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A graduated
What is surprising (to many grad students and possibly undergrads) though, is how closely knit (and small) the post-PhD circle of schools/research institutes new assistant professors tend to hail from. This applies across majors.
It is a pyramid. For engineering at the undergrad level, there are about 30 institutions in the US with a relatively strong reputation. But this number shrinks by half at the PhD level. If you want to secure an academic position, even a top-10 school ain't gonna be enough. Many (including my profs) suggest either going to one of the top 5 for the post-doc or just head out to industry and leave academia.
The other major factor is whom you know. This becomes very important if you happen to be in a program that is not that highly ranked.
Additional readings if you want more (not exhaustive obviously):
Focus on Academia and related hiring
1. Pecking Order
2. The Academic Caste System: Prestige Hierarchies in PhD Exchange Networks
3. PhD Circle in Academic Economics
4. Applying for Admission to Economics PhD Programs
5. Grad School: Does it matter where you go?
General views on rankings and prestige
6. University Snobbishness: All Are Not Made Equal
7. Ramblings on the educational divide
The good (US) schools in a majority of disciplines are more or less the same.
8. Her list (for math).
9. Real life examples.
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This site is cool. Not surprising that medical doctors were the first chemists (long before chemistry came into its own as a discipline). The German influence is strong, and I am somehow linked to Liebig in the academic family tree. The earliest person I can trace to hailed from Padua.
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OK, time to head back to my writing.
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