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CATEGORIES:Professional Development Events
SUMMARY:USASP Career Corner: The Art of Negotiation in Early Career
DESCRIPTION:
This event will comprise a didactic component discussing the wh
o, what, when, and why of negotiation, with ample time for audience partici
pation and Q&A. The emphasis will be on preparing to negotiate an acade
mic job offer, with some content related to negotiating graduate and postdo
ctoral positions. Content will be relevant to people at any early career st
age.
Speakers:
Rachel Aaron, PhD, is an Assistant
Professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Medicine. Her research investigate
s emotional factors that underly the development and maintenance of chronic
pain, supported by an NIH K23 Career Development Award. Dr. Aaron is passi
onate about empowering trainees to negotiate competitive and equitable job
offers.
Burel Goodin, PhD:
Burel R. Goodin, PhD, is a tenured Professor in the Department of Psycholog
y within the College of Arts and Sciences at the University of Alabama at B
irmingham. He is a nationally and internationally recognized expert in tran
slational pain science, with broad expertise ranging from clinical psycholo
gy to behavioral neuroscience and a notable record of both building and lea
ding transdisciplinary research teams. Dr. Goodin’s scientific expertise is
centrally related to disparities in the pain experience and pain managemen
t based upon minority status, having published extensively on psychological
aspects of chronic pain outcomes with more recent work examining the envir
onmental conditions and context within which people develop and live that i
nfluence pain. Dr. Goodin has received continual NIH funding since 2010 (mu
ltiple R01s, as PI), serves as a member on the NIH/NIDA Career Development
Education and Training (CDET) study section, and published over 100 peer-re
viewed publications with nearly 5,000 citations per Google Scholar.
M
oderator:
Chen Chen, PhD: Chen X. Chen, PhD, RN, is an a
ssistant professor at the Indiana University School of Nursing. She studies
biobehavioral factors that underlie individual differences in dysmenorrhea
(also known as menstrual pain). Her work has been funded by an NIH career
development award. Dr. Chen is a member of the USASP Education and Profess
ional Development Committee.
CONTACT:admin@usasp.org
DTSTAMP:20240328T120053
DTSTART;TZID=America/New_York:20220928T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/New_York:20220928T170000
SEQUENCE:0
TRANSP:OPAQUE
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