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Faculty版 - 来单独发个贴 (转载) What Search Committees Wish You Knew
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话题: search话题: committees话题: your话题: committee话题: about
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看到好多同胞焦急等待和仔细分析committee的回复,这篇文章可能会有所借鉴。
这篇文章后的回复也很有帮助。
What Search Committees Wish You Knew
http://chronicle.com/article/What-Search-Committees-Wish/136399
January 2, 2013
What Search Committees Wish You Knew
By Allison M. Vaillancourt
Search committees are often assembled to ensure procedural fairness, to
provide different stakeholders with an opportunity to express their views,
and to give a nod to shared governance, which calls for collective decision
making on certain appointments. While faculty search committees tend to be
fairly homogenous, made up of academics in the same field as the new hire,
administrative search committees are often an odd amalgam of people with
varied expertise and often-competing views.
Understanding the dynamics at play within search committees and the
constraints under which they exist can help candidates navigate the hiring
process more effectively. Having served on my fair share of committees
inside and outside of academe, I thought I would let you in on their inner
workings and share a few things that search committees wish you knew, but
will never actually reveal:
Search committees have less power than people think.
Committees are typically assembled to offer guidance to the ultimate hiring
authority—the administrator to whom the lucky finalist will report. The
committee is often asked to forward three to five names to the dean, provost
, or president who will make the final decision.
To give themselves wiggle room, reduce embarrassment in the event the top
candidate declines the job, and ensure that search committees do not come to
believe that they have true decision-making power, hiring administrators
tend to request an unranked list that includes each candidate's strengths
and weaknesses. That means that impressing the search committee is important
, but it's not enough to secure you the job.
We often have no idea what we want.
A position announcement may contain detailed information about
responsibilities and qualifications, but members of the search committee may
not understand what the hiring authority wants, and we may even disagree
among ourselves about what we are looking for in the position.
That's especially true when the committee includes a mix of people from
different departments as well as alumni or members of the community. Strong
and confident candidates can use this confusion to their advantage by
creating a vision of what the job and the successful candidate should look
like. If you sense confusion, take control and share your bold ideas.
We resent being used as a facade for fairness.
Sadly, there are times when committees are used to make it appear that a
search is truly fair and open. In those cases, the hiring authority has
someone in mind and forms a committee only because it is an expectation or
institutional requirement.
Search committees tend to figure that out quickly and will often demonstrate
a sense of apathy when communicating with you. Remember, it's them, not you
, so don't take it personally. If you have a sense you aren't a serious
contender, you can bow out of the process or use an interview or a campus
visit as a learning experience or opportunity to meet new people.
Search committees want you to at least pretend this process is a not a
hassle.
Because we want to ensure that you are successful here, we have scheduled
you to meet with a wide range of people who want to weigh in on your
candidacy. That means: meeting after meeting, presentation after
presentation.
In addition to showing you around, we are testing your stamina and ability
to remain polite after the 17th person has asked you to explain your views
on community engagement. Eye rolling; saying that you have answered this
same question nine times so far today; responding with, "As I explained to
the last three groups," or heavy sighing will not be good for you. Act like
every question is shiny and new—and answer it accordingly.
You are a reflection of us.
You are certainly being judged when we bring you to the campus for
interviews, but how you are perceived will be a reflection of our competence
as a search committee. If you are brilliant, we will look brilliant. If you
turn out to be a dud, we will look stupid. We want you to wow everyone so
that we can take credit for discovering you.
We skimmed your résumé several weeks ago and can't remember the details
about your background.
Candidates put incredible effort into their résumés and CV's and often
believe that search committees have perused them carefully. Some committee
members certainly do, but not all of them. Even those who gave your
documents a careful read during the screening process have since forgotten
the details. While we probably recall where you are now and what you are
currently doing, it's likely we've forgotten your past roles, awards, and
accomplishments.
Given that, remember to artfully review your history as you answer our
questions. Say: "I encountered a similar situation during my tenure as
interim director of the libraries when I led the merger of two library teams
." Or, "While I've been in financial services for many years, I spent the
first part of my career coordinating the logistics of clinical research
projects, so I understand the dynamics of a health-sciences campus."
We want you to like us.
It's normal for candidates to feel uncomfortable or insecure during a search
process, but committee members are nervous as well. Will the candidate
express concerns about the quality of our students? Did the candidate
uncover that embarrassing little episode that brought press attention to our
campus last year? Will the candidate think we are yahoos when she discovers
there are no restaurants in town that serve Thai food or gelato?
Candidates who put us at ease by expressing admiration for the institution
and interest in the community will have an edge in the evaluation process.
We may need to be "fixed," but we don't want to hear that from you.
Every organization can do better, and search committees are well aware of
their institutions' gaps and areas of vulnerability—but we don't want you
to embarrass us by talking about how you can save us.
One of my colleagues, a woman known for her directness, recently spent two
days at what she perceived to be a "lower-tier" institution offering her
myriad recommendations for improving rankings, streamlining operations, and
enhancing the curriculum. She had done her research and proposed a brilliant
five-year plan for achieving the college's aspirations.
There was just one problem: This made people resent her. Had she engaged in
conversation about the institution's aspirations, asked questions about the
trouble spots, and expressed excitement about working together to achieve a
better future, she would have been their top choice. Instead, she issued a
manifesto and positioned herself as a bossy, know-it-all, institutional
savior.
We know all about you, but we don't want you to know all about us.
We have scoured the Web and our respective social and professional networks
trying to understand who you truly are. We know that you lettered in soccer
in high school, were criticized in an open forum for proposing to centralize
information-technology services, and that despite your claims that it would
be hard to leave your community, your house is actually up for sale. We
think we have figured you out.
If you appear to have Googled us too extensively, however, we will be
extraordinarily offended. If you dare to mention the names of our spouses or
note that our brothers were in the same fraternity, we may judge you to be
a creepy stalker.
You would be smart to do deep research on us—and then smarter still to keep
your mouth shut during your interview about the trivia you uncover.
Keeping the employment needs of your spouse or partner a secret until the
very end can wreck the whole process.
The need to secure employment for a significant other before accepting a new
position is a common challenge in academe. Regardless of whether your
partner would do better in an academic environment or in the larger
community, it can be uncomfortable to reveal that your potential relocation
hinges upon your partner's ability to find a suitable job. It can be
tempting to keep that a secret until the very end of the process and then
spring it on the hiring official as a condition for accepting the offer.
That rarely turns out well.
The earlier a search committee knows that it is important to identify career
prospects for your partner, the easier things will go for everyone. Noting
that your partner is excited about the potential move and would be
interested in exploring career options in (choose one: museum management,
pharmacy, plant sciences, or some other field) will provide the search
committee with the time and space to start talking to people who might be
able to put something together.
We want to understand your possible reservations.
An African-American colleague of mine was considering a position in a very
white community. While that made him a little uncomfortable for himself, he
was especially worried about what life would be like for his young children.
"I couldn't exactly ask the committee to round up some black people for me
after the interview," he said, "but it would have been nice to know if there
actually were any around."
Because he couldn't get a sense of what life would be like in that community
, he eventually turned down the offer. I urged him not to be so reticent the
next time about asking for what he needs. "If the response to the request
is not positive," I explained, "you'll learn something important." I am
regularly asked to connect candidates to people in my community who can
describe what it is like to live here, so I maintain a diverse list of
friends and colleagues who are happy to share their perspectives and life
experiences with candidates.
We sometimes wish candidates would put us both out of our misery. I once
served on a search committee that was very excited about a particular
candidate, but within his first hour with us, he and we realized that we had
made a terrible mistake in coming together. His vision didn't align with
ours, and we didn't "click" during the opening conversation.
As search-committee members, we longed to call a timeout and suggest that
our candidate find an earlier flight home, but good manners stopped us from
doing that. Instead, we took him from interview to interview and collected a
huge amount of feedback to confirm what we suspected within the first 30
minutes.
He grew more despondent as the day wore on, and we felt badly for him.
Mercifully, the day came to a close, but we still had a group dinner to
attend. I have never witnessed a candidate claiming to have a family
emergency or a migraine to get out of the search process early, but I'd like
to recommend it. There are times when it makes sense to set each party free.
You were truly our first choice, but the hiring administrator liked someone
better.
Feel like you clicked with the search committee? Looking forward to using
them as your brain trust when you land your new gig? Not so fast.
As noted earlier, search committees typically serve in advisory rather than
decision-making roles. Given that, they don't have the power to slot you
into the position in question. Search committees often bond with candidates
and feel genuine remorse when we are unsuccessful in making a case for their
hiring.
If you sensed that we really liked you, we really did. And we want you to
know that we are as disappointed as you are.
Allison M. Vaillancourt is vice president for human resources at the
University of Arizona, in Tucson. She is a regular blogger for The Chronicle
's On Hiring blog.
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