Acoustical Society of America: http://asa.aip.org. This Web site contains job listings in acoustics.
American Association for the Advancement of Science : http://nextwave.sciencemag.org. This homepage includes an extensive array of career resources for scientists. These include forums, a fledgling postdoc network, and career advice articles.
American Association of Physicists in Medicine: http://www.aapm.org. This Web site contains a list of accredited medical physics programs. AAPM offers a career brochure and monthly job listings (for members only).
American Association of Physics Teachers : http://www.aapt.org. This Web site includes reports from the Physics Department Chairs conference series (click on the Programs link). The National Task Force on Undergraduate Physics Web page can be accessed here also.
American Astronomical Society: http://www.aas.org. This site has an extensive set of career resources, such as job listings and registers, statistics, and an industrial astronomers network. AAS is conducting an AAS PhD + 8 Survey.
American Chemical Society: http://www.acs.org. This site contains an extensive set of career services that covers chemistry and the chemical industry, including physical chemistry.
American Geophysical Union: http://www.agu.org. AGU runs a job-listing service (for members only) and has published books by Peter Fiske on careers.
American Institute of Physics : http://www.aip.org. This Web site contains links to a vast array of sites relevant to physics careers. AIP runs employment centers, workshops, and produces job listings; provides up-to-date and accurate statistical information on employment and educational trends; produces an annual Graduate Programs in Physics, Astronomy, and Related Fields; produces a Directory of Physics, Astronomy, and Geophysics Staff; has a Society of Physics Students; and publishes Physics Today, which occasionally runs articles related to careers; publishes The Industrial Physicist , a bimonthly magazine covering industrial and applied physics; and runs the Industrial Physics Forum and related workshops, which foster academic–industrial understanding and interactions.
American Physical Society: http://www.aps.org. This Web site provides links to APS career and educational outreach programs, including an archive of relevant APS News items; Committee on Careers and Professional Development; Career and Professional Development Liaison Program; Forum on Industrial and Applied Physics; Technical Network, a database of members willing to share their expertise; and the Faculty Industrial Fellow Program, which facilitates short-term placement of physics faculty in host companies. APS also maintains several lists of speakers (applied and industrial, women, minorities).
American Vacuum Society: http://www.vacuum.org. AVS maintains a job-listing service.
Commission on Professionals in Science and Technology: http://www.cpst.org. The Web site offers useful employment, career, and other statistical data across the sciences and in engineering.
National Academy of Sciences/National Research Council: http://www.nas.edu. The NAS/NRC holds workshops and produces publications on science education and careers. Among their recent publications: Physics in the New Era: An Overview (2001); Enhancing the Postdoctoral Experience for Scientists and Engineers: A Guide for Postdoctoral Scholars, Advisors, Institutions, Funding Organizations, and Disciplinary Societies (2000); Careers in Science and Engineering: A Student Planning Guide to Grad School and Beyond (1996); and Reshaping the Graduate Education of Scientists and Engineers (1995).
National Science Foundation: http://www.nsf.gov. The Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship (IGERT) program, http://www.nsf.gov/igert, was created to establish innovative models for graduate education and collaborative research beyond traditional disciplinary boundaries. The Faculty Early Career Development program and the Presidential Early Career Awards for Scientists and Engineers are described on the Web site found at http://www.nsf.gov/home/crssprgm/career/start.htm. The Industry/University Cooperative Research Centers program, http://www.eng.nsf.gov/eec/I_ucrc.htm, develops industry–university research centers that focus on research topics relevant to industry. The Division of Science Resources Studies Web site includes employment information at http://www.nsf.gov/sbe/srs/stats.htm.
Optical Society of America: http://www.osa.org. All three OSA meetings held each year have large employment centers run by AIP. OSA has listings of jobs and consultants, and an online student forum that facilitates networking opportunities for students with OSA members.
Alfred P. Sloan Foundation: http://www.sloan.org. Sloan sponsors a number of programs to strengthen education in science and technology, including professional master’s programs. The foundation also has developed the Sloan Career Cornerstone Series, which offers resources such as Careers for Physicists (developed with AIP), which is sold as a CD-ROM or video by the AIP education division; the e-mail address is sps@aip.org.
Many other professional societies also offer career activities.
More about the Authors
Barrett Ripin.
Research Applied, Bethesda, Maryland, US
.
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September 01, 2025 12:00 AM
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Physics Today - The Week in Physics
The Week in Physics" is likely a reference to the regular updates or summaries of new physics research, such as those found in publications like Physics Today from AIP Publishing or on news aggregators like Phys.org.