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Post by unclekarl on Nov 3, 2011 15:19:00 GMT -5
One thing I've generally been noticing is that there seems to be a lack of state R1s listing assistant professor positions. These would be places with PhD programs which do not have large endowments (e.g., not a Michigan or Penn State) Is this just just an observation in my head, or a trend? If its true, is that a trend which is making the market tighter this year?
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Post by aaaaaa on Nov 4, 2011 23:13:34 GMT -5
Is it possible that you are just noticing them less? Maybe there are fewer in your area? Because as far as I can recall:
Alabama UGA colorado state Florida Indiana UIC iowa kansas maryland minnesota nebraska lincoln new mexico nc state cincinnati oregon state
are all hiring, some multiple positions. Granted, many of them are in criminology or public health, but still
On top of that, there are several state R2s hiring, like south florida, central florida, georgia state, IIT, and so on.
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Post by um on Nov 6, 2011 10:13:07 GMT -5
Just a note, IIT is a private R1, not a state R2.
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Carnegie Classifications
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Post by Carnegie Classifications on Nov 9, 2011 8:19:27 GMT -5
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Post by complete list on Nov 9, 2011 8:21:39 GMT -5
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Post by aaaaa on Nov 9, 2011 9:27:02 GMT -5
I was going by carnegie's actual R1/R2 distinction from the 1994 reports.
"doctoral comprehensive- very high research" is not the same classification as r1 was.
to be an R1: Award 50 or more doctoral degrees each year Receive annually $40 million or more in federal support
to be doctoral- very high research: 20 research doctorates a year factor analysis of R&D expenditures and other types, but no federal funding requirements.
That is why there were 59 r1s in 1994, and there are 108 doctoral/very high research in 2005.
Granted, r1 is now mostly used informally, but still, the doctoral very high research now includes both r1s and r2s.
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