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Bookshelf

A Ph.D. Is Not Enough: A Guide to Survival in Science (Perseus Books Group, 1994), by Peter J. Feibelman. ISBN: 0201626632.

Should you ask that prominent scientist to be your thesis adviser? How do you go about writing a compelling scientific paper? These and other topics are covered in a guide designed to ease the transition from graduate school to professional researcher.

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Academic Deanship: Individual Careers and Institutional Roles (Jossey-Bass, 2001), by David F. Bright and Mary P. Richards. ISBN: 0787953504.

A must-read for deans and aspiring deans.

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Academic Scientists at Work: Navigating the Biomedical Research Career (Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers, 2002), by Jeremy Boss and Susan Eckert. ISBN: 030647493X.

This handbook for aspiring biomedical scientists features advice on finding an academic job, obtaining research grants, setting up and managing a laboratory, and advancing one's academic career. There's a chapter on mentoring and another summarizing the results of a national survey of biomedical faculty members on how to have a successful career in scientific research. The book's appendix has sample CV's and cover letters.

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Advice for New Faculty Members: Nihil Nimus (Allyn & Bacon, 2000), by Robert Boice. ISBN: 0205281591.

This guide offers tips on developing work habits that will help graduate students and new faculty members succeed in academe.

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Anthropology in Practice: Building a Career Outside the Academy (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2003), by Riall W. Nolan. ISBN: 1555879853.

This guide is designed for students who want to pursue nonacademic careers in anthropology. The author explores the differences between academic, applied, and practicing anthropologists and offers tips on preparing for careers beyond the academy. The book also includes sample résumés and cover letters, lists of anthropology-related Web sites, and advice on surviving the first year on the job.

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The Academic Job Search Handbook (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2008, 4th edition), by Jennifer S. Furlong and Julia Miller Vick. ISBN: 978-0-8122-2016-2.

A comprehensive guide for recent doctoral graduates conducting their first academic job hunt and junior professors looking to change jobs. It offers a description of the academic hiring process and takes readers through the process of planning and executing an effective academic job search. A large section on written materials includes sample correspondence, professional vitas, statements of teaching philosophy, and a sample interview schedule and offer letter. The new fourth edition contains updated information about interviewing, negotiating a job offer, starting your first job, and nonacademic career options for Ph.D.'s, as well as sections devoted to the special concerns of dual-career couples and pregnant job candidates.

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The Adjunct Professor's Guide to Success: Surviving and Thriving in the College Classroom (Allyn and Bacon, 1999), by Richard E. Lyons, Marcella L. Kysilka, and George E. Pawlas. ISBN: 0205287743.

This guide is designed for real-world professionals -- in business, law, medicine, and a variety of other fields -- who want to teach part time in colleges and universities. The book opens with advice on finding an adjunct teaching job, then addresses the skills you will need to survive and flourish as a part-time instructor. Each chapter contains questions to help readers focus on the issues that will be covered. Topics include course planning and conducting effective class sessions, choosing an instructional method, and assessing your teaching performance.

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Alternative Careers in Science: Leaving the Ivory Tower (Academic Press, 1998), edited by Cynthia Robbins-Roth. ISBN: 0125893752.

Cynthia Robbins-Roth left an academic biochemistry career in the 1980s for the biotechnology industry and later founded a newsletter and a consulting business. This guide covers 22 alternative careers for scientists, including journalism, publishing, business development, sales and marketing, technology transfer, and public policy.

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At the Helm: A Laboratory Navigator (Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press, 2002), by Kathy Barker. ISBN: 0879695838.

This guide for new principal investigators focuses on how to set up and effectively manage a laboratory.

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The Black Academic's Guide to Winning Tenure--Without Losing Your Soul (Lynne Rienner Publishers, 2008), by Kerry Ann Rockquemore and Tracey Laszloffy. ISBN: 978-1-58826-588-3.

Negotiating the tenure track is difficult for all academics, but for black academics, who may be the only minority faculty member in their department, it can be a particularly isolating experience. This book is for them. It offers practical advice on how to succeed in academe, in spite of the hurdles in their way.

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Career Strategies for Women in Academe: Arming Athena (Sage Publications, 1998), by Lynn H. Collins, Joan C. Chrisler, and Kathryn Quina. ISBN: 0761909893.

A guide for women who want to get ahead in academe. It examines women's roles in higher education and offers information about affirmative action, salary and negotiation strategies, and advice about how to get to the top and avoid and deal with potential pitfalls.

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The Complete Academic Search Manual: A Systematic Approach to Successful and Inclusive Hiring (Stylus Publishing, 2005), by Lauren A. Vicker and Harriette J. Royer. ISBN: 1579221394.

This manual for faculty members and administrators provides practical advice on conducting a successful search. The topics covered include: selecting a hiring committee, writing a job description, conducting interviews, attracting a diverse pool of applicants, evaluating and selecting the finalists, making an offer, and retaining new hires.

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The Curriculum Vitae Handbook: How to Present and Promote Your Academic Career (Rudi Publishing, 1998), by Rebecca Anthony and Gerald Roe. ISBN: 0945213263.

This revised edition includes samples of C.V.'s for different stages of academic careers and information on how to create an electronic C.V.

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The Essential Academic Dean: A Practical Guide to College Leadership (Jossey-Bass, 2007), by Jeffrey L. Buller. ISBN: 0470180862.

Based on a series of workshops given by the author on college administration and management, this guide covers topics such as budgeting, community relations, personnel management and hiring, fund raising, and creating a vision for the future.

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Faculty Advising Examined: Enhancing the Potential of College Faculty As Advisors (Anker Publishing Company, 2003), edited by Gary L. Kramer. ISBN: 1882982630.

This book for faculty members, department chairmen, deans, advising directors, and vice presidents provides information on how to improve faculty advising on college and university campuses. A dozen essays examine issues such as training effective faculty advisors, the importance of assessment and reward in advisor development, organizational models of academic advising, and using technology to enhance the advising process. There's also a chapter on resources for academic advisors.

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Field Guide to Academic Leadership (Jossey-Bass, 2002), edited by Robert M. Diamond. ISBN: 0787960594.

This handbook for academic managers of all stripes -- department chairs, deans, provosts, presidents, and other academic administrators -- looks at what it takes to be an effective leader and provides practical advice on a wide variety of topics, including dealing with budgets, personnel issues, and technology.

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Finding an Academic Job (Sage Publishers, 1998), by Karen M. Sowers-Hoag and Dianne F. Harrison. ISBN: 0761904018.

Two deans of social-work schools offer advice on what colleges and universities look for in new faculty members, how to match your credentials to the job market, and how to negotiate a job offer. One section deals with employment issues affecting academic couples.

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Getting an Academic Job: Strategies for Success (Sage Publishers, 1997), by Jennie Jacobs Kronefeld and Marcia Lynn Whicker. ISBN: 0803970153.

This guide explains the nature of job searches, interviews, and landing the right job, and includes a section on the do's and don'ts of job searching.

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Getting It Published: A Guide for Scholars and Anyone Else Serious about Serious Books (University Of Chicago Press, 2001), by William Germano. ISBN: 0226288447.

This guide to scholarly publishing provides tips on writing and editing a manuscript, drafting a proposal, signing a contract, and everything in between.

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Ghosts in the Classroom: Stories of College Adjunct Faculty -- and the Price We All Pay (Camel's Back Books, 2001), edited by Michael Dubson. ISBN: 0965897710.

The number of adjunct professors in academe is rising, yet their voices are seldom heard. In this collection of essays, adjunct professors share their on-the-job experiences and horror stories.

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Good Start: A Guidebook for New Faculty in Liberal Arts Colleges (Anker Publishing Company, 1992), by Gerald W. Gibson. ISBN: 0962704237.

A guide for new faculty members who teach (or want to teach) at liberal arts colleges, written by the president of Maryville College, in Tennessee. Topics include the liberal-arts tradition; interviewing at a liberal-arts college; selecting the right college for you; scholarship, citizenship, and service; stress and time management; teaching, promotion, and tenure.

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How the University Works: Higher Education and the Low-Wage Nation (New York Univeresity Press, 2008), by Marc Bousquet. Forward by Cary Nelson. ISBN: 0814799752.

An expose about universities' shameless exploitation of academic workers by an associate professor of cultural studies and writing with new media at Santa Clara University.

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I'm the Teacher, You're the Student: A Semester in the University Classroom (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004), by Patrick Allitt. ISBN: 0812218876.

An entertaining account of a semester in the classroom, by an Emory University history professor.

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Job Search in Academe: Strategic Rhetorics for Faculty Job Candidates (Stylus Publishing, 1999), by Dawn M. Formo and Cheryl Reed. ISBN: 157992010X (cloth)
ISBN:1579220118 (paper).

The authors of this handbook analyze their own experiences and those of more than 50 job seekers in a variety of fields, including business, the humanities, and the sciences. They suggest ways job seekers can use the verbal, written, and visual clues offered during a job search and interviews to improve their chances of landing jobs.

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Life on the Tenure Track: Lessons from the First Year, by James M. Lang (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005). ISBN: 080188103X.

The author shares his trials and tribulations as a first-year college professor.

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Lifting A Ton of Feathers: A Woman's Guide to Surviving in the Academic World, by Paula J. Caplan (University of Toronto Press, 1993). ISBN: 0802074111.

Based on interviews with hundreds of academic women, this handbook includes suggestions for the job hunt, preparing your C.V., interviewing, handling job offers, and applying for contract renewals and tenure. It also includes a checklist for "woman-positive" institutions.

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Managing People: A Guide for Department Chairs and Deans (Anker Publishing Company, 2003), edited by Deryl R. Leaming. ISBN 1882982533.

Department chairmen and deans share their personnel-management strategies in this collection of essays.

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McKeachie's Teaching Tips: Strategies, Research And Theory for College And University Teachers (Houghton Mifflin Company, August 2005, 12th edition), by Wilbert James McKeachie, Marilla Svinicki. ISBN: 0618515569.

Useful tips for improving your classroom teaching.

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Motherhood, the Elephant in the Laboratory: Women Scientists Speak Out (Cornell University Press, 2008), edited by Emily Monosson. ISBN: 978-0-8014-4664-1.

Women in a variety of scientific fields describe how they balance work and motherhood in this collection of personal essays.

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Ms. Mentor's Impeccable Advice for Women in Academia (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1997), by Emily Toth. ISBN: 0812215664.

Ms. Mentor was born in 1992 as an advice columnist for woman professors, graduate students, recovering academics, and those who love them. In this question-and-answer guide, she dispenses wisdom on surviving graduate school, landing a job and earning tenure in "pale-male" fields, and what to wear to academic conventions.

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On Course: A Week-by-Week Guide to Your First Semester (Harvard University Press, 2005), by James M. Lang ISBN: 978-0-674-02806-7.

This handy teaching guide for doctoral students and new faculty members contains anecdotes and practical suggestions on everything from creating a syllabus, preparing assignments, and designing a teaching rubric to balancing lectures with group work and discussion, getting students to talk in class, and stopping cheaters. Divided into 15 chapters that correspond to the weeks in a semester, Lang's book is a great survival guide for those who want to get through their first year of teaching without feeling overwhelmed.

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On the Market: Surviving the Academic Job Search (Riverhead Books, 1997), edited by Christina Boufis and Victoria C. Olsen. ISBN: 1573226262.

Based on the assumption that hearing people's stories is therapeutic and empowering, this book collects the accounts of graduate students in many fields who have recently braved the market, some successfully. More than two dozen essays explore such issues as dealing with rejection, the treatment of feminist scholars by hiring committees, relocating, making a living as a full-time adjunct, and leaving the academy and finding alternative careers.

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Parenting and Professing: Balancing Family Work with an Academic Career (Vanderbilt University Press, 2005), edited by Rachel Hile Bassett. ISBN: 0826514774.

A collection of personal essays on the challenges of balancing parenting and a scholarly career.

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Professors as Writers: A Self-Help Guide to Productive Writing (New Forums Press, 1990), by Robert Boice. ISBN: 091350713X.

A must-read for academics who want to overcome procrastination and writer's block and become more productive writers.

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"So What Are You Going to Do with That?" (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2001), by Susan Basalla and Maggie Debelius. ISBN: 0374526214.

This guide -- written by two Ph.D.'s who've made the transition from academe to the "real world" -- looks at non-academic job opportunities for Ph.D.'s and M.A.'s and offers practical advice for those who are considering careers beyond the ivory tower.

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Successful Scientific Writing: A Step-By-step Guide for Biomedical Scientists (Cambridge University Press, 2001, 2nd Edition), by Janice R. Matthews, John M. Bowen, Robert W. Matthews. ISBN: 0521789621.

An informative manual on effective scientific writing.

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Surviving Your Academic Job Hunt: Advice for Humanities PhDs (Palgrave MacMillan, 2005), by Kathryn Hume. ISBN: 1403967296.

A guide for first-time academic job seekers and junior professors on the tenure track, written by a professor of English at Pennsylvania State University. The appendix includes samples of application letters and other documents that job seekers must submit when applying for a faculty position.

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To Improve the Academy: Resources for Student, Faculty and Institutional Development, Vol. 22 (Anker Publishing Company, 2004), edited by Catherine M. Wehlburg and Sandra Chadwick-Blossey. ISBN: 1-882982-65-7.

This volume for faculty members, administrators, and instructional development professionals features essays on topics such as redesigning a curriculum to improve student learning, providing support for adjunct faculty members and graduate student instructors, assessing student learning and the impact of faculty development, using peer evaluation to enhance learning, and implementing successful models for professional development.

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Tomorrow's Professor: Preparing for Careers in Science and Engineering (Wiley-IEEE Press, 1997) by Richard M. Reis. ISBN: 0780311361.

A must-read for graduate students, postdoctoral fellows, and junior professors seeking successful academic careers in science and engineering.

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Working Equal: Academic Couples as Collaborators (Falmer Press, 2001), by Elizabeth G. Creamer and associates. ISBN: 0-8153-3544-X.

This book presents case studies of academic couples who collaborate on scholarly projects and looks at how these couples have redefined their domestic roles to create environments that are conducive to mutual career satisfaction and success.

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Copyright © 2001 by The Chronicle of Higher Education

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