The first five posts in this series examined how hiring committees read and evaluate CVs, cover letters, research statements, teaching statements, and diversity statements. Before we move on to two other subjects that I suspect a lot of job-candidates would like to hear from search committees on–first-round interviews and on-campus visits–I'd like to wrap up our discussion of dossier materials by asking search committees about writing samples and letters of recommendation. Today's post will be on writing samples.
Obviously, search committees members are presumably looking for writing samples that bear all of the hallmarks of a good philosophy paper: clarity, originality, soundness of argumentation, etc. But, which of things do they prioritize over others? Does it help candidates if their sample is on a hot topic in the field, or does that make them less likely to distinguish themselves from other candidates (who may submit samples on the same topic)? And, are there are any less obvious things that search committees are looking for in a good writing sample? For example, are search committee members at teaching-focused institutions particularly interested in work that they think might interest their undergraduate students? Finally, how much weight do search committees place on the writing sample? Does this differ for different types of jobs (e.g., R1s vs. SLACs vs. CC's)? Is there anything else that you'd like candidates to know (e.g., about what comes off particularly well or poorly in a writing sample)?
Really curious to hear your answers! Next time, we'll wrap up our discussion of dossiers by examining letters of recommendation, before moving onto Zoom interviews and various components of on-campus visits.
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