Sentences with phrase «scientific labor market»

Not Your Father's Postdoc Beryl Benderly, 29 April 2005 In today's scientific labor market, just doing good science is no longer enough.
In this rough - draft article, she argues that the scientific labor market is broken, that the U.S. educational system actually produces too many qualified researchers for too few positions, and that a perverse funding structure perpetuates the problem, among other points.
The great lack in the American scientific labor market, he and other observers argue, is not top - flight technical talent but attractive career opportunities for the approximately 30,000 scientists and engineers — about 18,000 of them American citizens — who earn PhDs in the U.S. each year.
Based on these findings, any shortage in America's scientific labor market is «most likely a demand - side problem of STEM [science, technology, engineering, and mathematics] career opportunities that are less attractive than career opportunities in other fields» rather than a supply - side problem of too few Americans with scientific training, asserted Salzman in congressional testimony presented on 6 November before the House Committee on Science and Technology's Subcommittee on Technology and Innovation.
Recent reports from the National Academies see no break in the clouds over the scientific labor market
The Man Who Wasn't There 13 February 2009 What does the tale of Douglas Prasher, the protein, and the Nobel Prize reveal about the scientific labor market?
Shovel - Ready Science 6 March 2009 What does the stimulus windfall mean for the scientific labor market?
A Cloudy Crystal Ball 2 September 2005 Studies paint divergent pictures of the future for America's scientific labor market.
Not Your Father's Postdoc 29 April 2005 In today's scientific labor market, just doing good science is no longer enough.
What does the tale of Douglas Prasher, the protein, and the Nobel Prize reveal about the scientific labor market?
What bothers Matloff is not immigration or national origin, but waste, unfairness, and mendacity — all major elements, he believes, of today's technical and scientific labor markets.
Her major fields of study are scientific labor markets, gender differences in employment outcomes, wage inequality, scientific entrepreneurship, and children's educational attainments.

Not exact matches

«To get them to understand the labor market issues here, when they have just gained a foothold in this great scientific establishment of ours, is almost impossible,» he says.
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