Why not make the first stage of the application process (for a lectureship/postdoc, etc) a simple CV review?
Once your long list is decided, you can then request a letter of application and further materials.
This will save me, you and basically everyone in the process a huge amount of time.
Sorry, what's that, you think that's not a good idea? You don't like this idea because you enjoy [bleeping] wasting my [bleeping] time and energy on long pointless applications?
Fair enough. I understand. It's not your fault that you feel the need to "judge" 100+ application letters by spending 30 seconds on each one to make yourself feel special and important.
Kind [bleeping] regards,
Dr. disillusioned with this ridiculous charade that is academia
OK
1) there are HR rules to ensure compliance with equal opportunities legislation - that means some of the stuff is needed to ensure equality of treatment. Those annoying online forms for example - that's HR.
2) Most of the candidates applying have very similar cvs. A covering letter allows you space to make a case for why your publications have merit etc, and also most importantly gives a sense for the committee of whether you have a research strategy moving forward, and whether you have a clue about the expectations of the role.
I am a member of staff and recently served on a selection committee and I can assure you that if you are a competitive candidate then that letter will be read. An average UK lectureship in my social science discipline will get c.120 applications. Maybe 50% will be uncompetitive as they lack a completed PhD and/or REFable publications (i.e. a university press book or articles in top quartile journals - my employer's expectations) and so are easily knocked out. The other 50% do have those things but largely have very similar cvs, so that's when we read the cover letters / statements carefully to look for the things I mentioned in my last post. We cannot waste time interviewing someone who can't articulate where their research is going next for example. It would lengthen the timeline of a job application process considerably to only demand a cover letter after an initial sift, which given we are normally working to a tight timeline is tricky, and would open up all sorts of cans of worms about fairness, I suspect. What do you do if a really good candidate is on holiday and so misses the cover letter deadline for example? It's easier if there's one deadline for everything.
If you want to see a real waste of time, look at the North American system and at what they demand applicants for academic jobs send in. I applied for a job in the US that wanted a cv, cover letter, three writing samples, a teaching statement, a research statement, three reference letters (sent separately by each referee in a particular format), transcripts from all degrees, certified copies of my degree certificates and two equal opps forms, all sent hard copy.
First - everything I say applies to the UK and to research-intensive universities.
@ literarytheorist - sorry you're unemployed and not having much luck with your applications. It's horrible and if it's any consolation many people who have got academic jobs in the last decade have been there. I certainly have. The academic job market has been dire for a long time now.
@ Dunham internships and marks don't count - they don't say anything about someone's ability to make a good academic. So long as you have some teaching experience, it's really publications and research income for those a little further out from the PhD that get you longlisted, What I mean about very similar is that people are all trying to publish in similar places and chasing the same grants, and so you argue about whether a Marie Curie or a Leverhulme postdoc fellowship is more impressive, or whether a minor difference in impact factor makes one person's article stronger than another's. This is why the extra information in the cover letter / statement is useful.
@ both of you, you both agree that the hiring department should inconvenience itself so you don't need to write a cover letter. OK from my perspective there are some issues with this. 1) I get you're not interested in the fairness element, but legally that is really important. Universities don't want to get sued. 2) You don't seem to understand that here in the UK we operate on a tight schedule. Permission to advertise is maybe Feb, we need to interview by May at the latest, as most people we interview will need to give 3 months notice and we need them in September. We also need a senior faculty member on the panel - that really limits possible dates. Adding another stage makes it unviable timewise. 3) You need a cover letter to apply for a basic uni admin job (in my region more competitive than a lectureship) - what makes ECRs so special that it's a terrible burden for them?
To be honest, a lot of the frustrations being described in this thread concern things that are rife within recruitment in general, and not specific to academia. To give a couple of examples off the top of my head, I used to work in a field in which no academic qualification was necessary, but I would get jobs fairly easily (as would others) by having a degree - ie the shortlisting criteria were in practice more stringent than the ads suggested. Recently, my partner spent several days completing the most arduous application I have ever seen, and was later told she was not short-listed because we live 'in the wrong postcode area'. Recruitment is difficult and frustrating at the best of times and more so when you really need to find something. However, given that shortlisting can often seem to be done on a rather 'fuzzy' basis, I tend to see the annoying personal statement/cover letter as my chance to give it my best shot and possibly just hit the right note with the recruitment panel.
Dear all, long time reader, first time writer. I have felt compelled to register on this forum to lend my thoughts on this matter. As a seasoned academic at an RG university I dare say I find the situation alarming for early career researchers. I agree with the plan put forward above by LiteraryTheorist and Dunham and I shall pass this thread on to colleagues. It is slightly disappointing that the concerns of new academics are so easily dismissed by staff already in post. This may not be intentional, however the net effect appears to be very negative. Something can be done if one but tries.
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