Faculty Positions
The School of Computer Science
at the Georgia Institute of Technology invites applications for
tenure-track faculty positions. Applications at all levels of service
will be considered. Applicants must have an outstanding record of
research, a sincere commitment to teaching, and interest in engaging in
substantive interdisciplinary research.
The School of Computer
Science is part of Georgia Tech's College of Computing. With over 40
faculty members, research in the school covers a broad range of areas,
including: computer architecture, databases, distributed and embedded
systems, enterprise computing, high-performance computing, information
security, networking, operating systems, programming languages and
compilers, theory, and software engineering. Excellent applications in all
areas of computer science represented by the School are invited.
The school incorporates a number of research centers including: the Center for Experimental Research in Computer Systems, the Georgia Tech Information Security Center, and the Algorithms and Randomness Center.
These centers support a wide variety of focused and collaborative
research projects spanning multiple academic units on campus.
Applications from candidates with an interdisciplinary research focus
and interest in potential joint appoints are welcome.
Reviews
of submitted applications will begin December 15, 2008. Full
consideration will be given to those who apply by January 15, 2009.
We strongly encourage application cover letters and materials be submitted online here or by email here.
If done by email, the cover letter must include a URL pointing to
application materials in PDF. The application material should include a
full academic CV, teaching and research statements, a list of at least
three references and up to three publications. Applicants are
encouraged to clearly identify in their cover letter the area(s) that
best describe their research interests.
Georgia Tech is an Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer.
Applications from women and under-represented minorities are strongly encouraged.