Abstract

Doctoral recipients in the biomedical sciences and STEM fields are showing increased interest in career opportunities beyond academic positions. While recent research has addressed the interests and preferences of doctoral trainees for non-academic careers, the strategies and resources that trainees use to prepare for a broad job market (non-academic) are poorly understood. The recent adaptation of the Social Cognitive Career Theory to explicitly highlight the interplay of contextual support mechanisms, individual career search efficacy, and self-adaptation of job search processes underscores the value of attention to this explicit career phase. Our research addresses the factors that affect the career search confidence and job search strategies of doctoral trainees with non-academic career interests and is based on nearly 900 respondents from an NIH-funded survey of doctoral students and postdoctoral fellows in the biomedical sciences at two U.S. universities. Using structural equation modeling, we find that trainees pursuing non-academic careers, and/or with low perceived program support for career goals, have lower career development and search process efficacy (CDSE), and receive different levels of support from their advisors/supervisors. We also find evidence of trainee adaptation driven by their career search efficacy, and not by career interests.

Highlights

  • There is a growing trend among doctoral trainees in the sciences to pursue careers outside of academia [1, 2, 3, 4]

  • Because career development typically involves the support of others, we explored within our structural equation modeling (SEM) models how doctoral advisors and other institutional support systems matter in this process

  • These results suggest that developing mechanisms that build the career development and search process efficacy (CDSE) of trainees with nonacademic career interests may have important outcomes, including providing the foundation for seeking and tailoring resources for one’s own career interests

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Summary

Introduction

There is a growing trend among doctoral trainees in the sciences to pursue careers outside of academia [1, 2, 3, 4]. Changes in the size of the PhD workforce and corresponding changes in the job market present a very different career landscape than in prior decades, with evidence of an increasing interest in careers beyond the professoriate [5]. A recent National Science Foundation (NSF) report on workforce trends among doctoral recipients shows continued decline in the academic employment rates in life sciences, physical sciences, and engineering, with a rising number of PhD recipients in the life sciences

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