Post
by Murfreesboro » Wed Dec 11, 2024 10:23 pm
He has a PhD in math, so of course univ work is the top option. He taught at Vanderbilt (even won an award for it as a grad student), as well as Ohio State for a post-doc. But mainly he's focused on publishing and has gotten quite a bit in print, most notably perhaps in The Lancet, which is a very prestigious journal.
He is in a niche field, bio-math, which studies the math of the human body. His dissertation was on the math of rods and cones in the retina, the electrical impulses running through them, and how they accept/reject/are affected by drugs used to treat eye disease. I'm sure that's a gross oversimplification. But it's the best way I know to explain it. His work at Univ Chicago has been in the retinue of a prof he worked with at OSU who transferred to U of C. But their joint project concludes in a few weeks.
There's a lot of politics involved in univ hires. One problem my son has is that he's in a niche field, and some of the "pure" mathematicians look down on this hybrid work. Not every school has a position for it. Another issue is that universities have been obsessed in recent years with diversity hiring in STEM fields. They actually get more government grants if they hire women or people of color. So it's a disadvantage to my son that he's a red-headed, middle-American, straight male. He doesnt like to talk about this, because it sounds like sour grapes. But it's the truth. He's seen everyone who doesn't look like him land jobs.
He has friends in the pharmaceutical industry who say their companies are looking to hire people like him for remote work, so that may be his best bet. He'd be paid way more than he gets in academia, but any discoveries he might make would probably be credited to the company, not him. PhDs in math can also do very well on Wall Street, but he finds that type of math rather sterile.
I'm not really worried about him, because he's the most resilient person I've ever known, and he has remarkable perspective on his difficulties. He knows what he wants, and he knows his value as a human being is not determined by the academic world, which can be insane.