Difference between revisions of "JSA Promising Young Scientist Resources"

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=== List of Past Participants ===
 
=== List of Past Participants ===
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=== More Helpful Reading ===
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[https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-00560-9?fbclid=IwAR1_bIQBwBaQ-iRsYz39B9-kRfVs0pVz6kalGPOM_-ZfeL-ZTNZnGWuZJAM&utm_campaign=crs-&utm_content=130219v2&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter eight pieces of advice for beginning faculty]

Revision as of 17:20, 13 February 2019

Note: this page is a work in progress, and more materials will appear here over time.

Golden Rules of the Colloquium Speaker

  • Underestimate, as much as humanly possible, the expertise (but not the intelligence) of the audience.
  • Make the first 10-15 minutes of your colloquium intelligible to non-physicists. For guidance, consider how you might explain your work to a relative.
  • Make the next 10-15 minutes intelligible to undergraduate physics majors.
  • Let the third 10-15 minutes be sparklingly clear to graduate students and to professors who are not specialists in your area.
  • Use the last part of the talk to impress the experts

Tips on Writing Research Statement

Tips on Writing Teaching Statement

List of Past Participants

More Helpful Reading

eight pieces of advice for beginning faculty