Job Market: should one hide their (young) age?How should one turn down academic job applicants?Does age matter to get a job/postdoc?Job Market in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI)Clarification needed: Job market paperHow should a job market candidate leverage his or her network?Job Market Cover Letter - Mention undergrad experiences?Job Market paper: what are the criteria?Statistics job marketIs the academic job market in developing / former Eastern Bloc countries welcoming towards young foreign researchers?Will “academic expert” for study website hurt me on the academic job market?
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Job Market: should one hide their (young) age?
How should one turn down academic job applicants?Does age matter to get a job/postdoc?Job Market in Human-Computer Interaction (HCI)Clarification needed: Job market paperHow should a job market candidate leverage his or her network?Job Market Cover Letter - Mention undergrad experiences?Job Market paper: what are the criteria?Statistics job marketIs the academic job market in developing / former Eastern Bloc countries welcoming towards young foreign researchers?Will “academic expert” for study website hurt me on the academic job market?
I am a 23 year old cis-woman in sociology. I entered college at 16 and grad school at 19. The program is in the US, so it is a five year program with a Masters along the way.
I have been reading a lot of advice about going on the academic job market (starting this year, ABD but with complete draft). Despite all my searching, there is one topic that I cannot find anything on: indicating or revealing one's age. I would never volunteer this information (like how women are especially aware not to reveal parental or marital status), but I am worried about accidentally dating myself with a comment. Would it be particularly bad? Would a committee be more impressed or wary? Any advice or insights would be appreciated.
job-search job age
New contributor
add a comment |
I am a 23 year old cis-woman in sociology. I entered college at 16 and grad school at 19. The program is in the US, so it is a five year program with a Masters along the way.
I have been reading a lot of advice about going on the academic job market (starting this year, ABD but with complete draft). Despite all my searching, there is one topic that I cannot find anything on: indicating or revealing one's age. I would never volunteer this information (like how women are especially aware not to reveal parental or marital status), but I am worried about accidentally dating myself with a comment. Would it be particularly bad? Would a committee be more impressed or wary? Any advice or insights would be appreciated.
job-search job age
New contributor
4
I'd be surprised to hear a comment that could reliable distinguish a 23 year old from a 27 year old.
– Azor Ahai
8 hours ago
1
Given the paucity of faculty under 40, I don’t think you have to worry about accidentally saying something that reveals your age. If for some reason it does come up I’d just say you went to college a little early, and I don’t think it’ll be a big issue.
– Noah Snyder
7 hours ago
add a comment |
I am a 23 year old cis-woman in sociology. I entered college at 16 and grad school at 19. The program is in the US, so it is a five year program with a Masters along the way.
I have been reading a lot of advice about going on the academic job market (starting this year, ABD but with complete draft). Despite all my searching, there is one topic that I cannot find anything on: indicating or revealing one's age. I would never volunteer this information (like how women are especially aware not to reveal parental or marital status), but I am worried about accidentally dating myself with a comment. Would it be particularly bad? Would a committee be more impressed or wary? Any advice or insights would be appreciated.
job-search job age
New contributor
I am a 23 year old cis-woman in sociology. I entered college at 16 and grad school at 19. The program is in the US, so it is a five year program with a Masters along the way.
I have been reading a lot of advice about going on the academic job market (starting this year, ABD but with complete draft). Despite all my searching, there is one topic that I cannot find anything on: indicating or revealing one's age. I would never volunteer this information (like how women are especially aware not to reveal parental or marital status), but I am worried about accidentally dating myself with a comment. Would it be particularly bad? Would a committee be more impressed or wary? Any advice or insights would be appreciated.
job-search job age
job-search job age
New contributor
New contributor
edited 5 hours ago
StrongBad♦
88.2k24219433
88.2k24219433
New contributor
asked 8 hours ago
AmeliaAmelia
311
311
New contributor
New contributor
4
I'd be surprised to hear a comment that could reliable distinguish a 23 year old from a 27 year old.
– Azor Ahai
8 hours ago
1
Given the paucity of faculty under 40, I don’t think you have to worry about accidentally saying something that reveals your age. If for some reason it does come up I’d just say you went to college a little early, and I don’t think it’ll be a big issue.
– Noah Snyder
7 hours ago
add a comment |
4
I'd be surprised to hear a comment that could reliable distinguish a 23 year old from a 27 year old.
– Azor Ahai
8 hours ago
1
Given the paucity of faculty under 40, I don’t think you have to worry about accidentally saying something that reveals your age. If for some reason it does come up I’d just say you went to college a little early, and I don’t think it’ll be a big issue.
– Noah Snyder
7 hours ago
4
4
I'd be surprised to hear a comment that could reliable distinguish a 23 year old from a 27 year old.
– Azor Ahai
8 hours ago
I'd be surprised to hear a comment that could reliable distinguish a 23 year old from a 27 year old.
– Azor Ahai
8 hours ago
1
1
Given the paucity of faculty under 40, I don’t think you have to worry about accidentally saying something that reveals your age. If for some reason it does come up I’d just say you went to college a little early, and I don’t think it’ll be a big issue.
– Noah Snyder
7 hours ago
Given the paucity of faculty under 40, I don’t think you have to worry about accidentally saying something that reveals your age. If for some reason it does come up I’d just say you went to college a little early, and I don’t think it’ll be a big issue.
– Noah Snyder
7 hours ago
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
If you have well regarded publications and some demonstration of teaching experience at the collegiate level, your age may not be of significant concern to hiring committees. If I was a 45 year old on the hiring committee, is there really that much of a difference to me between a 23 year old and a 27 year old? (Okay, yes, there could be a difference. But how much? Some of that difference would amount to life experiences like graduating college, experiences you already will have attained, just at an earlier date).
Long story short, hiring committees are used to hiring new colleagues that are "young" and fresh. Being 23, 24 years old is likely not a point of concern.
I will add this: Anecdotally, many of the people I have run into in academia that are very young for their academic age (e.g. 19 year olds getting a PhD) have not gained the soft skills necessary for actually being a college professor. You can have a PhD and still have no clue how to deal with the guy who's 5 years your senior being a discipline issue in class. I know that when I was a graduate student in my early 20s and teaching classes, some students took advantage of my being very young. This is not to say this is your case. As long as you can demonstrate that you can be a mature instructor of a college class (letters of recommend and teaching ratings can speak to that), you will be fine. (And frankly, at 23, 24 years of age, you should be fine). Being a mature teacher is something that every hiring committee will look for anyway.
Really well put and helpful, thank you, Vladhagen!
– Amelia
5 hours ago
add a comment |
I would suggests you out the years you attended college and grad school, or at least the years you obtained your degree, on your application. This is pretty standard in the US. From this along with the assumption you started college at 18, people will potentially think you are 2-3 years older than you are. Starting college at 16 is rare, but not all that impressive. The same with finishing in 3 years. So there is nothing really to brag about.
Given the gender bias that exists in academia, being perceived as older at your age is probably better. I wouldn't suggest you go out of your way to point out that you are young, but I also wouldn't worry about it.
add a comment |
Personally I doubt it is a big deal.
Like others: difference between 23 and 27 is minimal. If anything, perhaps it's a mild positive in that you are precocious.
Your resume normally won't have your age on it. Perhaps applications may have a birthdate. If so, just fill it in. Don't volunteer or bring it up in interviews as that might seem immature. But I would not refuse to answer the question if asked, either.
I would avoid dating yourself or saying things that are seen as immature (e.g. parents taking care of car insurance).
This advice would be different for a job changing mid-level professional who is 40 but looks younger. In that case, being perceived as still moldable and growable is helpful. (Not saying this is true...just the world we live in, in terms of how companies/people react.)
New contributor
add a comment |
I think you should use it as a way to promote your achievements.
In my case, which is slightly different, I might write in a job application something like
I published X papers from my PhD, while completing it at a younger
age than 99% of US science PhDs (reference to NSF Survey of Earned Doctorates).
This shows I am very productive.
Keep in mind the typical age at which a PhD is attained varies by country and discipline. Note that I did not mention my current age (20 when I got a Bachelors, 25 for PhD, much older now...) because that is not relevant.
In any case, there is no need to worry about your age. Some institutions prefer to hire younger faculty because they are cheaper. Others will only hire faculty who are already famous (and therefore older), in which case new PhDs do not have a chance anyway.
add a comment |
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4 Answers
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4 Answers
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active
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votes
If you have well regarded publications and some demonstration of teaching experience at the collegiate level, your age may not be of significant concern to hiring committees. If I was a 45 year old on the hiring committee, is there really that much of a difference to me between a 23 year old and a 27 year old? (Okay, yes, there could be a difference. But how much? Some of that difference would amount to life experiences like graduating college, experiences you already will have attained, just at an earlier date).
Long story short, hiring committees are used to hiring new colleagues that are "young" and fresh. Being 23, 24 years old is likely not a point of concern.
I will add this: Anecdotally, many of the people I have run into in academia that are very young for their academic age (e.g. 19 year olds getting a PhD) have not gained the soft skills necessary for actually being a college professor. You can have a PhD and still have no clue how to deal with the guy who's 5 years your senior being a discipline issue in class. I know that when I was a graduate student in my early 20s and teaching classes, some students took advantage of my being very young. This is not to say this is your case. As long as you can demonstrate that you can be a mature instructor of a college class (letters of recommend and teaching ratings can speak to that), you will be fine. (And frankly, at 23, 24 years of age, you should be fine). Being a mature teacher is something that every hiring committee will look for anyway.
Really well put and helpful, thank you, Vladhagen!
– Amelia
5 hours ago
add a comment |
If you have well regarded publications and some demonstration of teaching experience at the collegiate level, your age may not be of significant concern to hiring committees. If I was a 45 year old on the hiring committee, is there really that much of a difference to me between a 23 year old and a 27 year old? (Okay, yes, there could be a difference. But how much? Some of that difference would amount to life experiences like graduating college, experiences you already will have attained, just at an earlier date).
Long story short, hiring committees are used to hiring new colleagues that are "young" and fresh. Being 23, 24 years old is likely not a point of concern.
I will add this: Anecdotally, many of the people I have run into in academia that are very young for their academic age (e.g. 19 year olds getting a PhD) have not gained the soft skills necessary for actually being a college professor. You can have a PhD and still have no clue how to deal with the guy who's 5 years your senior being a discipline issue in class. I know that when I was a graduate student in my early 20s and teaching classes, some students took advantage of my being very young. This is not to say this is your case. As long as you can demonstrate that you can be a mature instructor of a college class (letters of recommend and teaching ratings can speak to that), you will be fine. (And frankly, at 23, 24 years of age, you should be fine). Being a mature teacher is something that every hiring committee will look for anyway.
Really well put and helpful, thank you, Vladhagen!
– Amelia
5 hours ago
add a comment |
If you have well regarded publications and some demonstration of teaching experience at the collegiate level, your age may not be of significant concern to hiring committees. If I was a 45 year old on the hiring committee, is there really that much of a difference to me between a 23 year old and a 27 year old? (Okay, yes, there could be a difference. But how much? Some of that difference would amount to life experiences like graduating college, experiences you already will have attained, just at an earlier date).
Long story short, hiring committees are used to hiring new colleagues that are "young" and fresh. Being 23, 24 years old is likely not a point of concern.
I will add this: Anecdotally, many of the people I have run into in academia that are very young for their academic age (e.g. 19 year olds getting a PhD) have not gained the soft skills necessary for actually being a college professor. You can have a PhD and still have no clue how to deal with the guy who's 5 years your senior being a discipline issue in class. I know that when I was a graduate student in my early 20s and teaching classes, some students took advantage of my being very young. This is not to say this is your case. As long as you can demonstrate that you can be a mature instructor of a college class (letters of recommend and teaching ratings can speak to that), you will be fine. (And frankly, at 23, 24 years of age, you should be fine). Being a mature teacher is something that every hiring committee will look for anyway.
If you have well regarded publications and some demonstration of teaching experience at the collegiate level, your age may not be of significant concern to hiring committees. If I was a 45 year old on the hiring committee, is there really that much of a difference to me between a 23 year old and a 27 year old? (Okay, yes, there could be a difference. But how much? Some of that difference would amount to life experiences like graduating college, experiences you already will have attained, just at an earlier date).
Long story short, hiring committees are used to hiring new colleagues that are "young" and fresh. Being 23, 24 years old is likely not a point of concern.
I will add this: Anecdotally, many of the people I have run into in academia that are very young for their academic age (e.g. 19 year olds getting a PhD) have not gained the soft skills necessary for actually being a college professor. You can have a PhD and still have no clue how to deal with the guy who's 5 years your senior being a discipline issue in class. I know that when I was a graduate student in my early 20s and teaching classes, some students took advantage of my being very young. This is not to say this is your case. As long as you can demonstrate that you can be a mature instructor of a college class (letters of recommend and teaching ratings can speak to that), you will be fine. (And frankly, at 23, 24 years of age, you should be fine). Being a mature teacher is something that every hiring committee will look for anyway.
answered 7 hours ago
VladhagenVladhagen
11.5k54066
11.5k54066
Really well put and helpful, thank you, Vladhagen!
– Amelia
5 hours ago
add a comment |
Really well put and helpful, thank you, Vladhagen!
– Amelia
5 hours ago
Really well put and helpful, thank you, Vladhagen!
– Amelia
5 hours ago
Really well put and helpful, thank you, Vladhagen!
– Amelia
5 hours ago
add a comment |
I would suggests you out the years you attended college and grad school, or at least the years you obtained your degree, on your application. This is pretty standard in the US. From this along with the assumption you started college at 18, people will potentially think you are 2-3 years older than you are. Starting college at 16 is rare, but not all that impressive. The same with finishing in 3 years. So there is nothing really to brag about.
Given the gender bias that exists in academia, being perceived as older at your age is probably better. I wouldn't suggest you go out of your way to point out that you are young, but I also wouldn't worry about it.
add a comment |
I would suggests you out the years you attended college and grad school, or at least the years you obtained your degree, on your application. This is pretty standard in the US. From this along with the assumption you started college at 18, people will potentially think you are 2-3 years older than you are. Starting college at 16 is rare, but not all that impressive. The same with finishing in 3 years. So there is nothing really to brag about.
Given the gender bias that exists in academia, being perceived as older at your age is probably better. I wouldn't suggest you go out of your way to point out that you are young, but I also wouldn't worry about it.
add a comment |
I would suggests you out the years you attended college and grad school, or at least the years you obtained your degree, on your application. This is pretty standard in the US. From this along with the assumption you started college at 18, people will potentially think you are 2-3 years older than you are. Starting college at 16 is rare, but not all that impressive. The same with finishing in 3 years. So there is nothing really to brag about.
Given the gender bias that exists in academia, being perceived as older at your age is probably better. I wouldn't suggest you go out of your way to point out that you are young, but I also wouldn't worry about it.
I would suggests you out the years you attended college and grad school, or at least the years you obtained your degree, on your application. This is pretty standard in the US. From this along with the assumption you started college at 18, people will potentially think you are 2-3 years older than you are. Starting college at 16 is rare, but not all that impressive. The same with finishing in 3 years. So there is nothing really to brag about.
Given the gender bias that exists in academia, being perceived as older at your age is probably better. I wouldn't suggest you go out of your way to point out that you are young, but I also wouldn't worry about it.
answered 5 hours ago
StrongBad♦StrongBad
88.2k24219433
88.2k24219433
add a comment |
add a comment |
Personally I doubt it is a big deal.
Like others: difference between 23 and 27 is minimal. If anything, perhaps it's a mild positive in that you are precocious.
Your resume normally won't have your age on it. Perhaps applications may have a birthdate. If so, just fill it in. Don't volunteer or bring it up in interviews as that might seem immature. But I would not refuse to answer the question if asked, either.
I would avoid dating yourself or saying things that are seen as immature (e.g. parents taking care of car insurance).
This advice would be different for a job changing mid-level professional who is 40 but looks younger. In that case, being perceived as still moldable and growable is helpful. (Not saying this is true...just the world we live in, in terms of how companies/people react.)
New contributor
add a comment |
Personally I doubt it is a big deal.
Like others: difference between 23 and 27 is minimal. If anything, perhaps it's a mild positive in that you are precocious.
Your resume normally won't have your age on it. Perhaps applications may have a birthdate. If so, just fill it in. Don't volunteer or bring it up in interviews as that might seem immature. But I would not refuse to answer the question if asked, either.
I would avoid dating yourself or saying things that are seen as immature (e.g. parents taking care of car insurance).
This advice would be different for a job changing mid-level professional who is 40 but looks younger. In that case, being perceived as still moldable and growable is helpful. (Not saying this is true...just the world we live in, in terms of how companies/people react.)
New contributor
add a comment |
Personally I doubt it is a big deal.
Like others: difference between 23 and 27 is minimal. If anything, perhaps it's a mild positive in that you are precocious.
Your resume normally won't have your age on it. Perhaps applications may have a birthdate. If so, just fill it in. Don't volunteer or bring it up in interviews as that might seem immature. But I would not refuse to answer the question if asked, either.
I would avoid dating yourself or saying things that are seen as immature (e.g. parents taking care of car insurance).
This advice would be different for a job changing mid-level professional who is 40 but looks younger. In that case, being perceived as still moldable and growable is helpful. (Not saying this is true...just the world we live in, in terms of how companies/people react.)
New contributor
Personally I doubt it is a big deal.
Like others: difference between 23 and 27 is minimal. If anything, perhaps it's a mild positive in that you are precocious.
Your resume normally won't have your age on it. Perhaps applications may have a birthdate. If so, just fill it in. Don't volunteer or bring it up in interviews as that might seem immature. But I would not refuse to answer the question if asked, either.
I would avoid dating yourself or saying things that are seen as immature (e.g. parents taking care of car insurance).
This advice would be different for a job changing mid-level professional who is 40 but looks younger. In that case, being perceived as still moldable and growable is helpful. (Not saying this is true...just the world we live in, in terms of how companies/people react.)
New contributor
New contributor
answered 5 hours ago
guestguest
211
211
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
I think you should use it as a way to promote your achievements.
In my case, which is slightly different, I might write in a job application something like
I published X papers from my PhD, while completing it at a younger
age than 99% of US science PhDs (reference to NSF Survey of Earned Doctorates).
This shows I am very productive.
Keep in mind the typical age at which a PhD is attained varies by country and discipline. Note that I did not mention my current age (20 when I got a Bachelors, 25 for PhD, much older now...) because that is not relevant.
In any case, there is no need to worry about your age. Some institutions prefer to hire younger faculty because they are cheaper. Others will only hire faculty who are already famous (and therefore older), in which case new PhDs do not have a chance anyway.
add a comment |
I think you should use it as a way to promote your achievements.
In my case, which is slightly different, I might write in a job application something like
I published X papers from my PhD, while completing it at a younger
age than 99% of US science PhDs (reference to NSF Survey of Earned Doctorates).
This shows I am very productive.
Keep in mind the typical age at which a PhD is attained varies by country and discipline. Note that I did not mention my current age (20 when I got a Bachelors, 25 for PhD, much older now...) because that is not relevant.
In any case, there is no need to worry about your age. Some institutions prefer to hire younger faculty because they are cheaper. Others will only hire faculty who are already famous (and therefore older), in which case new PhDs do not have a chance anyway.
add a comment |
I think you should use it as a way to promote your achievements.
In my case, which is slightly different, I might write in a job application something like
I published X papers from my PhD, while completing it at a younger
age than 99% of US science PhDs (reference to NSF Survey of Earned Doctorates).
This shows I am very productive.
Keep in mind the typical age at which a PhD is attained varies by country and discipline. Note that I did not mention my current age (20 when I got a Bachelors, 25 for PhD, much older now...) because that is not relevant.
In any case, there is no need to worry about your age. Some institutions prefer to hire younger faculty because they are cheaper. Others will only hire faculty who are already famous (and therefore older), in which case new PhDs do not have a chance anyway.
I think you should use it as a way to promote your achievements.
In my case, which is slightly different, I might write in a job application something like
I published X papers from my PhD, while completing it at a younger
age than 99% of US science PhDs (reference to NSF Survey of Earned Doctorates).
This shows I am very productive.
Keep in mind the typical age at which a PhD is attained varies by country and discipline. Note that I did not mention my current age (20 when I got a Bachelors, 25 for PhD, much older now...) because that is not relevant.
In any case, there is no need to worry about your age. Some institutions prefer to hire younger faculty because they are cheaper. Others will only hire faculty who are already famous (and therefore older), in which case new PhDs do not have a chance anyway.
answered 5 hours ago
Anonymous PhysicistAnonymous Physicist
21.7k84488
21.7k84488
add a comment |
add a comment |
Amelia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Amelia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Amelia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
Amelia is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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4
I'd be surprised to hear a comment that could reliable distinguish a 23 year old from a 27 year old.
– Azor Ahai
8 hours ago
1
Given the paucity of faculty under 40, I don’t think you have to worry about accidentally saying something that reveals your age. If for some reason it does come up I’d just say you went to college a little early, and I don’t think it’ll be a big issue.
– Noah Snyder
7 hours ago