A MFA Student's Guide to Job Hunting, composed by Phillip Gerard, University of North Carolina Wilmington.
By Philip Gerard, University of North Carolina at Wilmington
Finding the right position in a college or university takes preparation, skill, perseverance, common sense, and luck. What follows is some basic advice for that preparation, including:
Remember:
In your final year of the program, you will be asking your professors for letters of recommendation. As a rule, we are happy to do this--we want you to succeed at the next level of your ambition. But there is a protocol about how to get terrific letters from your faculty without abusing their time and good will.
The protocol also makes it more likely that the letters will get written and reach the people they need to reach in a timely fashion. So print this page of helpful guidelines to help you in your quest for great letters of recommendation:
The Department of Creative Writing routinely offers panel discussions conducted by qualified faculty on how to go about applying to graduate school and for academic jobs. If you are graduating with either of these ambitions, you should not consider these sessions optional-- they can make the difference between success or failure.
Curriculum Vitae--literally, Latin genitive singular for “course of life”—an account of one’s career; please see sample Vitae
The format can be varied slightly after item 4.
Note: Some institutions now interview at AWP.
No. 4, November 1999
You’ve applied for the academic jobs that seem attractive to you-- a good fit between your aspirations and the needs of the college or university that has advertised the position. After two or three months of anxious waiting, if you’re lucky, several have called you at the last minute and asked if you’ll be available for an interview at the MLA convention, which happens at the most inconvenient time of the year, between Christmas and New Year’s, usually at some far-flung city in an expensive hotel.
This is good news: it means you’ve made the first cut. On paper, you look attractive to them. And you-- confident in your experience and abilities-- have already made arrangements to attend. Sure, it’s a gamble, but what’s the alternative? You want to join the big leagues, so you have to prepared to make a calculated investment in your career that might or might not pay off.
The bad news is that each institution will be interviewing other people for the same job-- probably between half a dozen and twenty. Each of you will get about half an hour in a prescribed format. Some institutions seeking adjuncts or temporary replacements may interview in the MLA’s job center, but most tenure-track job interviews take place in hotel rooms or suites.
A typical format is for the chair of the committee to introduce the committee, make some general remarks about the requirements and advantages of the job, then allow members of the committee to ask a prearranged set of questions.
Some will designate a single member-- usually a chair or program director-- to meet you first in the lobby, brief you on the job requirements and the institution, then escort you to the interview room where you can concentrate on other matters. This is a humane approach, but unfortunately all too rare. More often, you’ll meet other candidates for the same job in the elevator, the hallway, even coming out of the hotel room as you’re going in. Don’t let it throw you.
Your goal is to impress the committee so much that they either a) invite you to campus for a more comprehensive interview among a short list of candidates, or b) offer you a job before you leave MLA. This is unusual, but it happens-- especially among less affluent institutions that want a commitment from you before you receive other offers, which they might be unable to match.
In that case, you’ll have about half an hour inside that interview room to form an opinion about where you want to live and work for the next several years. So pay attention.
A few basic precepts will take away some of the dread and allow you to present yourself in the best, most professional light possible.
After the interview, make notes about what went on and how impressed you were or weren’t with them. What did you do right or wrong? Jot down your unanswered questions. If they call tonight and offer you a job, will you take it?
If the interview went well, take yourself out to dinner. If you blew it, figure out what went wrong and try to do better next time. Take yourself out to dinner anyway. And remember: your impression may not be theirs. You may be passed over by the committee you were sure you impressed, or invited to campus by the one you were sure you didn’t.
That’s why committees don’t write poems.
In any event, you’ll now have your own MLA interview war stories to tell. And sooner or later, when you’re on the other side of the interview, you’ll remember to be as humane and considerate as your best interviewers.
Increasingly, search committees of creative writing programs are conducting preliminary interviews by telephone. Thus they save money and the ordeal of traveling during the holidays, when many would prefer to remain with their families. So if you are invited to interview by telephone, prepare for it as seriously as if you were traveling to MLA. The interview will most often be a conference call.
“Tell us about your work in progress?”
“Talk about your teaching philosophy—what do you do different at the graduate and undergraduate levels?”
“Why do you want to come to our program—what can you offer us, and what can we offer you?”
At this stage, the search committee has decided that on paper you are qualified for the position; the MLA or telephone interview has put you on a short list of probably between two and five finalists who will be invited to campus.
Format: typically, you will be expected to do some combination of the following:
Most search committees will conduct their business in the professional manner described above, and most campus visits are set up more or less along the lines described. But there are some things to beware of:
CASPER Q. GATSBY
Home address: 1966 Bubblecuffer St. Telephone: 555.555.1234
New Novel, VT 12345 Fax: 555.555.1235
E-mail: gatsby@westegg.com
Education: MFA in Creative Writing, University of North Carolina at Wilmington, 2002.
BA in English, Whatsamatta U., Frostbite Falls, MN, 1998
Teaching Experience: Teaching Assistant, UNCW (1999-2002): ENG 101-- College Writing and Reading; CRW 201-- Introduction to Creative Writing
CRW 207-- Introduction to Fiction Writing Teacher, New Novel High School (1996-1999): Tutored 10
students in Writing for Life remedial English program.
Publications: “A Horse of a Different Color” (short story), Bullwinkle Quarterly, Watsamatta U., Vol. 7, No. 12, Dec.1998, 19-26.
“Dudley Dooright and the Post-Colonialists” (essay), Culture Matters, Sam Hill State Univ., Pecos, TX,
Vol. 8, March 1999, 75-87.
Administrative Experience: Administrative assistant for summer writers workshop, UNCW (1999- 2000): Handled scheduling of writers.
Editorial: Intern at the UNCW Publishing Laboratory (2000-2002):
Critiqued project proposals, solicited manuscripts, copy-edited fiction, proofread galleys.
Honors: Graduate Student Teaching Award (May 2001). Robert H. Byington Leadership.
Academic Service: President, Graduate Student Association (2002). MFA student representative on Creative Writing Department MFA committee.
Agent: The Shakspeare Agency, 1 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10012.
Credentials: Complete dossier available from Associated Writing Programs
(AWP), George Mason University., Fairfax, VA 22030; 703.993.4301.
Personal: Born December 25, 1975, New Novel, VT.