Jump to content

aginath

Members
  • Posts

    238
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    4

Posts posted by aginath

  1. I set and keep regular schedules. After about 7PM, I try to have any immediate tasks for the day wrapped up, because that's when my husband gets home from work. He also sees to it that I'm in bed around 10:30 every night (it may be closer to midnight before I fall asleep, but at least I'm there). I've spent the last two years blocking off Fridays and Sundays for entire work days of reading/writing as necessary.

    Time management is different for everyone and other factors such as writing (desire and ability), course load, advisor expectations, assistantship, etc. figure into your obligations. My availability for hobbies fluctuates greatly, but I still find time to make baby blankets for friends or cook for dinner parties and birthdays every month or grab a few classmates and head to the hills for some hiking.

  2. These are very broad questions and part of the answers may vary by discipline (and even within a discipline depending upon the culture of the college/department/program).

    I've seen it happen (both an advisor publishing a student's work and an advisor submitting a paper with a student as co-author without informing them). My own advisor is very careful to talk about authorship and ownership upfront. I have published with him, but he was third author on the paper (I was first and another student was second). Right now I have a paper out for submission where I am second author and he is eighth. On the other hand, I also have a paper in press where I am the sole author and it's based on a case study I conducted for one of his classes.

    The bottom line is, it happens.

  3. I feel terrible for neglecting GradCafe (and this thread) for so long! But I have been writing my Comps this summer.

    I would sooner shoot myself in the foot than commute from Atlanta. However, I know a LOT of graduate students who do it. It comes down to what you're comfortable with and what you want. Those who do commute usually complain about getting up early/going home late, having to stack classes/meetings to avoid commuting daily, and the gas prices. Living in Winder, Lawrenceville, or Gainesville are doable. There are also small towns around Athens like Winterville, Jefferson, Danielsville, and Bishop that are viable, too (especially if you like the small town feel).

    I always send incoming graduate students to CragisList to find housing. You'll see the usual spam from certain complexes who always advertise, but you also find some gems. It's where I found the house I rent (with my fantastic back yard and awesome landlord) near the Navy School (now the Medical Campus).

  4. Check to see if your college or department has a template for graduate students. We do and it has been approved by the department. The student organization for the department provides a Word template and access to a color printer (free). All we have to do is buy the Avery business cards.

  5. As for the additional question: people don't normally take classes in the summer. Since we're payed for 10 months out of the year (9 regular + 1 month summer funding), a lot of people go away for extended periods over the summer. Those who stay mostly work on their research.

    This totally varies by university, college, and department. I'm on a 12-month schedule, whereas many of my friends are on a 9 (summer funding is rare around here). At UGA, in general, students receive a tuition waiver for summer if they held an assistantship for the preceding spring. For that reason, a number of students take classes (generally seems to be more humanities/social science than other science, though). I took 2 classes last summer and am taking 1 this summer.

  6. Has anyone ever heard of Ph.D. students switching to an entirely different University after they've begun a program?

    Any thoughts? Suggestions?

    Thanks!

    I know of a number of doc students who change universities, because their advisor takes a position at a new school and they follow them. I've also known of a few who have changed, because they find out that they just don't fit with the program. It's not unheard of, but it's also not done lightly.

  7. I applied to 3 schools and was accepted by all 3. You know how many times I've been asked "how many schools did you get in to?" Not once. In conversation, I have said I applied to NC State and Indiana, but never has anyone asked me about it or asked me to elaborate.

    In the words of Steve Miller...go on, take the money and run. B)

  8. I know a number of students who live in ATL (not too far from Emory) and commute to Athens without a problem. I don't know many who live here in Athens and commute to ATL. That said, there are a number of small towns in between that are quaint and would make the split more even. It more depends upon if you prefer (or can live with) city, suburban, or rural life and amenities.

  9. It's highly likely that you'll need to meet with your new advisor at least once prior to the semester starting. The Graduate School or University (as well as your department or program) may also offer an Orientation session. While these may not be required to attend, it's highly recommended. As Medievalmaniac mentioned, certain assistantships may also have a required training session. These generally occur in the week prior to school starting.

  10. This question depends entirely on the context. I have a few classmates who are fairly proficient with English, but they sometimes struggle with casual conversations (accents and speed, specifically). It's not uncommon for them to ask me to repeat myself.

    If this is something not related to English being a second language, then perhaps there's something else at play here such as a hearing impairment. In this case, getting a routine test run wouldn't be a bad idea.

  11. In some cases (this varies by filed, department, college, and institution), there is a scoring process that occurs during the interview process. Whether this is done numerically on paper or subjectively in the faculty members' minds, filtering occurs.

    They want to know that the person they've read about on paper aligns with the person sitting in front of them in the interview. They want you to expand upon what you've written and explain your goals verbally. You said you want to work on X with Faculty Y, but do you really?

    They want to know how you communicate face to face and interact with others. What you say and how you say it has an impact on how you're perceived. Do you really fit with any of the faculty in the department? Do your goals match with theirs?

    These are just some of the things they'll look at when evaluating you.

  12. Any moms here? I'll be considering starting a family while doing a PhD--how do these things fare for mothers?

    This isn't uncommon in my field. While some faculty frown upon it, others don't care or recommend having a baby towards the end of your degree (when you are working more on research hours and writing rather than juggling classes with it all). At least three graduate students in my department had babies in the last year. Some continue with the process and others take a semester leave of absence.

    If my husband and I can swing it, I'd like to start trying in my last year. I'll have accomplished 85% of what I want at that point and will be mostly finished with my dissertation.

  13. When you get the money really depends. At my current university, our department pays students a half paycheck at the end of August. But, that may not be true in every department since the date of your first paycheck depends on when your contract starts.

    I'd save up as much money as you can. Having too much saved never hurt anyone. And, I'd try to have minimal overlap between the two leases.

    A fantastic point! Even within a University, it's different. Here at UGA, teaching GAs are paid on an academic calendar. My main assistantship is non-teaching, and therefore on a different calendar. I mention this, because it does make a difference; right before the holidays, many of my friends got paid about two weeks before I did. Don't count on when that first payment will arrive. Aim to save up enough to take care of you into the Fall semester.

  14. Alas, word seems incapable of dealing with images in textboxes or otherwise, it keeps doing stupid stuff and crashing.

    There are so many questions here...

    How large are the source images (file size and resolution? Can they be reduced without compromising quality?

    Are you on a Mac or PC?

    What version of OS are you running?

    What version of Word are you running?

    Word 2007/2010 (PC) or 2008 (Mac) shouldn't crash with images unless you have 20M images that are 100+ dpi.

  15. Hm, it surprises me that the schools are so willing to provide that data (since professors generally don't like giving out their grade distributions to most students). That being said, greater transparency is probably a good idea, since it might resolve many of the problems that institutions are having with grade inflation.

    My undergraduate alma mater has made grade distributions available in person to enrolled students since the late 80s. The reports paired with compiled course evaluations went online around the late 90s/early 00s. Around the mid 00s, I noticed a number of websites, such as PickaProf (which is now MyEdu), popping up that simply tapped into publicly available databases. I think it has definitely taken some institutions a bit longer than others to hop on the participation wagon, but it's certainly not a well kept secret.

    edit: for clarity

×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

This website uses cookies to ensure you get the best experience on our website. See our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use