job, and that you have a job where you currently work. The point is that one
should keep things in perspective, and not invest things with a power that
they do not have.
That being said, here is how I approach the institutional versus
professional service dichotomy.
First, anything you do in terms of professional service will almost surely
count outside of your institution, on the market at large. Conversely, a lot of
what you do in terms of institutional service is unlikely to count outside of
your institution. Therefore, between professional and institutional service,
the former is much more likely to raise your reservation wage than the
latter.
Second, even in places that try to protect their junior faculty from having
to do too much service, your institution will expect you to do a modicum of
service beyond attending departmental meetings. Thus, you likely face a
binding constraint when it comes to institutional service, though where
exactly that constraint binds is probably a bit fuzzy (i.e., “You should do
some departmental service”) rather than a bright line (i.e., “You need to sit
on at least two of our seven committees.”)
The conclusion is that at a minimum, you should do enough service to
satisfy your local institutional constraint, and when it comes to professional
service, you should do as much as you feel will benefit your career. One
indirect benefit of taking on professional service (which is usually taken on
on a voluntary basis) is that it can give you a get-out-of-jail-free card. That
is, when you get asked to do institutional service which you would rather
not do, it always comes in handy when you can point to all the professional
service you are already doing as a reason for declining.
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