Slides for 30 min~1 hr Skype tenure track application interview Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?Which topics to include in a teaching presentation?Are faculty job applications evaluated on a computer or on a paper?Which tenure-track jobs would a new math PhD have a shot at?submitting pre-prints at Tenure-track faculty applicationCan a tenure-track job candidate infer any meaning from the response to an initial contact email?Tenure-track application - Number of recommendation lettersDo tenure-track search committees using mathjobs.org receive revisions to job applications after the initial submission date?Applying for tenure-track research position and lecturer position at the same university?Time between on campus interview and tenure track job offerLetter of recommendation before Skype interview
A term for a woman complaining about things/begging in a cute/childish way
What initially awakened the Balrog?
How much damage would a cupful of neutron star matter do to the Earth?
How come Sam didn't become Lord of Horn Hill?
Disembodied hand growing fangs
Is there any word for a place full of confusion?
How do I use the new nonlinear finite element in Mathematica 12 for this equation?
Most bit efficient text communication method?
Dating a Former Employee
If Windows 7 doesn't support WSL, then what does Linux subsystem option mean?
What are the diatonic extended chords of C major?
What's the meaning of "fortified infraction restraint"?
How do I find out the mythology and history of my Fortress?
Why is it faster to reheat something than it is to cook it?
AppleTVs create a chatty alternate WiFi network
What order were files/directories outputted in dir?
Crossing US/Canada Border for less than 24 hours
Morning, Afternoon, Night Kanji
Using audio cues to encourage good posture
Generate an RGB colour grid
How does the math work when buying airline miles?
Performance gap between vector<bool> and array
Effects on objects due to a brief relocation of massive amounts of mass
Selecting user stories during sprint planning
Slides for 30 min~1 hr Skype tenure track application interview
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?Which topics to include in a teaching presentation?Are faculty job applications evaluated on a computer or on a paper?Which tenure-track jobs would a new math PhD have a shot at?submitting pre-prints at Tenure-track faculty applicationCan a tenure-track job candidate infer any meaning from the response to an initial contact email?Tenure-track application - Number of recommendation lettersDo tenure-track search committees using mathjobs.org receive revisions to job applications after the initial submission date?Applying for tenure-track research position and lecturer position at the same university?Time between on campus interview and tenure track job offerLetter of recommendation before Skype interview
Is it good to prepare slides to present during the video chat even if the search committee say you don't need to prepare slides?
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
faculty-application
add a comment |
Is it good to prepare slides to present during the video chat even if the search committee say you don't need to prepare slides?
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
faculty-application
10
Just tell them your name is Feynman, that should do the trick :-)
– einpoklum
Apr 11 at 11:11
add a comment |
Is it good to prepare slides to present during the video chat even if the search committee say you don't need to prepare slides?
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
faculty-application
Is it good to prepare slides to present during the video chat even if the search committee say you don't need to prepare slides?
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
faculty-application
faculty-application
edited Apr 12 at 9:53
feynman
asked Apr 11 at 1:53
feynmanfeynman
235212
235212
10
Just tell them your name is Feynman, that should do the trick :-)
– einpoklum
Apr 11 at 11:11
add a comment |
10
Just tell them your name is Feynman, that should do the trick :-)
– einpoklum
Apr 11 at 11:11
10
10
Just tell them your name is Feynman, that should do the trick :-)
– einpoklum
Apr 11 at 11:11
Just tell them your name is Feynman, that should do the trick :-)
– einpoklum
Apr 11 at 11:11
add a comment |
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
Before we decide to bring faculty candidates to on campus interviews, we would like the search committee or department head to have met the candidate before. This used to happen primarily at the major conferences in our field for any candidates that we did not already know. Now it can sometimes happen alternatively in videoconference interviews. These will generally last about 30 minutes, but are planned a bit longer in case things go really well.
You should absolutely not have slides prepared, and you should not be tempted to refer to slides to answer questions. The goal here is to see how you interact spontaneously with other academics, how you talk about your research, how you talk about your career goals, etc. We are absolutely not interested in a canned presentation. In fact, we would prefer that your answers do not sound too well "rehearsed" or "coached" at all!
6
Just a note - you don't want answers to sound "canned," but most interviewees definitely need to rehearse. They just should do so without becoming "scripted."
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 13:01
1
Agree completely! Big difference between preparing and rehearsing, versus sounding overly scripted! Thanks!
– alerera
Apr 11 at 16:27
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:53
@feynman Being able to communicate well.
– Austin Henley
Apr 12 at 15:45
add a comment |
No. I have done eight Skype interviews, and I have never been in a situation where I would need or want slides. I am probably not in your field, but I don’t think my experience is unusual.
It is a better use of your time to practice your answers to common interview questions. Make them succinct and compelling. Also prepare short ideas on teaching every class mentioned in the job ad. Finally, learn about the department and have lots of questions for them.
very good thx. BTW what's ur field, and did u pass those skype interviews
– feynman
Apr 11 at 2:28
1
Speaking from the point of view of the interviewer, I agree. Don't use slides in a Skype interview.
– LarrySnyder610
Apr 11 at 2:40
4
I had a skype interview with a research institute that wanted me to prepare slides once (and give them in advance). But otherwise yes, a typical skype interview for an academic position is a many-on-one interrogation where they fire questions at you like a batting cage. Any stunts you try to pull to deviate from that would probably just annoy everyone.
– A Simple Algorithm
Apr 11 at 4:03
1
Actually yes, 100% of my skype interviews turned into flyouts. It is actually kind of amazing. My two other tips are a) good lighting/backdrop and b) don't wait until the end to ask questions - ask them throughout and make it a conversation.
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 12:59
add a comment |
In addition to the other, quite correct, answers, here is another perspective:
It is very unwise to disregard the clear instructions of the search committee. Even on a minor topic, this sort of behavior can reflect quite negatively on the candidate.
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
You should ask this as a separate question, not in the comments, and not by editing your question.
– vadim123
Apr 12 at 14:32
add a comment |
The only time I was asked to present slides was in followup onsite interviews. During the initial Skype interviews, I have never been asked to present slides.
The initial Skype interviews are, in my opinion, usually just to get a little more information about your background and to get a feel how well you communicate your field of work. In an academic setting, this is important, because your ability to clearly communicate your work is highly correlated to success in teaching, filing grant applications, etc...
To impress them, you want to be able demonstrate how you would fit into the department. Generally, they want to make sure that there is no overlap in the topics that each faculty is working on so that there is no competition inside of the department for funding. To the contrary, any synergies that you could propose would probably we welcome.
I think that the biggest thing that they will want to know is simply... can you fund yourself and your group. Either you have demonstrated this in the past already or you haven't. You can't change much there. Just be prepared for this question and have a good answer.
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
add a comment |
I've had tenure-track faculty Skype interviews that included PowerPoint presentations, and ones that didn't. I recommend you follow their instructions. In this case, they are not necessary. If there's something highly technical that you need to refer to, you could share your screen with them, but it's probably not advisable. It's not a job talk. Instead, this is an opportunity to demonstrate how to communicate your research and teaching in everyday language.
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
1
In my personal experience, the skype interview is mostly about: showing professionalism, warmth, and competence in verbal interactions; discussing fit with the institution (research, teaching, other), such as what your career goals are, why you applied to this kind of position, etc.; exploring questions they had from your written materials, such as in my case asking about a gap in the CV; etc. In sum, do your homework about what they want and who they are, and show via detailed questions how you would succeed in the role in that context.
– Cameron Brick
Apr 12 at 10:56
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "415"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: true,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: 10,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f127906%2fslides-for-30-min1-hr-skype-tenure-track-application-interview%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
5 Answers
5
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Before we decide to bring faculty candidates to on campus interviews, we would like the search committee or department head to have met the candidate before. This used to happen primarily at the major conferences in our field for any candidates that we did not already know. Now it can sometimes happen alternatively in videoconference interviews. These will generally last about 30 minutes, but are planned a bit longer in case things go really well.
You should absolutely not have slides prepared, and you should not be tempted to refer to slides to answer questions. The goal here is to see how you interact spontaneously with other academics, how you talk about your research, how you talk about your career goals, etc. We are absolutely not interested in a canned presentation. In fact, we would prefer that your answers do not sound too well "rehearsed" or "coached" at all!
6
Just a note - you don't want answers to sound "canned," but most interviewees definitely need to rehearse. They just should do so without becoming "scripted."
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 13:01
1
Agree completely! Big difference between preparing and rehearsing, versus sounding overly scripted! Thanks!
– alerera
Apr 11 at 16:27
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:53
@feynman Being able to communicate well.
– Austin Henley
Apr 12 at 15:45
add a comment |
Before we decide to bring faculty candidates to on campus interviews, we would like the search committee or department head to have met the candidate before. This used to happen primarily at the major conferences in our field for any candidates that we did not already know. Now it can sometimes happen alternatively in videoconference interviews. These will generally last about 30 minutes, but are planned a bit longer in case things go really well.
You should absolutely not have slides prepared, and you should not be tempted to refer to slides to answer questions. The goal here is to see how you interact spontaneously with other academics, how you talk about your research, how you talk about your career goals, etc. We are absolutely not interested in a canned presentation. In fact, we would prefer that your answers do not sound too well "rehearsed" or "coached" at all!
6
Just a note - you don't want answers to sound "canned," but most interviewees definitely need to rehearse. They just should do so without becoming "scripted."
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 13:01
1
Agree completely! Big difference between preparing and rehearsing, versus sounding overly scripted! Thanks!
– alerera
Apr 11 at 16:27
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:53
@feynman Being able to communicate well.
– Austin Henley
Apr 12 at 15:45
add a comment |
Before we decide to bring faculty candidates to on campus interviews, we would like the search committee or department head to have met the candidate before. This used to happen primarily at the major conferences in our field for any candidates that we did not already know. Now it can sometimes happen alternatively in videoconference interviews. These will generally last about 30 minutes, but are planned a bit longer in case things go really well.
You should absolutely not have slides prepared, and you should not be tempted to refer to slides to answer questions. The goal here is to see how you interact spontaneously with other academics, how you talk about your research, how you talk about your career goals, etc. We are absolutely not interested in a canned presentation. In fact, we would prefer that your answers do not sound too well "rehearsed" or "coached" at all!
Before we decide to bring faculty candidates to on campus interviews, we would like the search committee or department head to have met the candidate before. This used to happen primarily at the major conferences in our field for any candidates that we did not already know. Now it can sometimes happen alternatively in videoconference interviews. These will generally last about 30 minutes, but are planned a bit longer in case things go really well.
You should absolutely not have slides prepared, and you should not be tempted to refer to slides to answer questions. The goal here is to see how you interact spontaneously with other academics, how you talk about your research, how you talk about your career goals, etc. We are absolutely not interested in a canned presentation. In fact, we would prefer that your answers do not sound too well "rehearsed" or "coached" at all!
answered Apr 11 at 2:59
alereraalerera
4866
4866
6
Just a note - you don't want answers to sound "canned," but most interviewees definitely need to rehearse. They just should do so without becoming "scripted."
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 13:01
1
Agree completely! Big difference between preparing and rehearsing, versus sounding overly scripted! Thanks!
– alerera
Apr 11 at 16:27
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:53
@feynman Being able to communicate well.
– Austin Henley
Apr 12 at 15:45
add a comment |
6
Just a note - you don't want answers to sound "canned," but most interviewees definitely need to rehearse. They just should do so without becoming "scripted."
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 13:01
1
Agree completely! Big difference between preparing and rehearsing, versus sounding overly scripted! Thanks!
– alerera
Apr 11 at 16:27
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:53
@feynman Being able to communicate well.
– Austin Henley
Apr 12 at 15:45
6
6
Just a note - you don't want answers to sound "canned," but most interviewees definitely need to rehearse. They just should do so without becoming "scripted."
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 13:01
Just a note - you don't want answers to sound "canned," but most interviewees definitely need to rehearse. They just should do so without becoming "scripted."
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 13:01
1
1
Agree completely! Big difference between preparing and rehearsing, versus sounding overly scripted! Thanks!
– alerera
Apr 11 at 16:27
Agree completely! Big difference between preparing and rehearsing, versus sounding overly scripted! Thanks!
– alerera
Apr 11 at 16:27
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:53
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:53
@feynman Being able to communicate well.
– Austin Henley
Apr 12 at 15:45
@feynman Being able to communicate well.
– Austin Henley
Apr 12 at 15:45
add a comment |
No. I have done eight Skype interviews, and I have never been in a situation where I would need or want slides. I am probably not in your field, but I don’t think my experience is unusual.
It is a better use of your time to practice your answers to common interview questions. Make them succinct and compelling. Also prepare short ideas on teaching every class mentioned in the job ad. Finally, learn about the department and have lots of questions for them.
very good thx. BTW what's ur field, and did u pass those skype interviews
– feynman
Apr 11 at 2:28
1
Speaking from the point of view of the interviewer, I agree. Don't use slides in a Skype interview.
– LarrySnyder610
Apr 11 at 2:40
4
I had a skype interview with a research institute that wanted me to prepare slides once (and give them in advance). But otherwise yes, a typical skype interview for an academic position is a many-on-one interrogation where they fire questions at you like a batting cage. Any stunts you try to pull to deviate from that would probably just annoy everyone.
– A Simple Algorithm
Apr 11 at 4:03
1
Actually yes, 100% of my skype interviews turned into flyouts. It is actually kind of amazing. My two other tips are a) good lighting/backdrop and b) don't wait until the end to ask questions - ask them throughout and make it a conversation.
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 12:59
add a comment |
No. I have done eight Skype interviews, and I have never been in a situation where I would need or want slides. I am probably not in your field, but I don’t think my experience is unusual.
It is a better use of your time to practice your answers to common interview questions. Make them succinct and compelling. Also prepare short ideas on teaching every class mentioned in the job ad. Finally, learn about the department and have lots of questions for them.
very good thx. BTW what's ur field, and did u pass those skype interviews
– feynman
Apr 11 at 2:28
1
Speaking from the point of view of the interviewer, I agree. Don't use slides in a Skype interview.
– LarrySnyder610
Apr 11 at 2:40
4
I had a skype interview with a research institute that wanted me to prepare slides once (and give them in advance). But otherwise yes, a typical skype interview for an academic position is a many-on-one interrogation where they fire questions at you like a batting cage. Any stunts you try to pull to deviate from that would probably just annoy everyone.
– A Simple Algorithm
Apr 11 at 4:03
1
Actually yes, 100% of my skype interviews turned into flyouts. It is actually kind of amazing. My two other tips are a) good lighting/backdrop and b) don't wait until the end to ask questions - ask them throughout and make it a conversation.
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 12:59
add a comment |
No. I have done eight Skype interviews, and I have never been in a situation where I would need or want slides. I am probably not in your field, but I don’t think my experience is unusual.
It is a better use of your time to practice your answers to common interview questions. Make them succinct and compelling. Also prepare short ideas on teaching every class mentioned in the job ad. Finally, learn about the department and have lots of questions for them.
No. I have done eight Skype interviews, and I have never been in a situation where I would need or want slides. I am probably not in your field, but I don’t think my experience is unusual.
It is a better use of your time to practice your answers to common interview questions. Make them succinct and compelling. Also prepare short ideas on teaching every class mentioned in the job ad. Finally, learn about the department and have lots of questions for them.
edited Apr 11 at 13:23
Peter Mortensen
31826
31826
answered Apr 11 at 2:21
DawnDawn
9,05012350
9,05012350
very good thx. BTW what's ur field, and did u pass those skype interviews
– feynman
Apr 11 at 2:28
1
Speaking from the point of view of the interviewer, I agree. Don't use slides in a Skype interview.
– LarrySnyder610
Apr 11 at 2:40
4
I had a skype interview with a research institute that wanted me to prepare slides once (and give them in advance). But otherwise yes, a typical skype interview for an academic position is a many-on-one interrogation where they fire questions at you like a batting cage. Any stunts you try to pull to deviate from that would probably just annoy everyone.
– A Simple Algorithm
Apr 11 at 4:03
1
Actually yes, 100% of my skype interviews turned into flyouts. It is actually kind of amazing. My two other tips are a) good lighting/backdrop and b) don't wait until the end to ask questions - ask them throughout and make it a conversation.
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 12:59
add a comment |
very good thx. BTW what's ur field, and did u pass those skype interviews
– feynman
Apr 11 at 2:28
1
Speaking from the point of view of the interviewer, I agree. Don't use slides in a Skype interview.
– LarrySnyder610
Apr 11 at 2:40
4
I had a skype interview with a research institute that wanted me to prepare slides once (and give them in advance). But otherwise yes, a typical skype interview for an academic position is a many-on-one interrogation where they fire questions at you like a batting cage. Any stunts you try to pull to deviate from that would probably just annoy everyone.
– A Simple Algorithm
Apr 11 at 4:03
1
Actually yes, 100% of my skype interviews turned into flyouts. It is actually kind of amazing. My two other tips are a) good lighting/backdrop and b) don't wait until the end to ask questions - ask them throughout and make it a conversation.
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 12:59
very good thx. BTW what's ur field, and did u pass those skype interviews
– feynman
Apr 11 at 2:28
very good thx. BTW what's ur field, and did u pass those skype interviews
– feynman
Apr 11 at 2:28
1
1
Speaking from the point of view of the interviewer, I agree. Don't use slides in a Skype interview.
– LarrySnyder610
Apr 11 at 2:40
Speaking from the point of view of the interviewer, I agree. Don't use slides in a Skype interview.
– LarrySnyder610
Apr 11 at 2:40
4
4
I had a skype interview with a research institute that wanted me to prepare slides once (and give them in advance). But otherwise yes, a typical skype interview for an academic position is a many-on-one interrogation where they fire questions at you like a batting cage. Any stunts you try to pull to deviate from that would probably just annoy everyone.
– A Simple Algorithm
Apr 11 at 4:03
I had a skype interview with a research institute that wanted me to prepare slides once (and give them in advance). But otherwise yes, a typical skype interview for an academic position is a many-on-one interrogation where they fire questions at you like a batting cage. Any stunts you try to pull to deviate from that would probably just annoy everyone.
– A Simple Algorithm
Apr 11 at 4:03
1
1
Actually yes, 100% of my skype interviews turned into flyouts. It is actually kind of amazing. My two other tips are a) good lighting/backdrop and b) don't wait until the end to ask questions - ask them throughout and make it a conversation.
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 12:59
Actually yes, 100% of my skype interviews turned into flyouts. It is actually kind of amazing. My two other tips are a) good lighting/backdrop and b) don't wait until the end to ask questions - ask them throughout and make it a conversation.
– Dawn
Apr 11 at 12:59
add a comment |
In addition to the other, quite correct, answers, here is another perspective:
It is very unwise to disregard the clear instructions of the search committee. Even on a minor topic, this sort of behavior can reflect quite negatively on the candidate.
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
You should ask this as a separate question, not in the comments, and not by editing your question.
– vadim123
Apr 12 at 14:32
add a comment |
In addition to the other, quite correct, answers, here is another perspective:
It is very unwise to disregard the clear instructions of the search committee. Even on a minor topic, this sort of behavior can reflect quite negatively on the candidate.
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
You should ask this as a separate question, not in the comments, and not by editing your question.
– vadim123
Apr 12 at 14:32
add a comment |
In addition to the other, quite correct, answers, here is another perspective:
It is very unwise to disregard the clear instructions of the search committee. Even on a minor topic, this sort of behavior can reflect quite negatively on the candidate.
In addition to the other, quite correct, answers, here is another perspective:
It is very unwise to disregard the clear instructions of the search committee. Even on a minor topic, this sort of behavior can reflect quite negatively on the candidate.
answered Apr 11 at 4:05
vadim123vadim123
4,0181021
4,0181021
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
You should ask this as a separate question, not in the comments, and not by editing your question.
– vadim123
Apr 12 at 14:32
add a comment |
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
You should ask this as a separate question, not in the comments, and not by editing your question.
– vadim123
Apr 12 at 14:32
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
You should ask this as a separate question, not in the comments, and not by editing your question.
– vadim123
Apr 12 at 14:32
You should ask this as a separate question, not in the comments, and not by editing your question.
– vadim123
Apr 12 at 14:32
add a comment |
The only time I was asked to present slides was in followup onsite interviews. During the initial Skype interviews, I have never been asked to present slides.
The initial Skype interviews are, in my opinion, usually just to get a little more information about your background and to get a feel how well you communicate your field of work. In an academic setting, this is important, because your ability to clearly communicate your work is highly correlated to success in teaching, filing grant applications, etc...
To impress them, you want to be able demonstrate how you would fit into the department. Generally, they want to make sure that there is no overlap in the topics that each faculty is working on so that there is no competition inside of the department for funding. To the contrary, any synergies that you could propose would probably we welcome.
I think that the biggest thing that they will want to know is simply... can you fund yourself and your group. Either you have demonstrated this in the past already or you haven't. You can't change much there. Just be prepared for this question and have a good answer.
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
add a comment |
The only time I was asked to present slides was in followup onsite interviews. During the initial Skype interviews, I have never been asked to present slides.
The initial Skype interviews are, in my opinion, usually just to get a little more information about your background and to get a feel how well you communicate your field of work. In an academic setting, this is important, because your ability to clearly communicate your work is highly correlated to success in teaching, filing grant applications, etc...
To impress them, you want to be able demonstrate how you would fit into the department. Generally, they want to make sure that there is no overlap in the topics that each faculty is working on so that there is no competition inside of the department for funding. To the contrary, any synergies that you could propose would probably we welcome.
I think that the biggest thing that they will want to know is simply... can you fund yourself and your group. Either you have demonstrated this in the past already or you haven't. You can't change much there. Just be prepared for this question and have a good answer.
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
add a comment |
The only time I was asked to present slides was in followup onsite interviews. During the initial Skype interviews, I have never been asked to present slides.
The initial Skype interviews are, in my opinion, usually just to get a little more information about your background and to get a feel how well you communicate your field of work. In an academic setting, this is important, because your ability to clearly communicate your work is highly correlated to success in teaching, filing grant applications, etc...
To impress them, you want to be able demonstrate how you would fit into the department. Generally, they want to make sure that there is no overlap in the topics that each faculty is working on so that there is no competition inside of the department for funding. To the contrary, any synergies that you could propose would probably we welcome.
I think that the biggest thing that they will want to know is simply... can you fund yourself and your group. Either you have demonstrated this in the past already or you haven't. You can't change much there. Just be prepared for this question and have a good answer.
The only time I was asked to present slides was in followup onsite interviews. During the initial Skype interviews, I have never been asked to present slides.
The initial Skype interviews are, in my opinion, usually just to get a little more information about your background and to get a feel how well you communicate your field of work. In an academic setting, this is important, because your ability to clearly communicate your work is highly correlated to success in teaching, filing grant applications, etc...
To impress them, you want to be able demonstrate how you would fit into the department. Generally, they want to make sure that there is no overlap in the topics that each faculty is working on so that there is no competition inside of the department for funding. To the contrary, any synergies that you could propose would probably we welcome.
I think that the biggest thing that they will want to know is simply... can you fund yourself and your group. Either you have demonstrated this in the past already or you haven't. You can't change much there. Just be prepared for this question and have a good answer.
edited Apr 12 at 10:00
answered Apr 11 at 5:39
bremen_mattbremen_matt
83736
83736
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
add a comment |
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
add a comment |
I've had tenure-track faculty Skype interviews that included PowerPoint presentations, and ones that didn't. I recommend you follow their instructions. In this case, they are not necessary. If there's something highly technical that you need to refer to, you could share your screen with them, but it's probably not advisable. It's not a job talk. Instead, this is an opportunity to demonstrate how to communicate your research and teaching in everyday language.
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
1
In my personal experience, the skype interview is mostly about: showing professionalism, warmth, and competence in verbal interactions; discussing fit with the institution (research, teaching, other), such as what your career goals are, why you applied to this kind of position, etc.; exploring questions they had from your written materials, such as in my case asking about a gap in the CV; etc. In sum, do your homework about what they want and who they are, and show via detailed questions how you would succeed in the role in that context.
– Cameron Brick
Apr 12 at 10:56
add a comment |
I've had tenure-track faculty Skype interviews that included PowerPoint presentations, and ones that didn't. I recommend you follow their instructions. In this case, they are not necessary. If there's something highly technical that you need to refer to, you could share your screen with them, but it's probably not advisable. It's not a job talk. Instead, this is an opportunity to demonstrate how to communicate your research and teaching in everyday language.
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
1
In my personal experience, the skype interview is mostly about: showing professionalism, warmth, and competence in verbal interactions; discussing fit with the institution (research, teaching, other), such as what your career goals are, why you applied to this kind of position, etc.; exploring questions they had from your written materials, such as in my case asking about a gap in the CV; etc. In sum, do your homework about what they want and who they are, and show via detailed questions how you would succeed in the role in that context.
– Cameron Brick
Apr 12 at 10:56
add a comment |
I've had tenure-track faculty Skype interviews that included PowerPoint presentations, and ones that didn't. I recommend you follow their instructions. In this case, they are not necessary. If there's something highly technical that you need to refer to, you could share your screen with them, but it's probably not advisable. It's not a job talk. Instead, this is an opportunity to demonstrate how to communicate your research and teaching in everyday language.
I've had tenure-track faculty Skype interviews that included PowerPoint presentations, and ones that didn't. I recommend you follow their instructions. In this case, they are not necessary. If there's something highly technical that you need to refer to, you could share your screen with them, but it's probably not advisable. It's not a job talk. Instead, this is an opportunity to demonstrate how to communicate your research and teaching in everyday language.
answered Apr 11 at 9:25
Cameron BrickCameron Brick
4166
4166
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
1
In my personal experience, the skype interview is mostly about: showing professionalism, warmth, and competence in verbal interactions; discussing fit with the institution (research, teaching, other), such as what your career goals are, why you applied to this kind of position, etc.; exploring questions they had from your written materials, such as in my case asking about a gap in the CV; etc. In sum, do your homework about what they want and who they are, and show via detailed questions how you would succeed in the role in that context.
– Cameron Brick
Apr 12 at 10:56
add a comment |
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
1
In my personal experience, the skype interview is mostly about: showing professionalism, warmth, and competence in verbal interactions; discussing fit with the institution (research, teaching, other), such as what your career goals are, why you applied to this kind of position, etc.; exploring questions they had from your written materials, such as in my case asking about a gap in the CV; etc. In sum, do your homework about what they want and who they are, and show via detailed questions how you would succeed in the role in that context.
– Cameron Brick
Apr 12 at 10:56
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
What's the strategy of impressing them then?
– feynman
Apr 12 at 9:54
1
1
In my personal experience, the skype interview is mostly about: showing professionalism, warmth, and competence in verbal interactions; discussing fit with the institution (research, teaching, other), such as what your career goals are, why you applied to this kind of position, etc.; exploring questions they had from your written materials, such as in my case asking about a gap in the CV; etc. In sum, do your homework about what they want and who they are, and show via detailed questions how you would succeed in the role in that context.
– Cameron Brick
Apr 12 at 10:56
In my personal experience, the skype interview is mostly about: showing professionalism, warmth, and competence in verbal interactions; discussing fit with the institution (research, teaching, other), such as what your career goals are, why you applied to this kind of position, etc.; exploring questions they had from your written materials, such as in my case asking about a gap in the CV; etc. In sum, do your homework about what they want and who they are, and show via detailed questions how you would succeed in the role in that context.
– Cameron Brick
Apr 12 at 10:56
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Academia Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f127906%2fslides-for-30-min1-hr-skype-tenure-track-application-interview%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
10
Just tell them your name is Feynman, that should do the trick :-)
– einpoklum
Apr 11 at 11:11