In our January “how can we help you?” thread, a reader writes:
I have a question about trying to move from one institution to another as a person with a permanent job.
I have a permanent job in philosophy. However, I absolutely hate where I am and so does my spouse. I only started the job a year ago. I have been a postdoc for years beforehand, and have lived a broad for a while, but I do not want this to be my life permanently. Both me and my husband desperately want to return to our home country, and there are a couple of jobs coming up there this year.
My question is: How do I express on my documents (usually just a cover letter) that I would genuinely take a job in my home country at far less prestigious universities than the one that I am currently at simply because I want to be home?
I have been told by a few people close to me that one concern that some search committees might have is that I am seeking to leave a job that I have just been appointed to, without really giving it a go.
I cannot think of a professional way to express that I just don’t want to live overseas anymore and I want to work in my own country.
I think I would just be forthright about this in the cover letter, as it seems to me a completely understandable reason to want to move. But maybe I’m missing something.
What do readers think?
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