vix86 Wrote:(…) I can't really compare US vs Japan as a foreigner, but I get the feeling that the situation might be a bit better in Japan.
Almost all PhD programs in the US at any school of repute are fully funded, i.e. you get the tuition waived or paid for, and around $15,000-22,000 per year as stipend or scholarship. If any place doesn't offer that, it's a sure sign you do not want to do your PhD there. The tuition figures US universities quote are for people who get an outside scholarship so that they can be charged.
vix86 Wrote:kitakitsune Wrote:I suggest looking very deeply into the hiring situation that foreign professors face in Japanese universities. From what I've heard, it's not good at all for people who want to stay long term and eventually receive tenure in Japan.
(…) I suspect that teachers in other departments probably can pick up tenure, but it'd come at a price: Teaching in Japanese and probably involving your self in the politics that most others get involved in.
According to a Japanese colleague at 早稲田, sometimes Japanese universities are reluctant to hire foreigners because they try and often can get out of committee work, sometimes for simple lack of ability to write properly in Japanese. But unfortunately it's true that most universities will not offer tenure to a foreigner, but try to fill whatever teaching needs in English (not necessarily teaching English, but mostly teaching foreign students) they have with a five-year limited term appointment (任期).
vix86 Wrote:That said. Doesn't the "worthless" degree thing only really apply to undergrad in Japan? Isn't most of your graduate work and future employment opportunity going to be heavily dependent upon the work you do on you research?
Regrettably no, at least in academia. You can do amazing research, unless you come from a prestigious university and ideally have a well-known adviser, you're not going to get far. Part of the reason is that your PhD research is likely to be very specialized, and you won't have published much yet when you're on the job market, so it's hard to assess your potential. Hiring committees tend to play it safe and go with the prestige of the institution. That's true even in Mathematics, even though in theory it should be the least "political" as a subject.
A PhD is also a period in which you need a fair bit of mentoring, and you're more likely to get good mentoring from a leading figure in your field (unless that leading figure is a real prick and poor advisor, which is sadly rather common).
yudantaiteki Wrote:While a PhD from a Japanese university is not worthless, at least in the US, they really want you to have an American PhD. The standards for research and publication are different in Japan than in the US, so your research and publications may not count for much (or for anything) in the US.
Spot on with very, very few exceptions (like a handful of professors with Oxbridge PhDs in relative niche subjects like economic history).
My general advice to students considering graduate school is that you can never go completely wrong with a top US PhD because you can get a job anywhere in the world with it, while a PhD from elsewhere tends to restrict you to that labour market. The exception is a UK PhD and getting a job in Australia or New Zealand, but even that is changing and more and more US PhDs are hired there.
vix86 Wrote:I've heard in the past that when comparing the graduate program styles between the US and Europe; the US tends to place a lot more significance on the research part of the process, while Europe tends to emphasize the classroom part a lot more. US students still take classes through out the program, especially when their doctoral candidates during prelims, but there is a very heavy focus on research.
In the US, a PhD involves two years of coursework. In the UK one year, but that's not really "coursework" but rather a few seminars. PhDs on the continent rarely involve coursework. This is one of the many reasons why US PhDs tend to be trained more broadly.
So perhaps the idea should be this: if possible, get your PhD at one of the leading US universities, and try to spend time in Japan during your PhD, or come back to Japan as a post-doc for two years and then try to get a permanent position there. It's rare, but possible provided you really immerse yourself in the Japanese work/lab environment. Second best option would be a PhD from Oxford or Cambridge and then do the same thing.
To give this some context and qualifiers: I've only worked at a Japanese university as a visiting researcher, but I have been shortlisted for a tenured position at a 国立大学 once and was offered a position at one of the better private universities. I now have a position in economics at one of the unis mentioned here, so I'm not speaking from the perspective of a scientist. I also don't have anything particular against British academia, as you might see from my location, or against Japanese colleagues, but I'm trying to think what would be the best course of action.
I also think that being a professor in Japan is one of the best positions to be in as a foreigner: you have a fair bit of social status, a comfortable income north of ¥7-8 Mio per year, and generally well-educated people around you who won't treat you as the outsider all the time.
Of course, the issue is likely completely different if you're not aiming for an academic position but want a PhD to get a private sector research position.
Edited: 2012-02-26, 4:37 pm