Overview
Graduate students can receive professional development support from many places across campus. A unique form of support, which we will refer to as a professionalization course, happens at the departmental level, facilitated by faculty. As a result, these courses offer professional support that is embedded in the student’s disciplinary context. Common topics include navigating the academic job market; investigating the non-academic job market; applying for grants; improving academic writing; managing scholarly publishing. These courses are usually required for doctoral students and commonly offered as a non-credit (pass/fail) course. These courses often involve visiting speakers, both from the U of T professional development space and from departmental alumni with connections to these topics.
If you are charged with organizing such a course, we offer support in the form of best practices in professionalization courses and potential guest speakers, outlined below.
We also curate a collection of syllabi and course outlines that you can use to inform the creation of your own program (coming soon). If you have a syllabus or course outline that you would be willing share with others, we would be glad to add it to our growing repository of such resources. We know that faculty are eager to learn what is being done across the institution, particularly in cognate departments. We are grateful to everyone who contributes to this institutional resource. If you have a syllabus to contributor, or wish to access the repository, please get in touch at cgpd@utoronto.ca.
Developing a Professionalization Offering
At U of T, many departments have offerings that serves to introduce graduate students to the professional practices associated with their disciplinary studies. These departmental professionalization offerings take many forms: some have more integrated disciplinary content while others focus exclusively on professional development. All seek to support graduate students as they learn about the ancillary knowledge and skills requisite for their professional success. Here are some of the common topics covered:
- Program milestones
- Disciplinary practices
- Research methods
- Research integrity
- Research ethics
- Research funding
- Data management
- Intellectual property
- Communication skills
- Grant applications
- Conference attendance and effective oral presentations
- Publishing (peer review, authorship, journal selection)
- Knowledge translation and public scholarship
- Giving and receiving feedback
- Teaching skills
- Interpersonal skills
- Conflict resolution
- Leadership
- Managing unconscious bias
- Networking
- Productivity and work-life balance
- Project management
- Individual development plans
- Career planning
- Academic careers (CVs, dossiers, campus visits, interviews)
- Non-academic careers (resumes, cover letters, informational interviews)
- Alumni panels
- Applying for postdocs
- Internships or work-integrated learning
- Entrepreneurship
Here are common questions that should be answered as you develop your departmental professionalization offering:
- Credit: Will this be a credit course? If so, will it be graded or pass-fail? What, if any, work will be assigned to registrants?
- Duration: Will the offering be offered in a single term? A full year? Over multiple years?
- Timing: When during their degree should graduate students participate? Will the offering be open to both master’s and doctoral students?
- Mode: Will the offering be in person? If not, will it be synchronous or asynchronous? How will you ensure the offering is accessible to graduate students across the tri-campus?
- Instruction: Who will teach the offering? Will you involve graduate students to allow for peer learning? What will be the role of guest speakers? Which institutional subject matter experts might be able to teach particular topics?
Guest Speakers
If you are looking to invite a guest speaker to share their disciplinary expertise, or if you wish to consult about a particular professional development topic, here are some of U of T experts that are prepared to support you:
School of Graduate Studies
- Graduate Centre for Academic Communication: To find disciplinary experts in academic communication, including grant writing, research article writing, thesis writing, oral presentation skills, and preparing for publication
- Centre for Graduate Mentorship & Supervision: To find support for building strong supervisory relationships, developing interpersonal skills, and improving conflict resolution
- Centre for Graduate Professional Development: To find an introduction to the graduate professional development landscape at U of T
- SGS Data Projects Team: To find insights into the PhD Career Outcomes relevant to your department
Central Offices
- Centre for Research Innovation & Support: To find connections to speakers who could cover topics such as data management, intellectual property, commercialization, research ethics, research funding
- Centre for Teaching Support & Innovation: To find experts in teaching and learning, including representatives from the Teaching Assistant’s Training Program, which supports mandatory TA and course instructor job training as well as offering professional development for all graduate students
- University of Toronto Libraries: To find librarians to explain the many library services and resources for graduate students, including resources from the Map and Data Library
- Institutional Strategic Initiatives: To find people working in various areas of interdisciplinary research (e.g., Indigenous Research Network, Schwartz Reisman Institute for Technology and Society, School of Cities, Data Sciences Institute, Critical Digital Humanities Initiative, Black Research Network)
- Alumni Career Support: To find resources to designed to support new U of T grads. You may also wish to contact alumni offices within your own faculty.
Career Centres
The career centres have targeted expertise in graduate career pathways, both academic and non-academic:
- Career Exploration & Education (UTSG)
- Career Centre (UTM)
- Academic Advising & Career Centre (UTSC)
Other Institutional Resources
Support can also be found from within particular faculties or campuses:
- Faculty of Arts & Science Graduate Professional Development Resources
- Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering Graduate Communication Initiative
- Faculty of Applied Science & Engineering Career Exploration
- OISE Registrar’s Office & Student Experience Career Resources
- Temerty Faculty of Medicine Graduate Professional Development
- UTM Academic and Professional Development Resources
- UTSC Graduate Professional Development
We also encourage you to refer to our discussion of Professional Development Strands to help your students identify and access the professional development support that they need at U of T.