Cargando…

An evidence-based evaluation of transferrable skills and job satisfaction for science PhDs

PhD recipients acquire discipline-specific knowledge and a range of relevant skills during their training in the life sciences, physical sciences, computational sciences, social sciences, and engineering. Empirically testing the applicability of these skills to various careers held by graduates will...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sinche, Melanie, Layton, Rebekah L., Brandt, Patrick D., O’Connell, Anna B., Hall, Joshua D., Freeman, Ashalla M., Harrell, Jessica R., Cook, Jeanette Gowen, Brennwald, Patrick J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5607200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28931079
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185023
_version_ 1783265246354341888
author Sinche, Melanie
Layton, Rebekah L.
Brandt, Patrick D.
O’Connell, Anna B.
Hall, Joshua D.
Freeman, Ashalla M.
Harrell, Jessica R.
Cook, Jeanette Gowen
Brennwald, Patrick J.
author_facet Sinche, Melanie
Layton, Rebekah L.
Brandt, Patrick D.
O’Connell, Anna B.
Hall, Joshua D.
Freeman, Ashalla M.
Harrell, Jessica R.
Cook, Jeanette Gowen
Brennwald, Patrick J.
author_sort Sinche, Melanie
collection PubMed
description PhD recipients acquire discipline-specific knowledge and a range of relevant skills during their training in the life sciences, physical sciences, computational sciences, social sciences, and engineering. Empirically testing the applicability of these skills to various careers held by graduates will help assess the value of current training models. This report details results of an Internet survey of science PhDs (n = 8099) who provided ratings for fifteen transferrable skills. Indeed, analyses indicated that doctoral training develops these transferrable skills, crucial to success in a wide range of careers including research-intensive (RI) and non-research-intensive (NRI) careers. Notably, the vast majority of skills were transferrable across both RI and NRI careers, with the exception of three skills that favored RI careers (creativity/innovative thinking, career planning and awareness skills, and ability to work with people outside the organization) and three skills that favored NRI careers (time management, ability to learn quickly, ability to manage a project). High overall rankings suggested that graduate training imparted transferrable skills broadly. Nonetheless, we identified gaps between career skills needed and skills developed in PhD training that suggest potential areas for improvement in graduate training. Therefore, we suggest that a two-pronged approach is crucial to maximizing existing career opportunities for PhDs and developing a career-conscious training model: 1) encouraging trainees to recognize their existing individual skill sets, and 2) increasing resources and programmatic interventions at the institutional level to address skill gaps. Lastly, comparison of job satisfaction ratings between PhD-trained employees in both career categories indicated that those in NRI career paths were just as satisfied in their work as their RI counterparts. We conclude that PhD training prepares graduates for a broad range of satisfying careers, potentially more than trainees and program leaders currently appreciate.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-5607200
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2017
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-56072002017-10-09 An evidence-based evaluation of transferrable skills and job satisfaction for science PhDs Sinche, Melanie Layton, Rebekah L. Brandt, Patrick D. O’Connell, Anna B. Hall, Joshua D. Freeman, Ashalla M. Harrell, Jessica R. Cook, Jeanette Gowen Brennwald, Patrick J. PLoS One Research Article PhD recipients acquire discipline-specific knowledge and a range of relevant skills during their training in the life sciences, physical sciences, computational sciences, social sciences, and engineering. Empirically testing the applicability of these skills to various careers held by graduates will help assess the value of current training models. This report details results of an Internet survey of science PhDs (n = 8099) who provided ratings for fifteen transferrable skills. Indeed, analyses indicated that doctoral training develops these transferrable skills, crucial to success in a wide range of careers including research-intensive (RI) and non-research-intensive (NRI) careers. Notably, the vast majority of skills were transferrable across both RI and NRI careers, with the exception of three skills that favored RI careers (creativity/innovative thinking, career planning and awareness skills, and ability to work with people outside the organization) and three skills that favored NRI careers (time management, ability to learn quickly, ability to manage a project). High overall rankings suggested that graduate training imparted transferrable skills broadly. Nonetheless, we identified gaps between career skills needed and skills developed in PhD training that suggest potential areas for improvement in graduate training. Therefore, we suggest that a two-pronged approach is crucial to maximizing existing career opportunities for PhDs and developing a career-conscious training model: 1) encouraging trainees to recognize their existing individual skill sets, and 2) increasing resources and programmatic interventions at the institutional level to address skill gaps. Lastly, comparison of job satisfaction ratings between PhD-trained employees in both career categories indicated that those in NRI career paths were just as satisfied in their work as their RI counterparts. We conclude that PhD training prepares graduates for a broad range of satisfying careers, potentially more than trainees and program leaders currently appreciate. Public Library of Science 2017-09-20 /pmc/articles/PMC5607200/ /pubmed/28931079 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185023 Text en © 2017 Sinche et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Sinche, Melanie
Layton, Rebekah L.
Brandt, Patrick D.
O’Connell, Anna B.
Hall, Joshua D.
Freeman, Ashalla M.
Harrell, Jessica R.
Cook, Jeanette Gowen
Brennwald, Patrick J.
An evidence-based evaluation of transferrable skills and job satisfaction for science PhDs
title An evidence-based evaluation of transferrable skills and job satisfaction for science PhDs
title_full An evidence-based evaluation of transferrable skills and job satisfaction for science PhDs
title_fullStr An evidence-based evaluation of transferrable skills and job satisfaction for science PhDs
title_full_unstemmed An evidence-based evaluation of transferrable skills and job satisfaction for science PhDs
title_short An evidence-based evaluation of transferrable skills and job satisfaction for science PhDs
title_sort evidence-based evaluation of transferrable skills and job satisfaction for science phds
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5607200/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28931079
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185023
work_keys_str_mv AT sinchemelanie anevidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT laytonrebekahl anevidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT brandtpatrickd anevidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT oconnellannab anevidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT halljoshuad anevidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT freemanashallam anevidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT harrelljessicar anevidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT cookjeanettegowen anevidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT brennwaldpatrickj anevidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT sinchemelanie evidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT laytonrebekahl evidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT brandtpatrickd evidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT oconnellannab evidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT halljoshuad evidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT freemanashallam evidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT harrelljessicar evidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT cookjeanettegowen evidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds
AT brennwaldpatrickj evidencebasedevaluationoftransferrableskillsandjobsatisfactionforsciencephds