Research associate: Difference between revisions
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'''Research Associates''' are scholars and professionals that usually have an advanced degree beyond a [[Master's degree]]. Research Associate is an employee of the University or a Research Institute, and may be eligible to receive University / Federal benefits. Note that the Research Associate position does not explicitly require mentoring and is a regular staff position with appointment letters processed by Human Resources. In contrast to a [[research assistant]], a research associate often has a [[graduate degree]], such as a [[Master's degree|master's]] (e.g. [[Master of Science]]) or in some cases Master of Engineering or a doctoral degree (e.g. [[Doctor of Philosophy]] or [[Doctor of Medicine]]). In some cases it can be synonymous with [[postdoctoral research]]. |
'''Research Associates''' are scholars and professionals that usually have an advanced degree beyond a [[Master's degree]]. Research Associate is an employee of the University or a Research Institute, and may be eligible to receive University / Federal benefits. Note that the Research Associate position does not explicitly require mentoring and is a regular staff position with appointment letters processed by Human Resources. In contrast to a [[research assistant]], a research associate often has a [[graduate degree]], such as a [[Master's degree|master's]] (e.g. [[Master of Science]]) or in some cases Master of Engineering or a doctoral degree (e.g. [[Doctor of Philosophy]] or [[Doctor of Medicine]]). In some cases it can be synonymous with [[postdoctoral research]]. |
Revision as of 06:12, 1 July 2015
This article includes a list of references, related reading, or external links, but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations. (July 2015) |
Research Associates are scholars and professionals that usually have an advanced degree beyond a Master's degree. Research Associate is an employee of the University or a Research Institute, and may be eligible to receive University / Federal benefits. Note that the Research Associate position does not explicitly require mentoring and is a regular staff position with appointment letters processed by Human Resources. In contrast to a research assistant, a research associate often has a graduate degree, such as a master's (e.g. Master of Science) or in some cases Master of Engineering or a doctoral degree (e.g. Doctor of Philosophy or Doctor of Medicine). In some cases it can be synonymous with postdoctoral research.
References
http://physiology.case.edu/people/postdoctoral_personnel/