Is this rejection rude? Should I apply to another position in the same University?











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I applied for an adjunct position and never heard back from the school. I emailed them to learn about the status of my application and this is the response I received: Your resume is competitive but doesn't meet our needs. Am I overreacting for thinking that this is a rude rejection letter (well, one sentence!)? There is another position open, but I am hesitant to apply. What would you do if you were me?
p.s.1 Sorry, I know this is a petty question, but I have become very picky since I want to work in a healthy environment.
p.s.2 I am pretty confident I am not underqualified for the position.










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  • 7




    All rejections hurt. No, it's not rude; it's just straightforward.
    – JeffE
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    At least you got a response!
    – Thomas
    5 hours ago










  • "We would lie to inform you that you have not been successful this time, but we have kept your resume on file."...
    – Solar Mike
    5 hours ago















up vote
3
down vote

favorite












I applied for an adjunct position and never heard back from the school. I emailed them to learn about the status of my application and this is the response I received: Your resume is competitive but doesn't meet our needs. Am I overreacting for thinking that this is a rude rejection letter (well, one sentence!)? There is another position open, but I am hesitant to apply. What would you do if you were me?
p.s.1 Sorry, I know this is a petty question, but I have become very picky since I want to work in a healthy environment.
p.s.2 I am pretty confident I am not underqualified for the position.










share|improve this question


















  • 7




    All rejections hurt. No, it's not rude; it's just straightforward.
    – JeffE
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    At least you got a response!
    – Thomas
    5 hours ago










  • "We would lie to inform you that you have not been successful this time, but we have kept your resume on file."...
    – Solar Mike
    5 hours ago













up vote
3
down vote

favorite









up vote
3
down vote

favorite











I applied for an adjunct position and never heard back from the school. I emailed them to learn about the status of my application and this is the response I received: Your resume is competitive but doesn't meet our needs. Am I overreacting for thinking that this is a rude rejection letter (well, one sentence!)? There is another position open, but I am hesitant to apply. What would you do if you were me?
p.s.1 Sorry, I know this is a petty question, but I have become very picky since I want to work in a healthy environment.
p.s.2 I am pretty confident I am not underqualified for the position.










share|improve this question













I applied for an adjunct position and never heard back from the school. I emailed them to learn about the status of my application and this is the response I received: Your resume is competitive but doesn't meet our needs. Am I overreacting for thinking that this is a rude rejection letter (well, one sentence!)? There is another position open, but I am hesitant to apply. What would you do if you were me?
p.s.1 Sorry, I know this is a petty question, but I have become very picky since I want to work in a healthy environment.
p.s.2 I am pretty confident I am not underqualified for the position.







teaching job rejection






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share|improve this question










asked 7 hours ago









Kar Masia

6791614




6791614








  • 7




    All rejections hurt. No, it's not rude; it's just straightforward.
    – JeffE
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    At least you got a response!
    – Thomas
    5 hours ago










  • "We would lie to inform you that you have not been successful this time, but we have kept your resume on file."...
    – Solar Mike
    5 hours ago














  • 7




    All rejections hurt. No, it's not rude; it's just straightforward.
    – JeffE
    7 hours ago






  • 1




    At least you got a response!
    – Thomas
    5 hours ago










  • "We would lie to inform you that you have not been successful this time, but we have kept your resume on file."...
    – Solar Mike
    5 hours ago








7




7




All rejections hurt. No, it's not rude; it's just straightforward.
– JeffE
7 hours ago




All rejections hurt. No, it's not rude; it's just straightforward.
– JeffE
7 hours ago




1




1




At least you got a response!
– Thomas
5 hours ago




At least you got a response!
– Thomas
5 hours ago












"We would lie to inform you that you have not been successful this time, but we have kept your resume on file."...
– Solar Mike
5 hours ago




"We would lie to inform you that you have not been successful this time, but we have kept your resume on file."...
– Solar Mike
5 hours ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
10
down vote













This seems to me like a normal rejection letter. They normally don't really contain any information except "you didn't get the job". Some letters do go on for longer about "we had so many great candidates and we wish we could hire them all, blah blah blah" but I wouldn't really say that makes them more polite.



In particular, I certainly would not draw any conclusions about the "healthiness" of the environment from this letter. It might be a good department or a bad one, but this letter doesn't help you to determine which; you'll need to investigate that in other ways. See:




  • How can I detect a toxic environment while on the interview circuit?


  • "Warning signs" that candidates should be aware of during an academic job interview


  • What things can I do as a job market candidate to gauge the internal political culture of a department that is hiring?







share|improve this answer





















  • I clicked +1 for the gist of your answer even though I think that it would be preferable for writers of rejection letters to have enough eloquence to write something like "we are sorry, but your application doesn't meet our need at the moment" followed by an indication about whether this is likely to change or whether they don't hire your profile at all. Instead, "your application doesn't fit our need", almost implies that it was an imposition to have implied at all. As Nate writes, though, this is no good metric for how the department treats instructors they DID hire.
    – chryss
    3 hours ago











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1 Answer
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1 Answer
1






active

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active

oldest

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active

oldest

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up vote
10
down vote













This seems to me like a normal rejection letter. They normally don't really contain any information except "you didn't get the job". Some letters do go on for longer about "we had so many great candidates and we wish we could hire them all, blah blah blah" but I wouldn't really say that makes them more polite.



In particular, I certainly would not draw any conclusions about the "healthiness" of the environment from this letter. It might be a good department or a bad one, but this letter doesn't help you to determine which; you'll need to investigate that in other ways. See:




  • How can I detect a toxic environment while on the interview circuit?


  • "Warning signs" that candidates should be aware of during an academic job interview


  • What things can I do as a job market candidate to gauge the internal political culture of a department that is hiring?







share|improve this answer





















  • I clicked +1 for the gist of your answer even though I think that it would be preferable for writers of rejection letters to have enough eloquence to write something like "we are sorry, but your application doesn't meet our need at the moment" followed by an indication about whether this is likely to change or whether they don't hire your profile at all. Instead, "your application doesn't fit our need", almost implies that it was an imposition to have implied at all. As Nate writes, though, this is no good metric for how the department treats instructors they DID hire.
    – chryss
    3 hours ago















up vote
10
down vote













This seems to me like a normal rejection letter. They normally don't really contain any information except "you didn't get the job". Some letters do go on for longer about "we had so many great candidates and we wish we could hire them all, blah blah blah" but I wouldn't really say that makes them more polite.



In particular, I certainly would not draw any conclusions about the "healthiness" of the environment from this letter. It might be a good department or a bad one, but this letter doesn't help you to determine which; you'll need to investigate that in other ways. See:




  • How can I detect a toxic environment while on the interview circuit?


  • "Warning signs" that candidates should be aware of during an academic job interview


  • What things can I do as a job market candidate to gauge the internal political culture of a department that is hiring?







share|improve this answer





















  • I clicked +1 for the gist of your answer even though I think that it would be preferable for writers of rejection letters to have enough eloquence to write something like "we are sorry, but your application doesn't meet our need at the moment" followed by an indication about whether this is likely to change or whether they don't hire your profile at all. Instead, "your application doesn't fit our need", almost implies that it was an imposition to have implied at all. As Nate writes, though, this is no good metric for how the department treats instructors they DID hire.
    – chryss
    3 hours ago













up vote
10
down vote










up vote
10
down vote









This seems to me like a normal rejection letter. They normally don't really contain any information except "you didn't get the job". Some letters do go on for longer about "we had so many great candidates and we wish we could hire them all, blah blah blah" but I wouldn't really say that makes them more polite.



In particular, I certainly would not draw any conclusions about the "healthiness" of the environment from this letter. It might be a good department or a bad one, but this letter doesn't help you to determine which; you'll need to investigate that in other ways. See:




  • How can I detect a toxic environment while on the interview circuit?


  • "Warning signs" that candidates should be aware of during an academic job interview


  • What things can I do as a job market candidate to gauge the internal political culture of a department that is hiring?







share|improve this answer












This seems to me like a normal rejection letter. They normally don't really contain any information except "you didn't get the job". Some letters do go on for longer about "we had so many great candidates and we wish we could hire them all, blah blah blah" but I wouldn't really say that makes them more polite.



In particular, I certainly would not draw any conclusions about the "healthiness" of the environment from this letter. It might be a good department or a bad one, but this letter doesn't help you to determine which; you'll need to investigate that in other ways. See:




  • How can I detect a toxic environment while on the interview circuit?


  • "Warning signs" that candidates should be aware of during an academic job interview


  • What things can I do as a job market candidate to gauge the internal political culture of a department that is hiring?








share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 7 hours ago









Nate Eldredge

104k32297398




104k32297398












  • I clicked +1 for the gist of your answer even though I think that it would be preferable for writers of rejection letters to have enough eloquence to write something like "we are sorry, but your application doesn't meet our need at the moment" followed by an indication about whether this is likely to change or whether they don't hire your profile at all. Instead, "your application doesn't fit our need", almost implies that it was an imposition to have implied at all. As Nate writes, though, this is no good metric for how the department treats instructors they DID hire.
    – chryss
    3 hours ago


















  • I clicked +1 for the gist of your answer even though I think that it would be preferable for writers of rejection letters to have enough eloquence to write something like "we are sorry, but your application doesn't meet our need at the moment" followed by an indication about whether this is likely to change or whether they don't hire your profile at all. Instead, "your application doesn't fit our need", almost implies that it was an imposition to have implied at all. As Nate writes, though, this is no good metric for how the department treats instructors they DID hire.
    – chryss
    3 hours ago
















I clicked +1 for the gist of your answer even though I think that it would be preferable for writers of rejection letters to have enough eloquence to write something like "we are sorry, but your application doesn't meet our need at the moment" followed by an indication about whether this is likely to change or whether they don't hire your profile at all. Instead, "your application doesn't fit our need", almost implies that it was an imposition to have implied at all. As Nate writes, though, this is no good metric for how the department treats instructors they DID hire.
– chryss
3 hours ago




I clicked +1 for the gist of your answer even though I think that it would be preferable for writers of rejection letters to have enough eloquence to write something like "we are sorry, but your application doesn't meet our need at the moment" followed by an indication about whether this is likely to change or whether they don't hire your profile at all. Instead, "your application doesn't fit our need", almost implies that it was an imposition to have implied at all. As Nate writes, though, this is no good metric for how the department treats instructors they DID hire.
– chryss
3 hours ago


















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