Cracking
The Job Market
Physics
as a Career Choice
| The Road Ahead | Cracking the Job Market
How to use this page: If
this is your first visit to this page it is a good idea to read
the first three bullets completely through before you begin surfing
the links. The first bullet contains a description of the kinds
of pages you can search for career aids (with examples). The second
section provides a checklist of steps to take in the successful
career search, and the third section discusses marketing your
physics degree to employers.
Resources
to Get You Ready Professional organizations
maintain sites that have more specific content and information
directed at your particular field. Two good examples are the career
pages at the American
Institute of Physics and at the National
Academy of Sciences. For mathematics check AMS,
and for international information try Physicsweb
and PhysLink. Cornell (see
below) also has international
job search advice. Many
universities maintain web sites to help with career planning.
These are often lists of links to the sites where the information
can be found. These pages are the best way for you to get a broad
overview of what is available. Some comprehensive sites that illustrate
what is available are the Jobs
in Physics and Astronomy page at Sonoma State University,
one at Fresno
and one at Arizona.
Perhaps
the best practical information for the beginning career planner,
are the pages on career services at major Engineering schools.
Two excellent resources are the Cornell
career service center and Washington
state University. For particular links to Engineering disciplines
visit the college of Engineering of your choice. Finally you can
get personal help right here at the Career
Resource Center at BC. Also the book Careers
in Science and Engineering is available online. Organizing Your Career Planning
Each site linked above is full of information and
links to more information. It is easy to get overwhelmed with
too much information. You need to set out a plan for establishing
your career goals. The following steps will help you to focus
your information gathering toward specific goals. You may want
to start a checklist of where you are, or keep a notebook of the
resources you develop as you go along.
- Assess yourself: Visit sites that help you discover your
interests and abilities. Cornell,
the NAS
and Washington
state University have materials for this and you can visit
the BC Career Resources Center for similar materials. .
- Talk to your instructors. They know a side of you that you
cannot see.
- Begin considering your field of interest (see the Career
Chooice page)
- Look for sites that contain career planning references and
read through this information (Sonoma
has these).
- Consult the American Institute of Physics Carreer
Guide on reserve in the BC library.
- Read Careers
in Science and Engineering online.
The
next phase will be to acquire experience and to begin documenting
this in the form of a resume. Look in the sources above for
Finally
you will want to make contact with employers. Search your resources
for
- lists of employers (Cornell,
for "How to", all sites for resources, BC for employers
in state)
- Job
Fairs
- Jobs available
- Informational interviewing (AIP book in library, WSU,
Cornell,
)
- Making the initial contact
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Marketing
Your Degree A well prepared physics student
is an excellent problem solver with a broad physical background.
This means that you may be qualified to work in a variety of positions
that do not have "physics" in the job description. You
can find interesting work in a variety of organizations but you
may have to work a bit harder to find and secure these jobs than
someone with a more specialized degree (for example Computer Science
or Engineering). This additional work involves informing yourself
about the possibilities, and educating employers about your skills.
Informing yourself just means knowing that it
is possible to do many things with a physics degree and considering
what you might do as you acquire your education. Find out about
related fields, attend talks in your department and in related
deppartments. Learn about technology in industry. Computers are
central to data collection in physics so you may acquire skills
comparable to some CS majors as you complete your coursework.
If you examine the requirements for abachelors degree in mathematics
you may find only a slight difference between these requirements
and the courses you have taken. In Engineering you may have encountered
the same academic material as many engineers but at a more fundamental
level. You are not as fluent with particular problem solving methods,
but you have the background to create new methods that your engineering
peers may not have. So, you may be in a central
position, able to move in several directions. How do you capitalize
on this? The first piece of advice is do not jump at anything
that moves. If you entered physics out of interest, you may place
a primium on jobs that offer new chalenges, demand creativity,
or that allow you to indulge your curiosity. Be aware. There are
many jobs that require highly technical skills but that do
not offer much variety or demand creativity. The information
you gather about jobs should focus on these qualities. There are
jobs outside of physics that will suit you well but the task of
finding them will fall to you. Unlike fields like Engineering
or Computer science, they will not all appear in standard lists.
Educating the employer will be just as important. Many people
in the general population do not know what a physicist does (or
can do). A large fraction of human resources managers are indistinguishable
from the public in this respect. In many cases they will not even
pick up your physics resume unless "physics" is specifically
cited in the job description sent to them through company channels.
You can work at two levels to change the odds in your favor. First
try to educate the manager who files the request for a position
with Human Resources. Arrange informational interviews and use
this opportunity to gauge this persons knowledge about the physics
major. If the oppertunity arrises you can educate your interviewer
about the physics degree. Do not activly sell yourself during
this interview. You will violate a trust if you market your self
strongly in this setting, but it is perfectly fair to try to influence
what kind of positions are requested from Human Resources. The
second line of attack is the Human Resources people themselves.
Try to arrange a personal meeting with them. Describe your capabilities
and jobs you believe you are qualified for. The main
avenues that lead to employment in physics are contacts developed
through your instructors and employers, and by attending Job fairs.
The good news is that many of the larger corporations are well
informed about the physics degree and actively recruit physics
majors both at job fairs and through their Human Resources offices.
The Job Market; Choosing
a Field. In parallel with the activities
described above, you must choose a field for your first career.
This is a process that will stretch over several years and (probably)
be revised several times along the way. You need to find out what
is possible by talking to faculty and using resources like this
page, and you need to experience physics and mathematics in your
courses to see how they suit you. Your first
step is to find out what physicists do, as discussed on the career
choice page. But you also want to find out what
the market is like. There are two parts to this question:
Reviewing
the Jobs Available at the Sonoma
site, the AIP, or PhysLink. and Reviewing
statistics on recent graduates. See for example AIP,
Duke,
Cornell,
(click on Careers after Cornell and select your field of interest)
What About Careers in
Related Fields? At the AIP
and NAS home pages you can link
to fields related to physics. The Sonoma
page opens with links to careers in many related fields and you
can get information from the research interests page that is usually
part of the physics department an any university. A convenient
listing of physics graduate
programs is kept at Duke and provides a good place to start.
Advising Resources at
BC BC has a Career
Resource Center and the science division has a full-time science
advisor. Together with your physics instructors these resources
should form your primary source for evaluating your choices and
gathering information.
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Physics as a Career Choice | The Road Ahead | Cracking the Job Market