A good friend of mine is about to sit through a research panel interview and he's totally freaking out. I don't know what advice to give him as I have fortunately never had to sit through one myself. I have a hunch one or the both of you might have, though...any tips I can pass on? Looking through the net, I see several pieces of advice on research fellowships generally...nothing legal. Any advice will be appreciated.
I have been on both sides of that fence, but I'm not sure that I would necessarily be of much help. A lot of "variables". To start with, if I may ask: (i) what area, (ii) what tier of university he is applying to, (iii) what tier university he is coming from, and (iv) what the specified requirements are in the advertisement. (The following largely, but not entirely, assumes that this is a university position.)
Anyways ...
* I think you can give him some useful generic advice, in the sense that he is off for a job interview, and certain aspects of that tend to be independent of the particular job---schmoozing etc.
* As far as a research fellowship goes:
- He would need to show that he is on top of things in his area, capable of independent research, and has a research plan of his own (to cover, say, 2-3 years).
- "Independent" and "own" in the preceding must be qualified: As a research fellow, the standard expectation is that he would be someone's work-horse. He should find out who that someone might be---if not named in the advertisement, then make a guess from looking at the possibilities in terms of the area in question---read up on their published stuff and views, and consider how best to convince said someone.
Even better, he should go ahead and ask who will be on the interview panel. Most places should have no problems with telling him that.
- If he is applying a top-tier university, he can expect very stiff competition, and in such a case a great deal would depend on the "personal" element; "on paper", everyone being interviewed will most likely be a "high flyer". Of course, that also depends on the area and how hot it is, e.g. IP is huge these days.
The "personal" element could include
indirect sucking-up being mindful of the other people connected to the "centre" of the research: making a good impression on the other researchers (fellows or otherwise), the secretary who makes the travel arrangements and hotel bookings, etc.