<p>Looks like UChicago is going to actively exploit the hiring reductions and freezes at peer schools such as Harvard. They reduced spending last year, did not overly rely on their endowment, and took a more conservative approach all around.</p>
<p>my entry level position seeking new PhD daughter will be on the job market in Spring of 2011.I hope theres more places besides U Chicago that will be looking :)</p>
<p>UC made offers to 6 Wisconsin faculty last year and all rejected the offer. UW also is hiring about 40+ additional faculty over the next couple years.</p>
<p>It will be interesting to see how this all plays out. The faculty to student ratios at some schools is going to suffer and affect their ranking, “oh, no.”</p>
<p>Lafayette did that last year. They hired several new (additional) professors. The President said that thanks to the job cutbacks/freezes at other colleges, the quality of the candidates they interviewed was the highest they had ever seen.</p>
<p>I wouldn’t discount the possibility that the MIT and Berkeley profs are trying to wrangle a competing offer which they can use as a threat. That is not an uncommon move when universities freeze salaries. Sometimes it works, sometimes you have to take the offer. The response of the department to the competing offer is a good indicator of just how serious the financial situation is.</p>
<p>The quote in the original post refers to an expansion of the number of faculty positions at U Chicago. That is indeed unusual this year.</p>