[Plsgs] FW: Event Invitation – Aug. 29: Seven Keys to Finding and Obtaining the Right Postdoc
Lambert, Georgina M - (glambert)
glambert at email.arizona.edu
Thu Aug 16 10:43:05 MST 2018
The Office of Fellowships and Community Engagement, Postdoctoral Affairs, and the Graduate Center invite your graduate students to attend our upcoming panel, “Seven Keys to Finding and Obtaining the Right Postdoc.”
We encourage your students to take advantage of this opportunity to hear from UA postdoctoral scholars about how they found their current positions and what they advise students to look for when choosing the right postdoctoral position. Students are encouraged to attend in person; however, an online option will also be available.
Seven Keys to Finding and Obtaining the Right Postdoc
Learn about finding and applying to postdocs from current postdocs here at the UA. Room size is limited but the session will also be available online.
Wednesday, August 29 from 12:00 – 1:00 in ENR2 S215, please RSVP <https://grad.arizona.edu/ofce/seven-keys-finding-right-postdoc>
Panelists
Sarah Richman recently received her Ph.D. in Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Arizona and will begin a postdoc at University of Nevada, Reno in September 2018. Fresh off the postdoc application process, she successfully (and unsuccessfully) applied for positions in national fellowship competitions and PI-funded job postings. She hopes sharing her experiences will be helpful for other Ph.D. students navigating the postdoc process.
Viktoriia Babicheva received her Ph.D. in Photonics Engineering from the Technical University of Denmark. During her postdoctoral experience, she worked at Purdue University and the Georgia State University in the field of nano-optics, nanophotonics, and materials for optoelectronics. Currently, she is a postdoc at the College of Optical Sciences at the University of Arizona.
Fernando Rios is currently the Research Data Management Specialist at the University of Arizona Library. He focuses on supporting academic research in the areas of data management planning, research workflows, reproducibility, data and software curation, archiving and sharing, and open science. Formerly, he was a postdoctoral fellow in the Data Management Services group at Johns Hopkins University, investigating issues around software preservation to support research reproducibility and reuse. Rio received his Ph.D. in Geography and his BS and MS in computational science focusing on physics and hydrogeology respectively.
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