Applying for Faculty Position: How long does it take for an initial response?

I recently applied to a handful of assistant/associate faculty positions in the midwest. I am curious as to the typical timeframe to possibly hear back from departments. Do they typically respond to all applicants to let them know if they are still being considered? Would it be appropriate to follow-up with the department director after 2 weeks to determine the status?

I am an early career (finishing up postdoc) professional so I am curious to know how this process works. Thank you in advance to those able to provide insight.

erg923

Regional Clinical Officer, Centene Corporation
Account on Hold 15+ Year Member Joined Apr 6, 2007 Messages 10,827 Reaction score 5,610

I recently applied to a handful of assistant/associate faculty positions in the midwest. I am curious as to the typical timeframe to possibly hear back from departments. Do they typically respond to all applicants to let them know if they are still being considered? Would it be appropriate to follow-up with the department director after 2 weeks to determine the status?

I am an early career (finishing up postdoc) professional so I am curious to know how this process works. Thank you in advance to those able to provide insight.


When was the deadline? Typically search committees do not contact applicants until after the deadline. After that, they typically contact the top 3 (or so) and let the 2-3 below that know that they may be in the running, but not the "first string", so to speak. Beyond that, they may or may not respond to your app, depending on how many applicants they have. I think sending an email 2-3 weeks after deadline would be fine.

Balmoral

Full Member
10+ Year Member Joined Mar 29, 2013 Messages 70 Reaction score 1

When was the deadline? Typically search committees do not contact applicants until after the deadline. After that, they typically contact the top 3 (or so) and let the 2-3 below that know that they may be in the running, but not the "first string", so to speak. Beyond that, they may or may not respond to your app, depending on how many applicants they have. I think sending an email 2-3 weeks after deadline would be fine.


Thank you for the feedback. It has been a couple of weeks since the closing dates but there are a couple with "open until filled" which are vague.

Pragma

Neuropsychologist
Verified Member 10+ Year Member Psychologist Joined Dec 29, 2011 Messages 3,461 Reaction score 921

I don't think it always happens the way erg described it.

It varies a ton. I was on the market last year and had different experiences. The first thing to consider is the overall time of year. Right now is fairly late in the game as a lot of schools do interviews in December/January to try to get the top applicants. So it is possible that these later openings might be unique.

I was contacted for interviews anywhere from 1 week after the deadline to 2 months after the deadline. At every place I interviewed at, they started with phone interviews for the short list (probably the top 5-10 people). Then they usually bring in 3 for campus interviews, give or take. One place took a whole month after the phone interview to invite me for a campus interview.

After going through the process successfully and being on the other end of it now, I can tell you that there are a ton of institutional factors that could delay notification. People are busy, committees have to meet, budgets still need to be negotiated with administration, etc. Then the waiting after your campus interviews is also variable. Those kinds of things can also delay offers after interviews. It is sort of a crapshoot.

There is actually a great wiki website for psychology jobs and forums on these topics specific to academia/psychology. You should check it out (can't post it here, but Google it).

Oh, and even though I am optimistic for you, some places will never contact you at all or will send an email or letter after they hire someone. The search process is not typically a transparent one and it is good to get a hobby while you wait.