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2 nd Annual Beyond the Professoriate A Virtual Conference for PhDs in Career Transition May 2 and 9, 2015 Hosted by Maren Wood (Lilli Research Group) and Jennifer Polk (From PhD to Life) Speaker Bios Conference hosts: Jennifer Polk and Maren Wood Jennifer Polk works as an academic, career, and life coach. Her clients include graduate students working on dissertations and PhDs figuring out life and work beyond the tenure track. Jen speaks on campus and at conferences on issues related to graduate education and career outcomes for PhDs, and her writing has appeared in the Globe and Mail, University Affairs, Vitae, and Academic Matters. Find Jen online at FromPhDtoLife.com, at her University Affairs blog, and follow her on Twitter and Facebook. Join her twice a month for #withaPhD chat and at the monthly Versatile PhD meetup in Toronto. Jen earned her PhD in history from the University of Toronto in 2012. She lives in Toronto with her cat, Izzy. Maren Wood (Founder, Lilli Research Group) is a research consultant and professional development specialist, working exclusively with graduate students and PhDs. In addition to one-on-one coaching services, she is a research consultant to the American Historical Association and the Chronicle of Higher Education/Vitae, studying academic employment trends and tracking PhD career outcomes. She earned a PhD in history from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and knows firsthand the challenges of being an adjunct, having worked as a Visiting Lecturer in the Department of History at UNC Chapel Hill teaching courses in American History and the History of Sexuality. A proud Canadian, she currently resides in Denver.

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Page 1: Beyond the Professoriate 2015 - Bios (4)

2nd Annual Beyond the Professoriate

A Virtual Conference for PhDs in Career Transition

May 2 and 9, 2015

Hosted by Maren Wood (Lilli Research Group) and Jennifer Polk (From PhD to Life)

Speaker Bios

Conference hosts: Jennifer Polk and Maren Wood

Jennifer Polk works as an academic, career, and life coach. Her clients include graduate students

working on dissertations and PhDs figuring out life and work beyond the tenure track. Jen speaks on

campus and at conferences on issues related to graduate education and career outcomes for PhDs, and her

writing has appeared in the Globe and Mail, University Affairs, Vitae, and Academic Matters. Find Jen

online at FromPhDtoLife.com, at her University Affairs blog, and follow her on Twitter and Facebook.

Join her twice a month for #withaPhD chat and at the monthly Versatile PhD meetup in Toronto. Jen

earned her PhD in history from the University of Toronto in 2012. She lives in Toronto with her cat, Izzy.

Maren Wood (Founder, Lilli Research Group) is a research consultant and professional development

specialist, working exclusively with graduate students and PhDs. In addition to one-on-one coaching

services, she is a research consultant to the American Historical Association and the Chronicle of Higher

Education/Vitae, studying academic employment trends and tracking PhD career outcomes. She earned a

PhD in history from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and knows firsthand the challenges

of being an adjunct, having worked as a Visiting Lecturer in the Department of History at UNC Chapel

Hill teaching courses in American History and the History of Sexuality. A proud Canadian, she currently

resides in Denver.

Page 2: Beyond the Professoriate 2015 - Bios (4)

Career Day (May 2, 2015)

11:00 A.M. – 12:20 P.M. (EDT): Higher Education

Chair: Jennifer Polk

Panelists: Yanoula Athanassakis, Julia Brookins, Joe Frank, Jane Fiegen Green, Kristy Lamb

Yanoula Athanassakis is an administrator at NYU in the Office of the Provost. Formerly an American

Council of Learned Societies New Faculty Fellow (ACLS NFF 2012-2014) and a postdoc at the College

of Creative Studies at UC Santa Barbara, Yanoula holds a PhD in American literature and researches

environmental justice, food production, and ecocriticism. She worked in the publishing industry as an

assistant editor and for academic publications, most recently JTAS. A published writer in both academic

and nonacademic publications, Yanoula is currently working on her book and on the Environmental

Humanities initiative at NYU. As a certified yoga instructor beginning in 2006 (RYT 400), Yanoula

approaches biomechanics and functional anatomy with the same love of research that drives her off the

mat. She resides in NYC and teaches yoga at Sacred Sounds Yoga.

Julia Brookins has worked at the AHA since November 2010. She assists in developing and

implementing initiatives to advance the historical profession and history in public life, and serves on the

editorial board of Perspectives on History magazine. Her current projects include the nationwide history

Tuning project, the AHA's project to broaden the career horizons of history PhDs, and an effort to

integrate the scholarship of teaching and learning into the disciplinary training of history graduate

students. She received a BA in history from Harvard University and a PhD in US history from the

University of Chicago.

Joe Frank started his career as an advocate for solutions to the digital divide and for economic

development in urban communities. His research focused on disparities in local government service

delivery within urban neighborhoods. Since 2011 he has served as a statistical analyst and compensation

consultant in the Human Resources office at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis,

Missouri. He provides HR metrics, reporting, and analytics services to senior managers and executives

within the School of Medicine and the University, as well as day-to-day compensation analysis, reporting,

and job analysis responsibilities. Joe has also served as an adjunct faculty member at Washington

University, University of Missouri-St. Louis, and Webster University, most recently teaching data

analysis for forensic accountants. Joe completed a PhD in political science from Washington University

in St. Louis in 2009, and has studied at the University of the Western Cape in Cape Town, South Africa.

Joe presents regularly at conferences in the HR field, and chaired a panel on alternative careers for PhDs

at the 2014 Midwest Political Science Association conference. Joe is on Twitter @mrjoefrank and

LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/joefrankstl).

Jane Fiegen Green is the Marketing and Public Relations Manager for the American Historical

Association, the largest US organization devoted to the discipline of history. Using her analytical skills,

writing powers, and experience as a historian, she helps grow the AHA’s membership and promotes the

activities of its staff and members. Jane previously worked as a researcher and course developer for NBI,

Inc., a leading provider of continuing legal education seminars. She received her PhD in American history

Page 3: Beyond the Professoriate 2015 - Bios (4)

from Washington University in St. Louis in 2014. Her work on coming of age in early nineteenth-century

New England has been published by History of Education Quarterly and Wayne State University Press.

Kristy Lamb is the STEM Career Advisor for juniors, seniors, and graduate students at St. John's

University in Queens, NY, where she also teaches a science course about disease outbreaks for non-

science majors. She earned her PhD in Genetics from Yale University and conducted postdoc research at

Weill Cornell Medical College. From her early scientific days as a first-generation college student at NC

State University, she held a deep commitment to mentoring and advocacy for the benefit of future

scientists and has helped run women in STEM mentoring programs and discussion round tables. As a

postdoc she served as chair of ASBMB's graduate student and postdoctoral advocacy committee, and she

continues to hold a strong interest in science policy. She is active on Twitter (@KLambPhD) and her

website (www.kristylamb.com) has complete social media and blog links.

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12:30 P.M. – 1:50 P.M. (EDT): Small Business / Industry

Chair: Maren Wood

Panelists: Ada Barlatt, Rachel Bennett, Elizabeth Keenan, Melanie Nelson, Sal Zerilli

Ada Y. Barlatt is your cheerful life engineer! If you are feeling lost, stuck or confused, Ada can show

you how to use your decisions to create a life you love. After finishing her PhD (Industrial Engineering,

University of Michigan – Ann Arbor) Ada moved to Waterloo, Ontario, Canada to be an Assistant

Professor. However, a few years later, Ada realized that academia was not a perfect fit. To the surprise of

everyone around her, Ada resigned her faculty position and started a company. Through research and

experience, Ada learned how to use her decisions to create a life she loves. Now she develops engineering

meets self-help approaches to teach you how to do the same! Ada provides flexible, friendly, and

insightful decision support online at sumptu.com. Connect with Ada on Twitter, Facebook, Google Plus,

and LinkedIn. Feel free to check out her podcast!

Rachel Bennett is the director of marketing at Mitacs, a not-for-profit organization that designs and

delivers research and training programs in Canada. She has 15 years of experience in marketing

communications, primarily in the area of product marketing in the technology sector. She has a PhD in

English from the University of Alberta, where she specialized in eighteenth-century literature, and can be

found on LinkedIn.

Elizabeth Keenan is a licensed real estate salesperson in Brooklyn, NY. She earned her PhD in

ethnomusicology from Columbia University in 2008. Elizabeth started her current career after several

years as an adjunct professor at Columbia and Fordham University. She has a long-time side business as a

freelance researcher, writer, editor, and proofreader. Follow Elizabeth on Twitter @badcoverversion and

read her blog, Bad Cover Version.

Melanie Nelson is a consultant specializing in scientific data management and the effective management

of people and projects. Prior to starting her own consultancy, she led teams and projects in the

biotechnology industry for more than ten years. She has a PhD in biochemistry from The Scripps

Research Institute. She is also the author of Navigating the Path to Industry: A Hiring Manager’s Advice

for Academics Looking for a Job in Industry and Taming the Work Week: Work Smarter Not Longer. You

can find her online at BeyondManaging.com and on Twitter at @melanie_nelson.

Sal Zerilli is an Applied Sociologist and Ethnographer earning a living doing research, innovation, and

strategy work in a corporate consultancy. Over the course of his career, he’s worked as a researcher in

academic, design, and research settings on projects ranging from medicine invention to medical device

design to global launches of new vaccines. In his current position, he oversees a team of Sociologists,

Psychologists, and Anthropologists, and co-leads innovation and new product development. In addition to

his day job, he maintain an active commitment to teaching at the college level and to documentary film

making, having produced and directed six documentary films. In addition to founding and leading a local

chapter of the Awesome Foundation, he holds a PhD in Sociology from UCLA.

Page 5: Beyond the Professoriate 2015 - Bios (4)

2:00 P.M. – 3:20 P.M. (EDT): Writing / Teaching / Editing

Chair: Jennifer Polk

Panelists: Rachel Bundang, Dominique Morneau, Rebecca Schuman, Amanda Sewell, Anna Marie

Trester

Rachel Bundang is on the Religious Studies faculty at Convent of the Sacred Heart High School in San

Francisco. She earned her PhD from Union Theological Seminary (Columbia University), focusing on

Catholic feminist ethics with additional interests in issues of race and religion. Prior to working in

independent schools, she was a postdoc at Santa Clara University and also taught in adjunct and visiting

positions around the U.S. She brings to life religious traditions, questions, and phenomena for her

students every day. As an independent scholar, she is active in the American Academy of Religion (AAR)

and takes on side projects and writing assignments as a religion/ethics consultant and musician.

Dominique Morneau's quest for a PhD started at the tender age of 8, when she was told she could be and

do anything she wanted. Of course, it took 18 years to realize that having a PhD was not a career in and of

itself. Not cut out for the cut-throat environment of academic science, she started looking for ways to use

her PhD outside of academia. After dabbling in policy and research, Dominique packed up her life and

moved from Ottawa to London, UK, and is now working as an assistant editor for Genome Biology, one

of the flagship journals of the publisher BioMed Central. She credits the advice of last years Beyond the

Professoriate conference for her success in finding a post-academic position. Follow Dominique on

Twitter, read her blog, and connect with her on LinkedIn.

Rebecca Schuman received her PhD in German literature from the University of California-Irvine in

2010, and spent two years as an adjunct professor of literature at the University of Missouri-St. Louis, and

two years in the German department of The Ohio State University as part of the ACLS New Faculty

Fellows Program. In the spring of 2013, after her fourth unsuccessful academic job search, Rebecca

decided not to return to the job market, and struck out on her own as an essayist and consultant. She is

now a controversial but widely-read columnist for Slate, the Chronicle of Higher Education and its Vitae

hub, and operates a boutique dissertation coaching practice as part of Alison Miller’s team at The

Dissertation Coach. She is the author of two forthcoming books: the academic monograph Kafka and

Wittgenstein (2015, Northwestern U Press), and the commercial memoir Schadenfreude, A Love Story:

Me, the Germans and Twenty Year of Unrequited Passion (2016, Flatiron Books/Macmillan). Rebecca is

currently on quasi-maternity leave after the birth of her beautiful daughter in January.

Amanda Sewell holds a PhD in musicology from Indiana University, and she works as an academic

editor. Some of her clients have included W.W. Norton and Company, Connect for Education, and dozens

of individual scholars working on their dissertations, manuscripts, and articles. Amanda also works as an

academic coach, helping clients with the challenges of navigating the dissertation or thesis process.

Amanda’s scholarship has been published in peer-reviewed musicology journals, and she recently

contributed a chapter to the Cambridge Companion to Hip-Hop. In February 2015, Amanda was featured

as the Entrepreneur of the Month by Indiana University’s Project Jumpstart. Please feel free to connect

with Amanda on Twitter @amjsew, on LinkedIn, on academia.edu, on Facebook, or by visiting her

website (http://in-the-write.com).

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Anna Marie Trester is an associate on the Learning team at the FrameWorks Institute. Prior to joining

FrameWorks, she served as the Director of the MA in Language and Communication (MLC) Program in

the Department of Linguistics at Georgetown University, where she worked with students to apply their

sociolinguistic training professionally. She has taught courses at Georgetown University, Howard

University, and University of Maryland, University College on topics including cross-cultural

communication, language and social media, and the ethnography of communication. She is the co-editor

(with Deborah Tannen) of Discourse 2.0, published in 2013 by Georgetown University Press. She

received her MA from NYU and PhD in linguistics from Georgetown. An applied sociolinguist, Dr.

Trester is particularly interested in exploring performance, narrative, intertextuality, language and identity

and language and social media in the contexts of professional self-presentation and the language of

business. She shares career resources for linguists on her blog Career Linguist and on Twitter

@CareerLinguist.

Page 7: Beyond the Professoriate 2015 - Bios (4)

3:30 P.M. – 4:50 P.M. (EDT): Non-Profit & Government

Chair: Maren Wood

Panelists: Katharine Bullard, Nicholas Dion, Christopher Eppig, Alison Ewart, Andrew Miller

Katharine Bullard is a Campaign Support Coordinator for the Service Employees’ International Union,

working on adjunct and regular faculty organizing. During her graduate work at the University of Illinois,

she helped to lead the recognition fight for the TA union. After receiving her PhD in History, she taught

for 15 years as an adjunct and a regular faculty member before transition into labor work. Find her on

Twitter @kbullard4 and the campaign at http://seiufacultyforward.org.

Nicholas Dion is Senior Coordinator, Research and Programs at the Higher Education Quality Council of

Ontario (HEQCO), an independent research and advisory body associated with the provincial Ministry of

Training, Colleges and Universities in Toronto. In 2012, he completed his doctorate in the Study of

Religion at the University of Toronto, where he also spent time lecturing, planning conferences, and

editing a peer-reviewed journal. He first joined HEQCO out of grad school as an intern, before becoming

the organization's first research editor and eventually graduating to his current role. His research at

HEQCO has focused on issues related to essential skills such as literacy and numeracy, as well as on

apprenticeship. He can be found on LinkedIn at www.linkedin.com/in/nicholasdion1.

Chris Eppig graduated from the University of New Mexico in 2011 with a PhD in biology. After two

years of underemployment, he moved to Chicago in 2014 to seek employment in science outreach. He

now works as Director of Programming for the Chicago Council on Science and Technology, a non-profit

organization with the goal of increasing public understanding of science. He blogs at

christophereppig.wordpress.com, and can be found on Linkedin at www.linkedin.com/in/cgeppig and

Twitter @CGEppig.

Alison Ewart holds a bachelor’s degree from Queen’s University and a PhD from the University of

British Columbia, both in chemistry. After completing her PhD she knew that she didn’t want to spend

any more time inside the lab and began looking for other opportunities outside of research, but still

connected to the academic community. In 2008 she joined Mitacs in Toronto, Ontario as a Director of

Business Development. In that role she worked closely with academics to help build collaborative

research projects with industry partners while at the same time worked closely with industry to showcase

the value of working with academia. From that role she later moved into the Programs department at

Mitacs where she is currently the Director of the industrial collaborative internship and fellowship

programs, Mitacs Accelerate and Mitacs Elevate.

Andrew Miller is a Strategic Leader with the City of Mississauga in Ontario, Canada. He received his

PhD in History from Johns Hopkins University in 2005. He's an expert in public-transit policy and

planning, as well as project management. He’s been a panellist on CBC Radio on the subject of municipal

finance reform, and is a two-time TEDx speaker. He’s currently leading the delivery of a master plan for

rapid transit and intensified urban development for Mississauga. He’s also fun at parties. You can connect

with him on LinkedIn, here: https://ca.linkedin.com/in/andrewmillertoronto.

Page 8: Beyond the Professoriate 2015 - Bios (4)

Professional Development Day (May 9, 2015)

11:00 A.M. – 12:00 P.M. (EDT): Reverse Engineer Your Job Search

Chair: Jennifer Polk

Presenter: Catherine Maybrey

Catherine Maybrey is the Graduate Career Strategist in the School of Graduate Studies at McMaster

University (http://graduate.mcmaster.ca/) and the owner of CM Coaching Services. A longstanding

advocate of the need for career services developed specifically for graduate students and the post-

academic job search, Catherine has spoken at numerous conferences and events to educate graduate

students and postdoctoral fellows on the realities of and opportunities in the post-academic market, and

has worked with universities in her private practice to develop career programs and services for graduate

students. She blogs on http://cmcoachingservices.com/blog, and contributes to the Rethinking Higher Ed

Forum at http://forum.academica.ca/catherine-maybrey/. A self-described LinkedIn evangelist, you can

find her on social media at https://ca.linkedin.com/in/catherinemaybrey or @Cate_Maybrey on Twitter.

12:15 P.M. – 1:15 P.M. (EDT): Identify Your Transferable Skills

Chair: Maren Wood

Presenter: Margy Thomas Horton

Margy Thomas Horton earned her PhD in English from Baylor (2012), where she published on

American literature and was a Presidential Doctoral Scholar. But then, in the middle of academic job

season, two things happened: she moved across the country to Durham, North Carolina, and gave birth to

her son, Abe. From those months at home caring for her infant emerged ScholarShape: a business that

offers tailored coaching, consulting, and editorial support to academics at all stages in their careers, and

across the disciplines from the sciences to humanities. Her clients are as far-flung as London and

Australia, and as nearby as the three major research universities down the street. (Durham is located in the

Research Triangle near Duke, UNC, and NC State). In Margy’s work with individual clients, she helps

them streamline their writing processes, master relevant genre conventions, and produce polished

manuscripts that articulate the meaning of their research. The business is also growing to include a second

consultant and two support staff. Further, Margy serves as the Dissertation Institute Consultant at NC

State, delivers presentations on academic writing and career transitions, manages a website of free writing

resources (including a blog), and writes for the popular site The Professor Is In. Connect

on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, and via email: [email protected]

1:30 P.M. – 2:30 P.M. (EDT): Writing a Combination Resume

Chair: Jennifer Polk

Presenter: Maren Wood

See above for Maren’s bio

Page 9: Beyond the Professoriate 2015 - Bios (4)

2:45 P.M. – 3:45 P.M. (EDT): Going in Confident: Keys to a Successful Interview

Chair: Jennifer Polk

Presenter: Heidi Scott Giusto

Heidi Scott Giusto, PhD, is a consultant, editor, writer, and speaker who owns Career Path Writing

Solutions, a business dedicated to helping individuals and businesses with their professional writing and

career development needs. Heidi earned her PhD in History from Duke University in 2012 and launched

Career Path shortly thereafter. Heidi has been featured in US News & World Report, PhD Career Guide,

What Are All the PhDs?, and Integrative Academic Solutions. She is a Certified Professional Résumé

Writer, a Certified Employment Interview Professional, a member of the Professional Association of

Résumé Writers & Career Coaches, and a Career Thought Leaders Associate. Follow her on Twitter

@HeidiGiustoCPWS and on Facebook at Career Path Writing Solutions.

4:00 P.M. – 5:00 P.M. (EDT): Going Out on Your Own: Starting a Small Business

Chair: Maren Wood

Presenter: Martin Leppitsch

Martin Leppitsch is a Senior Manager at Denver-based Rebound Solutions, a management consultancy,

and a volunteer certified business mentor with SCORE.org. He is a thought-leader with a proven track

record of generating measurable improvements for businesses, across multiple industries. Their areas of

specialization include continuous business process improvement, organizational change management and

project management with the goal of implementing innovative, information technology-enabled business

processes, to increase profitability and organizational efficiency. Martin is an effective leader,

collaborator, communicator, and mentor, grounded in personal integrity.

5:15 P.M. – 6:15 P.M. (EDT): The Power of Connecting

Chair: Jennifer Polk

Presenter: Tracy Shroyer

Tracy Shroyer completed her PhD in Organization and Management with a Leadership specialization

from Capella University in January, 2013. She has 19 years’ experience in the financial services industry

across the areas of operations, risk management, project management, analytics, leadership, and customer

service. Tracy currently works full-time as an Account Executive for a Fortune 500 company and founded

Beyond the Stone Wall, an individual development coaching and small business consulting company in

June, 2014. In addition, she has 3+ years’ experience as an adjunct business professor, and recently

decided to leave that position due to the growth of her coaching business. You can connect with Tracy

Shroyer via her website at www.beyondthestonewall.com, her Facebook Page Beyond the Stone Wall, FB

Group, and on Twitter at @tshroyer2 and @lifebtsw.