Wednesday, September 28, 2011

Tools for Finding Jobs Online

General Tips:

Set up search alerts on the sites below, join societies, and get on their mailing list

Summer is the best time to do a lot of legwork for job searching.

Most faculty job applications are due in October.

Postdocs come through more informal networking.


Regional Searches: Higher Education Recruitment Consortium

SoCalHerc.org

NorCalHerc.org

For other regions, google “Higher Education Recruitment Consortium”


General Psychology

APS under job opportunities tab (more academic): http://www.psychologicalscience.org/index.php/employment

APA Monitor (more clinical, some non-academic): http://www.apa.org/careers/index.aspx

Chronicle of Higher Education: http://chronicle.com/section/Jobs/61/


Subfields of Psychology

Social: http://www.spsp.org/student/career.htm

Cognitive: http://cognitivesciencesociety.org/employment_overview.html

Developmental: http://careers.srcd.org/

Neuro: http://www.sfn.org/neurojobs/default.aspx

Sensation & Perception: http://www.psychonomic.org/announcements.html

Behavior Analysis: http://www.abainternational.org/jobs/jobsIndex.asp


Conferences & their sponsoring organizations

Check the conferences you go to- most have job postings on their website


Resources at UCSD:

http://career.ucsd.edu/phd-and-masters-students/index.html

Port Triton: https://ucsd-csm.symplicity.com/students/(great stuff to explore in there, even if you can’t stand their workshops)


How to find interesting companies (which may or may not be hiring)

Vault.com: nonacademic, lots of details on job, interview process

Glassdoor.com: sortof like Facebook meets Yelp for companies

Indeed.com: meta site search, like Kayak

Monster.com: might as well… worked for a recent JDP student!


Networking: lots of internal hiring happens without public advertisement, and you want to get in on that pool, which also means being informed about upcoming opportunities. Real-life networking is critical, and can be supplemented with the resources below.

-linkedin

-academia.edu

-more…?

3 comments:

  1. Awesome post nice way of your posting. I like it.Get job from here..Psychology

    ReplyDelete
  2. I done PSY/SOC 373 Research Methods, and finding jobs. i have no experience. and searching some useful content related to it and also jobs option. i like your post.i have one option that help me a lot to finding jobs in such a regarding fields. hope it's help you.Psychology

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks for providing access for this jobs sites opening. I will visit each sites and hopefully to find a job that fits my qualification and get hired.

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    ReplyDelete

Best places to search for jobs

American Psychological Association has their own job search engine that is specifically geared to those of us with a Psychology background. You can search by location or keyword and narrow results via a number of variables. This is probably a good starting place for many of us. They also have some nice articles on career development that may prove useful.

Science Magazine Careers is yet another resource that may be a good starting place for some of us, especially those in Cognitive and Behavioral Neurosciences. In addition to the many postings, they have additional tools and tips that may be helpful to anybody.

The Chronicle of Higher Education is a well-known place for learning about the academic market, and they also have their own search engine. Most of the Chronicle is accessible online to non-subscribers. They even have a job alert service that you can sign up for!

Academic 360 links you directly to job postings at ~3000 participating universities. Academic 360 can aid in finding both academic and nonacademic job postings.

Higher Ed Jobs is one of the largest databases of open positions in higher education. For those who would like to focus more on teaching, this is a good place to start looking.

(Southern California) Higher Education Recruitment Consortium (HERC) is great if you're looking to stay in Southern California. HERC has a search engine that includes faculty and staff job listings specifically for member institutions in the region. This site is also particularly geared toward helping dual career couples.

SignOn San Diego's Career Section This site provides a lot of more general (but region-specific) information, including columns by local journalists relating to current employment issues, a listing of upcoming job fairs in the area, and tools for helping to make you a more appealing job applicant.

Braintrack and Academic Keys for Education If, on the other hand, you really want to get out of this place...these are two good resources for finding positions abroad!



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