I’m happy to see an increase in the number of temporary visiting researcher positions at various EA orgs. I found my time visiting GPI during their Early Career Conference Programme very valuable (hint: applications for 2021 are now open, apply!) and would encourage other orgs to run similar sorts of programmes to this and FHI’s (summer) research scholars programme. I’m very excited to see how our internship program develops as I really enjoy mentoring.
I think I was competitive for the RP job because of my T-shaped skills, broad knowledge in lots of EA-related things but also specialised knowledge in a specific useful area, economics in my case. Michael Aird probably has the most to say about developing broad knowledge given how much EA content he has consumed in the last couple of years, but in general reading things on the Forum and actively discussing them with other people (perhaps in a reading group) seems to be the way to develop in this area. Developing specialised skills obviously depends a lot on the skill, but graduate education and relevant internships are the most obvious routes here.
I already strongly agreed with your first paragraph in a separate answer, so I’ll just jump in here to strongly agree with the second one too!
Michael Aird probably has the most to say about developing broad knowledge given how much EA content he has consumed in the last couple of years
I can confirm that I’ve been gobbling up EA content rather obsessively for the last 2 years. If anyone’s interested in what this involved and how many hours I spent on it, I describe that here.
I’m happy to see an increase in the number of temporary visiting researcher positions at various EA orgs. I found my time visiting GPI during their Early Career Conference Programme very valuable (hint: applications for 2021 are now open, apply!) and would encourage other orgs to run similar sorts of programmes to this and FHI’s (summer) research scholars programme. I’m very excited to see how our internship program develops as I really enjoy mentoring.
I think I was competitive for the RP job because of my T-shaped skills, broad knowledge in lots of EA-related things but also specialised knowledge in a specific useful area, economics in my case. Michael Aird probably has the most to say about developing broad knowledge given how much EA content he has consumed in the last couple of years, but in general reading things on the Forum and actively discussing them with other people (perhaps in a reading group) seems to be the way to develop in this area. Developing specialised skills obviously depends a lot on the skill, but graduate education and relevant internships are the most obvious routes here.
I already strongly agreed with your first paragraph in a separate answer, so I’ll just jump in here to strongly agree with the second one too!
I can confirm that I’ve been gobbling up EA content rather obsessively for the last 2 years. If anyone’s interested in what this involved and how many hours I spent on it, I describe that here.