US-RSE January 2026 Newsletter
This Month: Welcome to 2026! 🎆
Published: Jan 10, 2026 by Tinashe M. Tapera (Author & Editor), Sandra Gesing (Editor), Ian Cosden (Editor)
As we open up for another fantastic year for the US-RSE community, we want to extend our heartfelt thanks to each and every one of you for being part of this journey. Your participation and contributions made 2025 a wonderful year of growth, learning, and collaboration across the research software engineering landscape. Better still, 2026 offers even more opportunities to connect, share, and innovate together.
In this issue:
- 1. New Year Reflections
- 2. USRSE’26 Announcement
- 3. Steering Committee Updates
- 4. AGM Recap
- 5. Organizational Founding Membership
- 6. Community News
- 7. Interesting Events and Opportunities
- 8. Featured Reads, Videos, or Podcasts
- 9. Get Involved
- 10. Recent Job Postings
🔔 1. New Year Reflections
The New Year is an opportune time to reflect on the past year and look ahead to what lies before us. In case you missed it, US-RSE Executive Director Sandra Gesing shared her thoughts on the year that was 2025 and what to expect in 2026. As a community, we have numerous conferences in the pipeline to look forward to, with special mention to the upcoming USRSE’26 happening this Fall! We hope to see you all there, but more importantly, we look forward to engaging with you in 2026 through our various working groups, community calls, and other exciting community initiatives. Remember that no matter your level of involvement, real-world-experience, or background and aspirations, there is a place for you in US-RSE. If you’re writing code, building software, or supporting research through software, you are an RSE and we welcome you to engage with us!
To read Sandra’s full thoughts from last year, check your email! And if for some reason you aren’t yet a member, consider joining us in 2026 to help continue building this vibrant community » Join US-RSE
In 2026, stay connected and keep up with the latest news, events, and community highlights by following US-RSE on social media:
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/us-rse
BlueSky: https://bsky.app/profile/us-rse.bsky.social
Mastodon: https://fosstodon.org/@us_rse
We hope you had a restful and joyful holiday season, and we look forward to another amazing year together! 😊🌟
😲 2. USRSE’26 Conference
📣 Mark Your Calendars for USRSE’26! 📣
We’re thrilled to announce that USRSE’26 will be held at the San Jose Marriott from October 19-21, 2026 in San Jose, California!
🌟 Call for Volunteers and Committee Members 🌟
We’re looking for enthusiastic volunteers to help organize this exciting event. If you’re interested in contributing, please fill out this form. Committee selection will happen this month, so if you’re interested in playing a key role in the conference organization, make sure to apply soon! If you’re interested in one of the chair roles, please submit your form before January 11, 2026. For more details about the roles and responsibilities, check out our organization page.
📧 Join Our Mailing List 📧
Want to stay updated on all things US-RSE? Join our mailing list to receive direct news about all US-RSE conferences. Sign up here.
💬 Have Questions? 💬
If you have any questions, feel free to reach out to the organizers at usrse26-conference@us-rse.org.
📅 Save the Date 📅
More details about the conference program, registration, and travel information will be coming your way in the months ahead. Stay tuned at us-rse.org/usrse26!
Looking forward to seeing you all in San Jose!
🛞 3. Steering Committee Updates
We’re happy to announce the new Steering Committee members for 2026! Please join us in welcoming:
- Keith Beattie, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, 2024-2026
- Jeffrey C. Carver, University of Alabama, 2019-2027
- Cordero Core, University of Washington, 2025-2026
- Ian Cosden, Princeton University, 2019-2027
- Julia Damerow, Arizona State University, 2021-2026
- Alex Koufos, Stanford University, 2024-2027
- Miranda Mundt, Sandia National Laboratories, 2023-2026
- Abbey Roelofs, University of Michigan, 2024-2027
- Pengyin Shan, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, 2026-2027
Congratulations and thank you to all the new and returning members! You can find their bios and statements on the committee page.
💎 4. Annual General Meeting Recap
Our Annual General Meeting for 2025 took place on December 4th, 2025. If you missed it, you can find the recording below! Highlights include:
- Outlining US-RSE’s purpose and growth as we aim to build a professional community, advocate for the RSE role, provide resources, and promote diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) in US-RSE.
- Reviewing US-RSE’s community activities, such our website, job board, monthly newsletter and community calls, Slack channels, various subcommunity events, and social media presence.
- Discussing funding opportunities, such as the transformative grant from the Sloan Foundation and US-RSE’s operation as a project under Community Initiatives.
- Reviewing leadership roles and volunteers, such as our Executive Director, the Steering Committee, and the numerous opportunities for community members to get involved through working groups, organizing committees, or community engagement.
- Celebrating 2025’s achievements and impact, including the 2025 conference in Philadelphia attracting over 300 participants, our community and travel funding program awards to numerous recipients.
- Promoting our advocacy and outreach, engaging with organizations like NSF, the US Department of Labor, the OECD, and K-12 students.
- Celebrating the success of our organizational membership program, including over 20 founding members.
- Acknowledging our numerous Working Groups and Regional Groups.
- Addressing future plans and priorities for 2026, including growing individual and organizational memberships, sustaining and growing the annual conference, pursuing grants and other funding sources, continuing advocacy efforts, and further understanding the impact of AI on research software engineering.
🤝 5. Organizational Founding Membership
US-RSE envisions a future where Research Software Engineers are universally respected for advancing science, technology, and society through the transformative power of research software engineering. We’re excited to share that the momentum around our Organizational Founding Membership continues to grow! See the list below for the current members (six more are onboarding at the moment).
Organizations that join on or before June 30, 2026, will be recognized in perpetuity as founding members. Founding organizations will also lock in current membership fees through December 31, 2028. Organizational support helps sustain and expand vital community offerings, including the annual conference, monthly calls and newsletter, job board, working groups, and new resources.
Please reach out to Sandra Gesing at sandra@us-rse.org if you are interested in becoming an organizational founding member!
Premier Members
Standard Members
Basic Members
🗞️ 6. Community News
Executive Director’s Interview on NAIRR Pilot
The NAIRR pilot, supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF) & SGX3, has evolved from concept to a real shared AI research platform that connects researchers, educators, industry partners, and national labs. Our Executive Director, Sandra Gesing, highlights how this 2-year-old collaborative infrastructure is lowering barriers for teams that once couldn’t access powerful computing, tools, and expertise to fuel creativity, discovery, and possibility.
Read the full interview on govtech.com: https://www.govtech.com/education/higher-ed/2-years-into-nairr-pilot-shared-infrastructure-boosts-ai-innovation
Social Media Coordinator’s Presentation at iPRES2025
At iPRES 2025 in Wellington, I shared how many library and archive developers are already doing RSE work even if it’s not called “RSEng”, supported by the US-RSE travel funds. I reflect on why US-RSE should welcome these preservation-minded professionals and how our connection with the National Library of New Zealand is building a bridge across communities.
- Pengyin Shan, Senior Research Software Engineer at the National Center for Supercomputing Applications, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, & US-RSE Social Media Coordinator
Read the full article here!
Impact of US-RSE Community and Travel Funds on Data Carpentries
Building on the success of last year’s first Data Carpentry workshop to ever be offered in Israel, generous funding from the US-RSE Community and Travel Funds enabled the success of a Data Carpentry Metagenomics workshop in October 2025, at Tel Aviv University in Israel. The two-day, hands-on workshop was made possible by a partnership among the US-RSE, the Carpentries, the Israel Research Core Facilities, the George Washington University Libraries, Tel Aviv University, Weizmann Institute of Science (WIS) and ELIXIR.
A key goal of the workshop was to empower local instructors to take on more of the teaching responsibilities. In addition to last year’s instructors Dan Kerchner, a Senior Software Developer and Bioinformatics PhD student from George Washington University in Washington, DC and Dr. Dan Ben-Avraham, head of Israel’s ELIXIR node and head of the WIS Mantoux Institute for Bioinformatics, major sections covering Bash shell and a metagenomics analysis pipeline were taught this year by WIS bioinformaticians Dr. Dayana Yahalomi and Dr. Amir Szitenberg, with support from Dr. Avital Sarusi-Portuguez.
The diverse group of 24 learners from 11 institutions included MS and PhD students, postdoctoral and staff researchers in the life sciences, as well as international students and postdocs from India, Brazil, and the U.S. conducting research at institutions across Israel. Hands-on learning included project data organization for metagenomics, cloud computing, Bash shell, R coding, and applying these skills to process real-world whole-genome sequencing data through a series of command-line analysis tools to determine relative proportions of different taxa of bacteria from samples taken from Cuatro Ciénegas, a unique ecological environment in Mexico. Research computing best practices were emphasized throughout. Participants reported increased skill levels, better understanding of how coding contributes to research reproducibility, higher confidence in applying their new software engineering skills to their research, and a desire for more learning opportunities of this type. We look forward to building on the success of the US-RSE-sponsored workshop and the enthusiasm for more workshops of this type in Israel to further develop RSE skills, connections, and community.
Photos may be accessed at https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1tv68B2n8cGuvtJAn0BttJ5UcYFQyhu8-?usp=sharing
Community Calls
Since we last checked in, we’ve had three community calls in November and December 2025, and January 2026!
Our next meeting is scheduled for February 13th, 2026 at 12:00 PM ET. We hope to see you there!
👀 7. Interesting Events and Opportunities
🚀 Supercomputing and the Future of AI: Watch the Full Virtual Exchange Series On-Demand! 🤖
Our exciting webinar series for K–12 classrooms, presented in partnership with Reach the World, has officially wrapped! Over the past ten weeks, more than 840 students joined us to explore the fascinating world of supercomputing, quantum computing, and artificial intelligence. Now, all episodes are available to watch on-demand along with companion journal articles that bring the topics to life for students, educators, and curious minds of all ages. Together with Reach the World, US-RSE created this virtual exchange to offer a behind-the-scenes look at how research software engineers and data scientists use cutting-edge computing to tackle real-world challenges.
Learn more at ReachTheWorld.org, and please reach out to Sandra Gesing with any questions
🚀 FAIR4RS Survey
The Actionable FAIR4RS Task Force is conducting a survey: “Standards Inputs/Outputs survey for Actionable FAIR4RS Task Force”. The task force is collecting information on how our community reads, writes, and exchanges data from the software they develop/ maintain, with a focus on file formats, metadata standards, and APIs. Responses are anonymous unless you give contact details. Estimated time: 6–8 minutes.
Find the survey here
🚀 Contribute to the future of DEI in US-RSE
The US-RSE DEI Working Group is seeking input from the community! We’re exploring new ways to foster diversity, equity, and inclusion within our organization and would love to hear your ideas. What would make US-RSE a more inclusive and welcoming space for you and others?
Let’s work together to make US-RSE a place where everyone feels they belong.
If you have suggestions, big or small, please share them in the #dei-discussion Slack channel or reach out directly to the DEI Working Group. Your feedback will help guide our future initiatives and ensure they reflect the needs of our diverse community.
🚀 2026 Improving Scientific Software Conference now accepting abstracts
The UCAR Software Engineering Assembly’s Improving Scientific Software Conference is returning in 2026! Next year’s ISS will take place April 6-10, 2026 at NSF NCAR’s Mesa Laboratory in Boulder, CO. The theme of the conference will be: Maintaining the Joy of Software Development.
We are now accepting abstract submissions for talks, tutorials, and panel sessions. As always, we welcome anyone with an interest in improving scientific software design, quality, development, deployment, and support. Abstracts are due by: Friday January 23, 2026. We plan to provide student support as funding allows and will accept paper submissions for a conference proceeding. You may submit an abstract here and visit our conference website for more information.
🚀 Neuroinformatics Unit Open Source Summer School (OSSS)
Applications are now open for the second Neuroinformatics Unit Open Source Summer School (OSSS), August 17-28 2026 in London, U.K. The aim of OSSS is to teach open source software to process neuroscience data, and to bring together researchers and RSEs to build a more sustainable ecosystem around these tools. Join us for one or two of the following tracks:
- Animals in Motion (analysing video behavioural data)
- Large Array Data (how to handle large data in Python)
- BrainGlobe (species-agnostic computational neuroanatomy)
- Extracellular Electrophysiology (using SpikeInterface to process probe data) Each week starts with a symposium on the Monday afternoon, followed by 3 days of hands-on training, then 2 days of collaboration, bringing together researchers and engineers to use, and improve neuroscience open source software. Please share with anyone who may be interested! Financial support is available.
Apply now: https://neuroinformatics.dev/open-software-summer-school
🚀 Catalyzing modular interoperable research attribution
“Current forms of research attribution - authorship in published journal articles - do a disservice to individual contribution in large collaborations.” — Matthew Akamatsu
As research becomes more collaborative, attribution systems built for journal articles no longer suffice. We need infrastructure for sharing and attributing discrete research contributions: results, claims, and the building blocks of scientific arguments. MIRA is a Navigation Fund supported production-focused workshop convening 22 researchers, engineers, designers, and ecosystem specialists to develop and implement interoperable standards for modular research attribution across participating platforms. While the physical workshop is limited to 22 participants, we will host virtual sessions before and after, so don’t hesitate to get involved!
Learn more and apply by January 23, 2026: https://www.mira.science/
🚀 PEARC26 Special RSE Track: Research Software Engineering: People, Practice, and Impact
For the first time, PEARC26 is having a Special RSE Track: Research Software Engineering: People, Practice, and Impact, and CFP is now available, along with the Call for Reviewers!
Submission deadlines
Full papers due Feb 9, 2026
Short papers due Mar 30, 2026
CFP: https://pearc.acm.org/pearc26/cfp-track-4-research-software-engineering
🚀 Call for Papers @ HPAI4S 2026: The Second Workshop on HPC for AI Foundation Models & LLMs for Science
The HPAI4S 2026 workshop will be held in conjunction with the IEEE International Parallel and Distributed Processing Symposium (IPDPS) in New Orleans, LA, USA, May 25-29, 2026. The workshop aims to bring together researchers and practitioners from the high-performance computing (HPC) and artificial intelligence (AI) communities to discuss the latest advancements in AI foundation models and large language models (LLMs) for scientific applications. We invite submissions of original research papers that address the challenges and opportunities in this rapidly evolving field.
Important Dates:
Paper submission deadline: February 6th, 2026
Final notification: February 20th, 2026
Camera-ready papers: March 6th, 2026
Workshop: https://sites.google.com/view/hpai4s/
More info: https://www.ipdps.org/ipdps2026/2026-workshops.html
🚀 Neuroinformatics Unit Open Source Summer School (OSSS)
Applications are now open for the second Neuroinformatics Unit Open Source Summer School (OSSS), August 17-28 2026 in London, U.K. We are excited to announce the second NIU Open Software Summer School, taking place in August 2026 at the Sainsbury Wellcome Centre in London, UK. This event will bring together researchers, developers, and users of open-source software for some hands-on training, community-building and hacking.
The 2025 event (known as Open Software Week) brought together 44 attendees from 12 countries to learn about open-source approaches for handling large images, processing microscopy data and analysing video behavioural data. In 2026, we will return, with an expanded two-week program adding a new Extracellular Electrophysiology track, additional satellite events, guest lectures and opportunities for researchers to present their own work.
Apply now: https://forms.gle/S4jWFdQktkRxfHBo9. For more information refer to our FAQ
🚀 SciPy 2026 Call for Proposals is Open!
This year the conference will have two highlighted tracks:
- Spirit of SciPy
- Data-Driven Discovery, Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence
As well as six specialized tracks:
- General
- Physics and Astronomy
- Environmental, Earth, and Climate Sciences
- Maintainers and Community
- Biological and Medical Sciences
- Scientific Computing in Education
SciPy 2026 will take place from July 13-19 this year and is hosted at University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, MN, USA. The talk, tutorial, and poster submission deadline is February 25th, 2026 but as you can make edits to your proposals after submission up until the deadline submit early!
Submit your proposals here: https://pretalx.com/scipy-2026/cfp
🚀 SGX3 Summer Internship Program
This is a 9-week, full-time internship hosted at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) and supported by Science Gateways (SGX3). It provides hands-on experience working on real science gateway projects alongside professionals in the field.
Duration: June 1 to August 1, 2026 (move-in May 30; starts June 1)
Commitment: Full-time (40 hours/week) hybrid schedule 3 days/week in office, 2 days remote.
Stipend: $6,300 (plus housing and travel support)
Location: In-person in Austin, Texas with travel and housing provided
Focus: Software development for science gateways and gateway technologies such as TACC’s CorePortal and Tapis
Eligibility: Graduate students (e.g., CS, CE, or related fields) with programming experience
This internship is a scholarship/fellowship experience, not traditional employment, and gives participants the opportunity to grow technical skills and receive mentorship from TACC researchers.
👉 Learn more and apply here: https://sciencegateways.org/internships. Applications are accepted on a rolling basis and typically close Feb 28, 2026, so apply early for the best chance!
🚀 INTERSECT Research Software Engineering Bootcamp 2026
Applications are open for the fourth annual NSF-sponsored INTERSECT Research Software Engineering Bootcamp, to be held at Princeton University, July 13-17, 2026!
This 4.5 day event, targeting those who self-identify as intermediate research software developers with backgrounds in a research domain (typically without formal Computer Science training), will cover Research Software Engineering topics including:
- Software Design
- Collaborative git
- Pull Requests
- Code review
- Licensing
- Documentation
- Testing
- CI/CD
- Packaging & Distribution
Travel funding is available! For more information or to apply, visit https://intersect-training.org/bootcamp26-announce/
🚀 2026 Summer Internships in Parallel Computational Science (SIParCS) Applications Now Open!
We are pleased to announce that we are now accepting applications for the 2026 Summer Internships in Parallel Computational Science (SIParCS). The application deadline for the 2026 SIParCS program is January 20, 2026 at 5 PM Mountain Time. This year we are offering undergraduate and graduate students the opportunity to work with technical projects ranging in topics from machine learning, data science, software engineering, data assimilation, digital asset management, and application optimization/parallelization in HPC among others. If you’re interested in applying, please visit our website to review our technical statements of work and apply to up to two projects you would like to work with. Learn more about NSF NCAR as a science organization for a resilient, sustainable society. We also have a CISL Outreach, Development, and Education (CODE) Intern, for graduate students in Higher Education Administration / Student Affairs, Science Education, Education Policy, Social Work, or related programs who are interested in learning about HPC Education and Outreach.
For more information and to apply, please visit our website: https://www2.cisl.ucar.edu/outreach/internships/how_to_apply
📢 2026 Global Open OnDemand (GOOD26) Conference
📅 When: March 9-12, 2026
📍 Where: University of Utah in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
We are thrilled to announce the 2026 Global Open OnDemand (GOOD26) Conference, an event for the entire Open OnDemand community! GOOD26 is a four-day in-person gathering taking place from March 9-12, 2026 at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Attendees will have the opportunity to participate in live keynote sessions, talks, BoFs, and tutorials that share insights and best practices, explore new features, and strengthen the Open OnDemand community. As with at GOOD25, the conference will kick off on Monday afternoon (March 9) with the optional Contributor Jam, an intensive deep dive into our code and documentation which will prepare attendees to contribute back to the Open OnDemand open source project.
Registration and the Call for Proposals are now open! We encourage an array of presentation modalities, including posters, prerecorded talks, and more (see website for details). Submissions are due on Dec 12, 2025. More information is available at https://www.good2026.openondemand.org
📢 Durham HPC Days 2026
📅 When: June 15-19, 2026
📍 Where: Durham, UK
Registrations have opened for the Durham HPC Days 15-19 June 2026, Durham, UK! The call for session proposals is also open and closes January 31, 2026. An open call for talks will open early 2026.
Check out the website for more information: https://hpc-days.github.io/Durham-HPC-Days-2026/
📢 Please, No More Loops (Than Necessary): New Patterns in Fortran 2023
📅 When: January 21, 2026, 1pm – 2pm EDT
📍 Where: Online
Loops are seemingly ubiquitous in programming and yet writing loops provides one example of a common practice stuck in a pattern as old as high-level programming languages themselves. This webinar will provide an overview of the features introduced in Fortran standards from Fortran 90 to 2023. We will venture into often-unvisited nooks and crannies and traverse equally unvisited expansive pastures. Weaving feature groups together by the approaches they enable, the talk will emphasize array, object-oriented, parallel, modular, and functional programming patterns and paradigms. The talk will demonstrate the utility of the described features in open-source packages developed by Berkeley Lab’s Computer Languages and System Software (CLaSS) Group and our collaborators. The presentation will emphasize expressiveness and conciseness, showing how our Julienne correctness-checking framework supports writing assertions and unit tests using natural-language idioms; how we write textbook-form partial differential equations (PDE) in the Matcha T-cell motility simulator; and how we concisely capture advanced algorithms for training neural networks in the Fiats deep learning library. The talk will include a brief update on the status of the compiler and runtime-library support for these features in the open-source LLVM flang compiler and the Caffeine parallel runtime library developed by CLaSS and our collaborators. The talk will conclude with a description of the planned Fortran 2028 support for generic programming via type-safe templates and the powerful ramifications of this technology in our development a formally verifiable, domain-specific language embedded in Fortran 2028 via a type system being developed for the MOLE PDE solver library. One recurring theme will be the ability to write thousands of lines of code manipulating large collections of data with few or no loops.
Registration: https://www.zoomgov.com/meeting/register/VNMWsQl6SjeYrHAfFh-miA. For more details: See here
📢 SciPy 2026
📅 When: July 13-19, 2026
📍 Where: University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN, USA
This year the conference will have two highlighted tracks: Spirit of SciPy Data-Driven Discovery, Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence and six specialized tracks: General Physics and Astronomy Environmental, Earth, and Climate Sciences Maintainers and Community Biological and Medical Sciences Scientific Computing in Education SciPy 2026 will take place from July 13-19 this year and is hosted at University of Minnesota in Minneapolis, MN, USA. The talk, tutorial, and poster submission deadline is February 25th, 2026 but as you can make edits to your proposals after submission up until the deadline submit early!
Registration: https://pretalx.com/scipy-2026/cfp
📢 2026 STRUDEL Contributor Event @ BIDS AI Futures Lab
📅 When: February 10, 2026, 9:00 AM – 5:30 PM PST
📍 Where: AI Futures Lab, Berkeley, CA
The STRUDEL team is excited to host an in person contribution event at the AI Futures Lab on Tuesday February 10th, 2026. This event will foster a wide range of contributions to the STRUDEL open source project that is creating and stewarding resources to enable more usable scientific software experiences. We anticipate sessions between 9am-4:30pm with a networking hour afterwards. Dropping in & out as your schedule allows is completely fine. Light breakfast, lunch, and snacks will be provided along with opportunities to network with a range of community members.
Sign up link here
📚 8. Featured Reads, Videos, and Podcasts
📑 Recent Publications
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Arneson, K., Bernholdt, D., Deshmukh, R., Doherty, M., Eide, E., Fox, E., Fu, L., Goldman, M., Greiner, A., Gunter, D., Ricci, R., Poon, S., Wiese, J., “Illustrating Impacts of User Experience Work in Research Software Engineering.” US-RSE User Experience Working Group White Paper, December 15, 2025. Read the white paper.
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Clark, D., “To Meld A.I. With Supercomputers, National Labs Are Picking Up the Pace.” The New York Times, November 2025. Read the article.
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Slack Thread Initiated by Jamil Gafur, “What books would you recommend for new RSE to read (Anything from Software Design, to scientific writing, to fun things you enjoy)”, US-RSE Slack, November 2025. Read the thread.
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Sanna, A.C., “Cross-LLM Generalization of Behavioral Backdoor Detection in AI Agent Supply Chains,” arXiv preprint, November 2025. Read the preprint.
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Yehudi, Y., Cashman, M., Goedicke, M., Hasselbring, W., Katz, D.S., Müller, S., Goble, C., Jay, C., “Research Software Lifecycles and Stages,” ECEASST, December 15, 2025. Read the article.
🏃 9. Get Involved
US-RSE Working Groups:
- Code Review
- Community Calls
- Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
- Education and Training
- Group Management
- Mentorship Program
- Outreach
- RSE Empowerment in National Labs
- Testing
- User Experience
- Website
🧑💼 10. Recent Job Postings
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Data Science Engineer
📍 Lawrence Berkeley National Lab, Berkeley, CA
🗓️ Posted: 2026-01-07 | Expires: 2026-03-01 -
Lead Research Software Engineer
📍 Princeton University, Princeton, NJ
🗓️ Posted: 2026-01-06 | Expires: 2026-03-31 -
Research Compute Support Specialist
📍 High-Performance Computing Collaboratory, Mississippi State University, Mississippi State, MS
🗓️ Posted: 2025-12-17 | Expires: 2026-01-31 -
Lead Research Software Engineer
📍 Yale Center for Geospatial Solutions, Yale University, New Haven, CT (can be remote)
🗓️ Posted: 2025-12-10 | Expires: 2026-03-01 -
Research Engineer / Research Scientist
📍 Aeolus Labs, San Francisco, CA
🗓️ Posted: 2025-12-08 | Expires: 2026-04-30 -
Senior Manager, Research Software Engineering
📍 Rosen Center for Advanced Computing, Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
🗓️ Posted: 2025-11-13 | Expires: 2026-02-27 -
Lead Research Software Engineer
📍 Princeton Language and Intelligence Initiative, Princeton, NJ
🗓️ Posted: 2025-07-30 | Expires: 2026-01-30
Other Job Boards
- Research Software Engineering Opportunities in other associations/societies
- Software Carpentries Job Opportunities
- Academic Data Science Alliance Jobs
- High Performance Computing (HPC) Jobs from hpc.social
- SGX3 and SGCI Science Gateways Community Jobs Board
This newsletter is a joint effort of members of the US-RSE Association.
© US-RSE • 2021–2026 • US-RSE is a fiscally sponsored project of Community Initiatives