Dr. Julie Kientz is a professor and Chair of the department of Human Centered Design & Engineering at the University of Washington in the US. In part 1 of our conversation, Julie shares her fascinating journey from first wanting to be a vet to then getting into a small town college to do computer science and then eventually doing a PhD at Georgia Tech and later getting a tenure track position. Her telling of the story is rich with reflective insights and nuggets of wisdom, whether it is about the about the value of good mentors, advice to PhD students, doing a job search as part of an academic couple, how to survive that first year as a faculty member, making decisions and managing boundaries, and parenting alongside work. In Part 2 we will focus on her path into leadership and being a department chair.
They were such good mentors. And life changing.
The first year is all about survival. So many things you have to learn in that first year [as Assistant Professor].
I learned I can’t do it all so I developed this [decision] framework: will I have fun doing it, will I learn something from it, … am I uniquely qualified to do it?
There are a lot of parallels between mentoring and parenting
Overview (times approximate):
02:22 Julie introduces herself and how she got into computing
05:00 Discovering research and the life changing impact of good mentors
09:25 Getting into Grad School and doing her PhD
11:57 Challenges/experiences doing a PhD and learnings as advice to other students
16:47 Finding her post-PhD path
18:40 Doing a job search together with partner
25:08 Surviving the first year
29:45 Making decisions about service, learning about setting boundaries
34:14 Managing parenting and being more focused and strategic with work
41:25 End
Download a full transcript of the conversation here.
Related Links
Julie Kientz - Bio
Anind Dey - https://ischool.uw.edu/people/faculty/profile/anind
Jen Mankoff - https://www.cs.washington.edu/people/faculty/jmankoff
Previous podcast conversation with Jen Mankoff - http://www.changingacademiclife.com/blog/2019/4/23/jen-mankoff
Gregory Abowd - https://coe.northeastern.edu/people/abowd-gregory/
Gillian Hayes - https://www.gillianhayes.com
Acknowledgements:
Auphonic for post-processing, Otter.ai for help with transcription.
This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:
Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy