PhDs at Work Podcast

Michelle Erickson, PhD
Podcast de PhDs at Work Podcast

PhDs at Work is a professional network and online resource for PhDs working across industries. Make new professional contacts. Gain insights on managing your career. Join us and network with your fellow PhDs at Work.

Episodios

  1. 03/11/2014

    PhDs 005: Job Search – with David Hardtke

    We chat with David Hardtke, Senior Engineeering Manager at LinkedIn, about data science, the job search, and the work he’s doing to bring the two together. QUOTES FROM DAVID “You don’t want to hire narrowly focused people that only want to do one thing for the rest of their career. You want people that have enough intellectual curiosity to want to do something else after a couple of years.” “We can use modern tools of data mining and machine learning to see what are the hidden patterns that predict success when looking and applying for a new job.” “Finding good people is not a database query. It takes some ingenuity.” “Sometimes you don’t want to take the most stable job. You want to take the job that makes you best for your next job.” “In data science, the models and the math – the stuff that we love – is the same, but we’re solving real-world problems.” “We innovate, we publish, we patent. Some of the fun stuff that you get to do when you’re an academic. But you can’t work on problems that take two years to solve, because there are demands placed on you by shareholders and public markets, so you have to pick problems that can be solved in six-month time scales , not two-year time scales.” LINKS & RESOURCES IceCube Telescope Finds High-Energy Neutrinos, Opens Up New Era in Astronomy Wired Dunning–Kruger Effect Hirable Like Me: Interviewers favor applicants who remind them of themselves Lauren Rivera The Startup of You: Adapt to the Future, Invest in Yourself, and Transform Your Career Reid Hoffman and Ben Casnocha Why Good People Can’t Get Jobs: The Skills Gap and What Companies Can Do About It Peter Cappelli GitHub Kaggle

    45 min
  2. 11/10/2014

    PhDs 004: Science and Democracy – with Pallavi Phartiyal

    Pallavi Phartiyal, Senior Analyst at the Union of Concerned Scientists, shares her thoughts on science-based careers in public policy and how scientific research and the sharing of information supports our democratic system. QUOTES FROM PALLAVI “There is a debate within the scientific community – it’s not a new debate, it’s happened over the course of centuries – which is, how should scientists engage or not engage in public policy and advocacy? And does that do something to the credibility they hold if they step out of their lab?” “Public policy and advocacy doesn’t have the luxury of the academic time frame. You have to be much more cognizant of everything that is playing out politically around you.” “What is the role of informed citizenry in making our system of governance a strong one? And how do we provide data to strengthen that relationship between the public and the people who govern them?” “Most of our founding fathers were citizen scientists. In fact, a lot of laws that they wrote were derived by thinking about Newtonian laws, for instance, the system of checks and balances.” “Science policy is a career which is not very well defined. A lot of opportunities that exist, you have to seek them out. There is no set way to get there.” LINKS & RESOURCES Union of Concerned Scientists The Science Network The Science Network Workshop Series Tips and Tools for Science Communicators

    48 min

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PhDs at Work is a professional network and online resource for PhDs working across industries. Make new professional contacts. Gain insights on managing your career. Join us and network with your fellow PhDs at Work.

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