One of the best career options to explore after you've graduated with your Ph.D. is with postdoctoral fellow positions, depending on your area of specialization. If the degree you've gotten suits itself to academia, being a post doctorate fellow may be your next step.
Postdoctoral fellowship opportunities are quite rare, but they do exist and they have some distinct advantages over traditional postdoctoral work, depending on the direction you want to take your career in. However, there are some disadvantages too, and you should know about these before you decide whether or not a postdoctoral fellowship position is for you.
If this resource is not available to you, take heart; you can still look for postdoctoral fellow positions on the Internet. In addition, job sites list positions in just about every area, so you should be able to find a Post Graduate position in the location you want to be in as well as your particular area of specialization. Keep in mind, though, that even though these positions are quite plentiful, they're also highly competed for. Therefore, it's not a given that you'll get a position simply because you apply for it, but you do have many opportunities available to you.
In addition, especially if your area of expertise focuses a lot on research, you're going to have almost unlimited time to do research on your own when you would otherwise not have been able to if you took a postdoctoral fellowship position. Therefore, you may want to consider taking such a position if you're going to find this research time valuable.
Finally, this is one time in your career when your time is really going to be your own for the most part. You'll usually have much less responsibility and greater freedom than you will at any other time in your career. For this reason alone, it's worth considering a postdoctoral fellowship position, although of course the final choice is yours.
No comments:
Post a Comment