Nurture your science career with the new-look naturejobs.com

Over the past 12 years, we’ve worked hard to craft the Naturejobs website into an eminent career resource for scientists. In that time, with your help, we’ve become the largest dedicated jobs board for the scientific community worldwide. That’s why we’re excited to share the new naturejobs.com with you.

The re-launched site offers a fresh new look and improved functionality that lets you search, save and apply for jobs even more quickly and easily. Here’s how the new site can help you with your job search and career development:

  • Apply for jobs faster by uploading your CV and cover letter to your account
  • Find exactly the right job using the advanced search option, now delivered via filters on the left-hand side of your search results
  • Get jobs that match your search keywords sent to you by email using  our improved job alert sign-up process
  • Easily find useful science career news and features in our archive by filtering articles by date, discipline, career stage and more
  • See the very latest updates on science careers and jobs news via the Naturejobs Twitter feed, which has been integrated into the site

We’ll shortly be reinstating the career toolkit section with improved and expanded content, and there’s also a new section dedicated to employers.

This is just the first phase of the new naturejobs.com – watch out for further new features and improvements to the site over the coming weeks.

We hope you find the changes helpful. If you have any questions about the new site, please get in touch via our contact us page.

Achieving gender equality in academic careers: Queen’s case study

Does your university make provision for maternity leave in its PhD studentships? Does it insist on female representation on all committees, or run a buddy system linking female postdocs to female PhD students? These are just some of the initiatives in place at Queen’s University Belfast, which was recently named as the lead university in the United Kingdom for tackling the unequal representation of women in science.

Queen’s has been given a ‘Silver University’ award by the Athena SWAN Charter, a recognition scheme that rewards UK universities committed to advancing and promoting the careers of women working in science, engineering and technology (SET). It’s the highest level of award currently held in the United Kingdom, and Queen’s is the only university with the accolade. Tom Millar, dean of the faculty of engineering and physical sciences, says the university’s gender-equality initiatives are “part and parcel” of the regular business of the institution. “It is this integration, or mainstreaming, of an equal opportunities focus that has made our efforts sustainable,” he says.

Other examples of initiatives at Queen’s include:

  • Personal mentoring programme for female postdocs and academic staff
  • Monitoring of processes at all stages of recruitment and career development
  • Regular surveys, courses and workshops on aspects of academic careers
  • Profiling of female scientists on websites and in print
  • Teaching-free semester for staff returning from maternity leave

Yvonne Galligan, director of Queen’s Gender Initiative — which has been the main driver of recent progress since it was established in 1999 — says the university’s ambition is to create a gender-equal environment for staff and students. “Winning the institutional Silver award was not an ‘event’,” she says. “It is [one] stage in a process.”

To achieve a Gold award, the highest possible, Millar and Galligan say the university must extend its gender-equality success to its arts and humanities departments and do more to tackle the loss of female academics at key career stages the so-called ‘leaky pipeline’. It’s a process that will take time — Peter Mason from Athena SWAN explains that to be awarded Gold, a university would need the majority of its departments to hold individual Gold departmental awards. Currently only the department of chemistry at the University of York is at this level.

While Queen’s works towards this goal, Millar is understandably proud of the university’s achievement to date: “It is recognition of the enormous contribution and commitment, for more than a decade, of many staff, academic and non-academic, male and female.”

How does Queen’s compare to your institution for gender equality? Could you see similar initiatives being implemented where you work? Let us know your thoughts.