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turbidite

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    Theoretical Geophysics

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  1. A little background... I'm a 4th year PhD student who has been ABD for roughly a year - classes, comps, and other requirements all complete. I've done a lot of thinking and have decided I want to propose to my girlfriend of ~3.5 years. I've planned it out, picked the ring, etc but have run into a bit of a problem. First, my SO recently got the job of her dreams in a city that is 4 hours by car away from my university. I don't think either of us has been enjoying the distance and have mentioned to each other in the past that if we got engaged, we would be living together. I feel like since I'm just writing I could work from anywhere but evidently my advisor does not agree. Upon breaking the news to my advisor that I would be moving at the end of the semester, he seemed pretty upset and asked me to reconsider. He's not married so I could be projecting here... but I feel like he can't empathize with this situation. In any case, he gave me a pretty long lecture about how academia is a lifestyle and how changing my priorities at inopportune times could be devastating to my long-term career. I personally feel like this is a bit overboard and ultimately won't affect my decision-making. However, it has been messing with my head and making me feel guilty. My parents unfortunately haven't been too supportive as they are both professors (sigh) who didn't get married until earning tenure. For my friends outside of academia the idea sounds ludicrous but I'm curious to hear opinions from other grad students/budding academics who have perhaps gone though a similar experience or know someone else who has... thoughts?
  2. Hi all, So after completing my MS, I've decided to stay on at the same university for a PhD. In my department, doctoral students must complete 27 hours of graded coursework and can transfer up to 24 hours from a previous degree/institution, assuming those hours were earned in relevant graduate level courses. So essentially I'll only have one more class to take to complete my coursework requirements. My question is: does it make me look lazy/unmotivated to take the bare minimum number of classes? I would personally rather be working on research than taking classes, but I don't want my new advisor to think that I don't care or something along those lines. Any opinions or feedback would be appreciated.
  3. I will never understand why some schools accept people on the PhD level without funding... I could see it for an MS, but for the PhD? No way
  4. I'm confused - you say that you were given a GTA (graduate teaching assistantship), but will have to manage your own living expenses... Surely they will give you a stipend for your TA responsibilities, yes? I'm not sure it's legal to make you do a TA without some sort of monetary compensation.
  5. Which POI's project do you find more appealing? That's ultimately how I would decide - you don't want to go somewhere where you'll be bored out of your mind. OK State is the superior O&G school, no questions there. However, IMO it depends less on the name of the school and more on the quality/skillset of the student.
  6. OP said that he/she was interested in going into O&G. Most feeder schools with connections to industry are located in TX, OK, or LA.
  7. Can't tell if April Fools or for real. If real, congrats!
  8. Awesome! Must have been quite a roller coaster ride going from seemingly rejected to accepted with funding, all within a week!
  9. It seemed like last year around this time people were getting decisions left and right. Weird to have such radio silence in mid-March.
  10. You might get more responses if you put this thread on the city forum under the appropriate city name (i.e. West Lafayette, IN). http://forum.thegradcafe.com/forum/18-city-guide/ Alternatively, there are almost always grad students looking for shared housing in Craigslist. You may want to explore that avenue as well. https://tippecanoe.craigslist.org/search/roo
  11. While I'll agree that this state does not value higher education in the slightest, it's hard to imagine the budget cuts affecting the geoscience department at the flagship university as much as a humanities dept at one of the many (too many in fact) small, public Louisiana colleges. But I don't want to derail the OP's thread, so I'll leave it at that.
  12. 1) A 3.2 cumulative GPA isn't great but there have been plenty of people who have gotten into respectable programs with worse. It is however important that you show an upward trajectory on your transcript and have a good GPA in your major (which you do). 2) Not necessarily. A publication would be great, but it's not the end of the world if your work doesn't get published. Professors are mainly looking for research experience. 3) Rice and UT are very competitive programs and would be a serious reach. But who knows, if you have a great fit with your POI anything can happen. Baylor and UNM are probably better matches for you based completely on stats. 4) I'd put OU and CU-Boulder right up there with UT and Rice as competitive programs that are a crapshoot for almost anyone. KU and UNL are within the same range as Baylor and UNM. Hate to be a homer, but I gotta put a plug in for UL-Lafayette and LSU. Both are great programs that consistently place MS students in industry. Only a couple hours away from Houston, so industry actively recruits at both of these schools. Good luck!
  13. Also, I should add that while reputation is fine and dandy, it's not the be-all and end-all. It is probably more important to compare factors such as research fit, POI fit, and funding before deciding on a school.
  14. What kind of job are you aiming for after completing the MS?
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