IHPCSS Mentoring: Career Workshop
Elsa Gonsiorowski
June 22, 2022
Created: 2022-06-21 Tue 23:10
1.1. Schedule
15 min |
Career Paths Talk |
45 min |
Breakout Sessions 1.1 |
- Resume Review
- Presentation Skills
- Networking & Elevator Pitch
- Interview tips
1.2. Disclaimer
- This is a quick talk, with links to some other resources.
- You don't need to know exactly what you want to do, but it's good to have an idea of the possibilities.
- Talk to the staff here about their career experiences and see which options appeal to you.
- This makes a good topic for your one-on-one discussions
1.3. General Career Paths
2.1. Academia
- Teaching at a college or university
- Each institution has a difference emphasis on 3 areas:
- Teaching Responsibilities
- Research (winning grants and writing publications)
- Community Service (departmental roles, conference & journal organization)
- Some initial funding comes from the school, but then you must find more money
2.2. Academic Career Path (US)
titles may be different in different countries
- Post Doc (optional)
- Assistant Professor, tenure track
- Tenure
- Full Professor
2.3. Academia Pros
- You get to work with students through teaching and research
- You get to build your own lab
- Once you have tenure…
- You are "unfireable and almost rich"
- Can explore any research topic you want (if you can get funding)
- Long term career path and stability
2.4. Academia Cons
- You have to work with students, teaching whatever classes need to be taught
- Getting tenure is difficult
- You have to move to wherever the school is
2.5. How to Get Started
- Try teaching / being a teaching assistant
- Try mentoring undergraduates, new graduate students
- Talk to professors in your department
- Talk to Scott Callaghan, Tom Cheatham, Frank Jenko, Erik Lindahl, Danel Silver
3.1. Industry
- Beholden to customers, must create products to sell
- Can work on government contracts / grants
3.2. Industry Career Path
- Varies by scientific field & company
- Larger companies typically have well-defined career paths with a specific progression of job titles
- May look something like:
- Individual contributor
- Project lead
- Technical Expert
3.3. Industry Pros
- Pay is usually higher than academia
- Company perks: free food, stock options, bonuses, sabbaticals
- May have the freedom to work remotely or more options of where in world/country to work
- You work with/for the customer
- Higher turnover, you can have a more varied career and change roles every few years
3.4. Industry Cons
- You have to make a product / make a profit for the company
- Less freedom to do "pure" research
- You work with/for the customer
- Company culture may not have the best work/life balance
3.5. How to Get Started
- Look for summer internship programs
- Go to career fairs / recruiting sessions
- at your university
- at conferences
- Talk to Sahil Chhabra, Pawel Janowski
4.1. Supercomputer Center
- Could be associated with a University or Government Research lab
- Funding could depend on current political climate or vary depending on your current project
- Best of both academia and industry worlds:
- No required teaching responsibilities
- option to work with summer interns
- possibility to do HPC training sessions
- Understand basic research activities, such as publication and conference attendance
4.2. Supercomputer Center Career Path
many paths available, depending on role
- Individual contributor; Consultant/user support; Trainer
- Team Lead or Project Lead
- Management or Technical Expert
4.3. Supercomputer Center Pros
- Opportunity to do a specific role, such as user support or application development
- Opportunity to do "pure" research/get grants
- Some labs may have a "mission"
- No required teaching responsibilities
- Culture typically has good work/life balance
4.4. Supercomputer Center Cons
- Government bureaucracy
- Federal funding, not as many perks as industry
- Not as well paid
- Employees are typically there for a long time, some can become "Retired In Place"
- Career path may be limited, depending on size/needs of the center
4.5. How to Get Started
- Look for lab people in your research area, ask about an internship
- Look for summer internship programs
- Research if there are citizenship preferences for different labs
- Talk to Elsa Gonsiorowski (Government Lab), Weronika Filinger (Academic HPC Center), Ilya Zhukov (HPC Center)
6. Breakouts
- Resume Review
- Elsa Gonsiorowski
- Presentation Skills
- Ilya Zhukov
- Networking & Elevator Pitch
- Weronika Filinger
- Interview Tips
- Scott Callaghan