Why Do You Want To Work Here?
Why Do You Want To Work Here?
Why Do You Want To Work Here?
This question is obviously asking you to look forward to the future, so drawing up one
year, five year and ten year research plans is helpful before going into an interview. (If
you are completing a PhD and looking for your first job this might sound a little
excessive, but believe me, it will make you stand out and be taken seriously). They will
not just want to hear about the topics you wish to cover but will crucially be interested in
two other areas: research funding and your output (i.e. publications). As well as telling
them about your exciting projects, tell them how you're going to pay for them (which
grants you will apply for) and what published benefits there will be in concrete terms.
Aim high at this point; you don't want to sell yourself short. You can write that
monograph or get an article into a world-renowned journal. The scope of your ambition
will help to sell you as the ideal candidate here, so don't worry about sounding arrogant.
Good answer: in the next year I will be finishing up the revisions on my manuscript
for x book which is due for publication on x date. I have several other projects on the go
that I wish to pursue after that [give details]; if my funding applications to the x and y
grant bodies are successful I should be able to see those projects to publication by [give
date].'
4. What courses could you offer to teach?
Bad answer: I am so desperate for a job that I will teach anything you ask me to'.
You want to seem keen and flexible and show that you are happy to fit in with the
department's teaching requirements but they also want to hear about new courses that
you would like to offer. In order to answer this question you need to look at the
department's current undergraduate curriculum. That way you can be sure the courses
you have invented will fit in with what they offer now. So if the department already has a
course on Nazi Germany, do not propose to offer a new one. You have to be careful
here: do not let your creativity run away with you. If you do get the job, your new
colleagues might say I loved that course you proposed in your interview, can you run it
next year?'
Make sure you suggest something that you could feasibly teach, preferably based on
your previous experience. Think about whether you would offer it in the first, second or
third year, and briefly state what some of your teaching exercises and assessment
strategies might be. If you can make use of technology then mention that too.
Good answer: I would be happy to contribute to some of the existing courses you run,
such as x and y but I also have a few ideas of my own that I feel would appeal to
students in the x year of their education. [Describe the course] I feel that it would fit into
your curriculum particularly well because it complements your other courses in x field
but is unique because it covers an earlier time period or uses different resources
[examples].