Career fellowship will highlight opportunities for doctoral students in history
Logan Weeter
May 31, 2018

A new program in the Department of History is creating wider awareness of the opportunities available to students who earn a doctoral degree in history. (Stock image of archival research.)
A new program in the Department of History is creating wider awareness of the opportunities available to students who earn a doctoral degree in history. (Stock image of archival research.)

A new program in the Department of History is designed to create wider awareness of the careers and opportunities available to doctoral students while highlighting the diverse skills developed through graduate study.

Mark Steinberg, a professor of history and director of graduate studies for the department, said that a new grant from the American Historical Association will allow the department to fund a career diversity fellow who will work with faculty to raise awareness and promote accessibility to a wide array of opportunities for graduate students.

The fellowship recipient, a graduate student who is funded by the AHA with additional support from the Department of History and the Graduate College, will assist in activities such as reforming the existing curricular offerings and programming, creating new events and materials that promote the skills and career opportunities that come with a PhD, and collaborating with other units and initiatives around digital humanities and other trends.

Mark Steinberg
Mark Steinberg

The driving principle of the program is that there are many careers open to people with doctoral degrees in history. In addition to the work of a professor, which itself involves many more skills than teaching and research, Steinberg said, a doctoral degree in history is good preparation for careers in museums, archives, libraries, law, business, politics, and writing.

“The idea is to diversify thoughts about the job market, about the careers that you can follow, and to be explicit about the type of training we give students to make sure that they’re completely aware of those possibilities, and are also very cognizant of those skills that they’re learning,” Steinberg said.

The Department of History has selected its first career diversity fellow: Brian Campbell, a doctoral candidate.

Creative writing contests keep memory of WWII-era poet alive
 Folger Adam Jr.’s eyes were drawn to the bronze plaque hanging over the fireplace in the dining room. “In honor of the brothers of the Illinois chapter Alpha Delta Phi who rendered service during the World War.” Below, there were many names.Adam was an LAS student from Joliet, Ill. Enough...
A global war without end
 World War II became a global war in 1942, after Japan attacked Pearl Harbor, drawing the U.S. into the war. All the world’s most powerful nations were at war with one another, and the fighting spanned the globe.But the war was global in other ways too — in the unifying idea of a fight for...
A hub for connection and learning
 Editor's note: The Spurlock Museum of World Cultures was recently awarded a Team Award for Excellence in Public Engagement. Read about the awardWho is a...