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What happens when you leave academia?
Leaving academia will open up a world of opportunities, intellectual challenges, and make you more engaged and energized with your life and work than you’ve ever felt in academia. Maybe academia is the only place you’ve every really worked as a professional, but you’re good at it and you enjoy it.
How do you tell your PI you are leaving?
How to Tell Your Advisor That You’re Leaving Academia
- Give enough notice.
- Have a research plan in place.
- Have a future plan in place.
- Don’t present your choice as a bad thing.
- Make sure they know you value your training.
How do you beat burnout in academia?
During school breaks, try to take vacations or staycations, where you truly give your mind time to rest.
- Make Time for Enjoyable Activities:
- Get Plenty of Physical Exercise:
- Get Outside:
- Make Time for Social Activities:
- Develop Good Relationships with Professors:
- Set Reasonable Goals:
- Avoid Procrastination:
Why do you want to transition from academia to industry?
Moving into industry is great – it offers stability, better pay, a good career progression, and an opportunity to put all the technical skills you picked up during research into practical use in a new context.
Why do you want to work in industry instead of academia?
Academia is highly research and discovery focused, and much research is done for the sake of learning, as opposed to clinical application. In contrast, “industry” work allows researchers to feel a sense of immediate impact on patient lives. Both workplaces have their own share of pressures and demands, as well.
How do I get back into academia?
How to return to academia from the industry
- Go part-time. In most cases, I’ve seen that people go to academia from the industry on a part-time basis.
- Volunteer in committees. In my field, most technical committees are made up of academics, practitioners, and government workers.
- Publish.
- Teach a course.
- Show up.
Is academia a crisis?
There is an evident crisis in academia. Certainly, you have seen the fallout from the furloughs and job cuts. Colleges and universities have cut 650,000 jobs. This represents a sharp decline of over 13 \% in higher education jobs since February 2020.