![]() ![]() You can also use the advanced search (job category, position type, institution type, specific location details) for a more specific search. To access the job listing, a keyword (or subcategory) is required. The rest of the homepage encourages users to sign up and displays some article previews. Despite being open to international recruiters and jobseekers, the only language option is English.ĭesign: The colour scheme is dominantly yellow and grey and the image of a classroom is featured on the homepage behind some search options (jobs by category, by location, by school, by type) and the search bar (keywords). ![]() A Youtube page can also be found (with a dozen videos and 98 followers) but it hasn’t been updated in a while. On social media, 21 800 people on Twitter, 47 550 on Linkedin and 9 908 on Facebook follow its activity. The website attracts as many as 2.45 million views a month (which is quite impressive for a specialist job site), mostly from the US, even if it is an international website. ![]() HigherEd could be a play on words for a job board (“hire Ed”) but since this specialist job board for academic professionals (working in schools and universities) has a mostly professional feel to it, it’s unlikely any play on words is actually intended. Summary: HigherEdJobs was founded in 1996 by three university employees: Andrew Hibel, John Ikenberry and Eric Blessner (who most likely met at Penn State University). ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |