Australia about holding on to your superannuation fund!
http://moominhouse.blogspot.com/2008/08/good-news-for-temporary-residents.html3. No tenure system. Coming from a cut-throat program where I saw several brilliant professors denied tenure, this is honestly quite a relief. I'm an active scholar and dedicated teacher, and I expect to seek promotion when I am ready.
As I mentioned, there is probation, but it is generally easy to pass..
5. Lack of PhD coursework. Again, this is a substantial difference from my PhD institution where a Masters required two years of coursework and a PhD required three years of coursework. I found many of those courses to be instrumental in my development as a scholar, and I'm curious as to how this differs in Australia.
Undergrads are more specialized in Australia than in the US so they need less further coursework. And then they do honours/masters which depending on field could be more coursework. The top programs in my field (econ) in Australia do have PhD coursework. But it is at most one year. Unless you are specialising on an Australia or Asia/Pacific topic a US PhD in econ is still generally considered superior.
6. Instead of a US model of a PhD defense with four to five professors from your own university and perhaps an outside reader, it seems like theses in Australia are sent to the advisor and then several scholars from other universities to read and comment on. Not sure how the format/length/revision time compare though.
Yes, we follow the British model of "external examination". Your advisers are not your examiners. This is similar to the general British separation of powers between Queen and Prime Minister, Chairman of the Board and CEO etc. Americans seem less concerned about concentrated power though they make a big fuss about "separation of powers". I think it is a pity that we don't do a regular defence or viva here. In the UK I think they do, but mostly we use foreign examiners and they're not going to be coming to Australia and so no defence. In the age of Ed Dante and video-conferencing, I think this should be rethought.
Anything else I should know, coming from the US to Australia?
You can apply to become a citizen 4 years after you arrive. This is much quicker than the US path to citizenship. This is great for people (like my wife) who are not citizens of Western/developed countries and want to be.
There are far more foreign students here than in the US.
It's expensive. Salary might seem high at current exchange rates... The only place I've been on recent travel that was more expensive was Denmark. I went to Sweden, Switzerland, Paris too on that trip. They all seemed comparable to Australia. Unless you are talking fresh fruit and vegetables of course. I feel that there is a lot "price dispersion" here. You can often get something much cheaper by shopping around. House prices in large cities here are comparable to NY and San Francisco at current exchange rates. Eastern Sydney to Santa Barbara. Adelaide is a bit cheaper than the other metros.
Ask and I'll try to answer!