The Department of Astrophysics, American Museum of Natural History, seeks a candidate for a 3-year postdoctoral fellowship consisting of 75% research and 25% education. The research will be conducted in fields related to the interests of curatorial faculty member Mordecai-Mark Mac Low, including theoretical and computational work on: the formation and dynamics of protoplanetary disks and solid bodies within them; the formation of stars, star clusters, and stellar populations in galaxies; the structure of the interstellar medium; and feedback driven outflows from galaxies. The education component supports an innovative Master-of-Arts in Teaching (MAT) program designed to educate teacher candidates in both the science and pedagogy required to successfully teach the New York State Earth sciences curriculum, which includes roughly 25% astronomy and planetary science topics. The successful applicant must demonstrate the ability to develop a robust research program, teach collaboratively with museum professionals in the MAT program, particularly during summer field experience and research exercises, and assist in coordinating teacher candidate science activities. Compensation will be at a level reflective of the extended responsibilities of the position. Candidates should send a CV, statement of research interests and goals, statement of educational experience and philosophy, and the names and contact information for two scientific and one education/outreach references in PDF format to Gwendolyn King ([email protected]). Consideration of application materials will begin no later than January 1, 2017. For further information please contact Mordecai-Mark Mac Low ([email protected]).
The AMNH is an Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action employer. The Museum encourages women, minorities, persons with disabilities, Vietnam era and disabled veterans to apply. The Museum does not discriminate due to age, sex, religion, race, color, national origin, disability, marital status, veteran status, sexual orientation, or any other factor prohibited by law.