"We have found the president's postdoctoral fellows to be an excellent source of diverse candidates — particularly in the humanities and social sciences," said Barbara Horwitz, vice provost for academic personnel at UC Davis, which has hired 17 former fellows, tying UCLA for the most of any UC campus. "Overall, the concept is good, and we have taken advantage of the program."
O'Rourke said enhancing faculty diversity may become more difficult as budget cuts curtail hiring, but programs such as this are "more important than ever if we're going to be relevant to the state of California."
"If we're going to have any credibility with the state and serve the needs of the people, we have to address diversity," she said.
The UC President's Postdoctoral Fellowship Program began in 1984 and is one of the pioneering programs designed to foster diversity in academia. UC's program is an ideal format for any kind of postdoctoral fellowship, said Alberto Roca, a former UC fellow and the editor and founder of
Minoritypostdoc.org, an information site for postdoctoral diversity issues and opportunities.
"UC is setting the model for the design as well as the purpose of a postdoc fellowship," said Roca.
While most postdoc fellowships provide a source of funding for research, many diversity programs such as UC's also emphasize networking and mentoring, allowing people who are in a position to hire to see candidates and judge "intangibles that don't necessarily come across in a CV," Roca said.
"Diversity postdocs have become a model for what could be done for other fellowships," Roca said.
During their UC fellowship, the relationships that are cultivated and the mentoring received on research methods, interviewing for jobs and putting together a curriculum vitae went a long way in getting them ready for faculty positions, former fellows said.
"This fellowship really helps postdocs get those skills that they need to advance in academia," said
Sukanya Chakrabarti, a current fellow researching the evolution of galaxies in the astronomy department at UC Berkeley (
see video).
Particularly helpful are the twice a year events where UC professors, many of whom are former fellows, are invited back to mentor current fellows.
"Learning how the UC system works from people who are there was a huge advantage," said former fellow
Rudy Ortiz, who joined UC Merced in 2005 as a founding faculty member and is an assistant professor of natural sciences.
The research itself also helps participants land a faculty appointment, said
Adah Almutairi, a former fellow who is an assistant professor in the pharmaceutical sciences and materials science and engineering departments at UC San Diego.
"With that research in hand I was able to apply for jobs," said Almutairi, who joined UC San Diego in 2008 and recently won a National Institutes of Health
New Innovator Award. "I got several offers. But I fought hard to stay in UC."