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mtlve

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Posts posted by mtlve

  1. It might depend on the bank but I was able to open an account with our university's Credit Union before I arrived (the credit union was recommended to me by many students in my department, you should ask students in your new department where they do their banking). In my case, I was able to apply online as a student at the university as soon as I got my university ID number and official acceptance, and when I arrived a debit card was already waiting for me and I could order checks and a credit card. It was very convenient.

    I recommend wells fargo in the US in general. Up until a few years ago wells fargo was the west coast bank and Wachovia was the east coast bank. Wells Fargo purchased wachovia,and I think that wells fargo has officially taken over most if not all of wachovia branches now. So if you have wells fargo, you can easily bank and use atms in probably all american cities and without extra fees.

    Credit unions vs banks: Credit unions are good if you want to take out loans and start a savings. There are often fees or restrictions to get accounts there. They usually require higher minimum amounts to keep account open. These are less in banks but you pay higher interest and save at lower % rates. I personally have a credit union and a bank. I do most of my banking at the bank and keep savings in the credit union.

    Check with people in your program though too. They may have deals or suggestions on what to do.

  2. Doing a summer program at a particular school will help you get into that particular school, if you do well there. Some programs even wave application fees for their summer students. I did a REU a long time ago, and we got heavily recruited by that particular school. I did not apply there, but summer students likely would have received at least an interview there. This is true for most schools. The top 5-10 schools are probably the main exception to this.

  3. A lot of people applying to graduate school probably considered medicine, and switched to science at some point for similar reasons as you mentioned. I would not mention your interest in medicine and just talk about how you volunteered in a lab and fell in love. Some people that do not get into medicine do apply as back up, so I would not mention it

  4. This is unfortunate, but not insurmountable. Presumably you were working primarily on classes and a quals project for your first couple years, so you haven't lost that much time towards PhD. I know a number of chemistry grads who have switched advisors at the end of their second year--in some departments it is even encouraged to rotate or work with other profs for awhile before deciding on a lab that is a good fit, so I think it is still possible to do quality work on a shorter timeline. If you have a while to figure things out, I'd start by zeroing in on some areas of interest and talking to profs that work in those areas--you don't have to keep doing what you have been, particularly if you find the physics overwhelming--I'm a physical chemist, I know the feeling!

    You need to decide if you want your PhD or not. If you want your PhD, try to find a new lab there even if this means starting over. It is unfortunate that you are two years into it, but it could have been worse for sure. Is there something there that you like more, if you do have to switch. It sounds like you did not have the background for your project anyways, so this may be for the best.

    I ran into a similar situation, and I ended up leaving the program to reapply to graduate schools/labs. It will ultimately end up taking me even longer now. I can discuss this more with you via private message, if you were interested. I am currently applying now.

  5. I do not know much about the funding in the UK for stuff like this. You may want to contact PIs of interest and see if they may have a spot for someone.

    I assume that you are a US citizen. If so, I would look at the NIH summer or post-bac programs. They have the US version of what you are asking for and it is a great place to work. You have to contact individual labs to find a position there. Some labs are better than others for giving you a real research project, so ask the right questions before picking one. I would avoid the clinical labs too.

  6. Yes. Write it into the grant, possibly under "broader impacts" or whatever NIH's version of this is.

    If a PI already has an existing R01 and did not do this, can they hire someone for a short term period of time? Summer rotation labs for people starting graduate school is a good example, since they are not likely registered as a student at the time that they are being paid. I was under the impression that the people paid on a R01 are flexible, but I heard that one may not list short term positions. This may not be true though.

  7. For interview weekends, most of my programs assigned a current student to pick me up from the airport, show me around the city/campus, and in some cases host me overnight.

     

    Is any sort of gift customary?

    This is required of students by many programs. You do not need to supply them a gift. I would send them a thank you email

    I think that most students enjoyed this. They get free food and alcohol, and they appreciate this aspect of it. We had unofficial contests to see who could get the most recruits to matriculate into the program too.

  8. On 2/5/2013 at 9:08 AM, ohgoodness said:

    Thanks.  I see your point and feel like you are describing any city/neighborhood/township that is not a guarded haven for certain demographics. I am not sure why you did link to a story from 2008 tho? 

     

    Appreciate the update! 

    The article described a larger wave that happened next to campus around the time I was there. It resulted in a Duke graduate student being murdered in the apartments next to campus. The suspect ~1 month later murdered the student body president at UNC and made national news (much more rare to hear about this stuff in Chapel Hill). This was a more famous crime wave a few years, but crime is a regular problem in that same area where international students live.

    I have also lived in a city that is near the top 10 for murder rates, so I am used to big cities with lots of crime. I would not call Durham an average US city in regards to crime. I am in a city now that is probably over 10x the size of Durham, and I have heard about fewer major crimes here in a year than I did in a typical month in Durham. I would not dismiss it as an average city in regards to crime. However, it is not something to stress about like many people do there. If you are cautious it is probably fine. There are definitely schools in more dangerous areas (Hopkins medical campus, WashU, etc)

    Anyways, enough of this tangent...

  9. What does bad neighborhood in this context mean?  Durham is a different place than Chapel Hill but I've heard a number of people saying that it is awesome and safe if you like the working class traditions. 

     

    I am sorry for asking this but graduate students tend to be a select population and a bad neighborhood can have so many different meanings depending on what one is used to.   For example -  I lived in Saskatoon, SK, and was told by "Canadians" (i.e. non first nations) that I should stay away from the west side since it was dangerous etc etc etc. The real reason was that these were either poor (proper working class) neighborhoods which often had high concentrations of First Nations populations.   I tend to tell people moving to Stockholm, or anywhere else that I've lived, that there are places where it would be unwise to walk home alone after dark but I usually just say this without any real knowledge of it. Hearsay goes along way. 

    Duke and Durham historically have bad relations. Durham was mainly a Tobacco manufacturing city and was a fairly poor area. Duke is a rich kids school. This is claimed to be the reason behind the crime. Some people in the community will come by and target people in the Duke area. We probably heard about 2-5 armed robbery reports in this area/month. Most of the time it was people doing stuff that common sense suggests one should avoid (e.g like walking home alone at 2am in a bad area. There were even some drive by shootings at the hospital. There have been strings of more crime: http://www.wral.com/news/local/story/2332198/

    If you use common sense, then Durham really is not too bad. It helps if you live in more safe area. I lived there for several years and I did not see anything myself. I used common sense and moved my car to center of campus before it was dark and tried to not walk in areas that I should not after dark. You do have to be careful in that city in general. If you make a wrong turn, you can end up in very bad looking areas. You just need to use common sense and treat Durham like you would any large city (even though it is only a medium sized city)

    Durham and Chapel Hill are close to each other, but Chapel Hill is a safe area. I had friends there and they were always scared to come to Durham. Durham has a bad reputation. Chapel Hill is college town, and people love that area. Most of the students there live in neighboring areas like Cary. They have a better public transit system I believe. If I remember right, parking was bad at UNC, so people like to use public transit there. It has been awhile since I interviewed at UNC, so I could be wrong about parking there. UNC is one of the best public schools in the US, so it would be a good place to get a degree from. Raleigh is not too bad either.

    In general this whole area is a pretty nice area to live. They have small, medium and large cities. You can live in the type of place that you prefer to live, and go visit the other types when you want. Raleigh and Durham sprawl and do not have the big city feel (e.g. a downtown, skyscrapers, etc). There are a lot of 2 lane roads surrounded by trees and an occasional business or home. Durham at least has a lot of parks and trails for people to use. You are also two hours from the NC coast (good beaches) and three hours from Asheville and mountains.

  10. I think Duke had a very small number of "graduate student housing", but no one lived in them. Most international students lived in housing next to campus. There are some nice new housing units there, but they are expensive. This area of campus is relatively dangerous though (do not walk home alone at night). Most international students tried to get a car and moved it onto campus when parking was free. I recommend trying to get a car and moving away from campus ASAP. There are a lot of decent apartments 10-20min drive from Duke. SW Durham is a good area to look, but I would see the place in person or rely on current students to suggest places. Northern Durham had some decent places too. Every other block in durham tends to be a bad neighborhood, so you have to be careful and use your common sense.

    I lived there for a few years, and I did not see anything too bad personally. You just have to be careful there. Living away from campus will decrease the odds of one being a victim of a crime.

  11. Hi grads and wanna-be grads,

    Your feedback is welcome.

    I started my PhD two months ago. I do it in a Dutch University so it's research only, I already have a Masters' degree. The problem is that I don't particularly like my topic and the approach that both of my supervisors are pushing me to adopt. Also, the staff at the department work on areas that I'm not interested in and I feel I do not fit. Whatever I talk about sounds like Greek to them and what they work on is mostly indifferent to me. Even more, I hate the place. It's a very conservative small town and there is literally nothing to do except work. This I wouldn't mind if I liked the topic, but I realised that it's not the topic I would fall in love with and spend another 4 years of my life doing research on. It should not be like this in the first two months of the PhD, should it?

    I'm thinking of dropping this PhD (it's fully funded...) and start looking all over again. How bad would that look on my CV? I'm even concerned that my professors from the Masters' programme will be hesitant to give me good letters of recommendation once again...

    What do you think?

    P.S.: I know since I don't like the topic I shouldn't have accepted the offer in the first place, but it was the only offer I got (and the only application I did due to time constraints) and at that time I didn't have enough information about the research areas of the faculty and the overall focus of research in my department, which is very divergent from my research interests (the topic is on the edge of my interests).

    Former grad applying again now. It is not easy to leave programs and reapply. You may do okay if you have a solid research background and letters. You can switch topics when you graduate and you may be able to change directions depending on your mentor soon.

    Regardless, you do need to decide if you can stay there for 4-5years and if you can be productive in this area. I ultimately decided no to both of these questions, so I left to reapply to graduate school

  12. I wonder if grad students have any input in the final selection process. Like, if one were to accidentally let slip that a particular school is not your top choice while having drinks with the grad students, would they relay that on to the admissions committee? Especially with personal questions like relationships and family...do we have to think carefully about every single answer we give? I'm scared!

    They definitely have a say. I have been a grad student host before. A lot of faculty asked me what I thought of x students. We also got emails to give opinions if people stood out in a bad or good way. Our director one time asked me if prospective x was really interested in the school. He told me he was not, and I told the director when I was asked. He still got acceptance, and he declined as I knew he would.

    This probably varies from school and program though. In some schools students have more say than others.

  13. I have a question.

    I just got an email from a professor whom I had a conversation with during the interview weekend (not an official interview but I requested him for a short meeting because he was one of my top choices but I didn't get a chance to interview with him. Anyway the conversation went quite well and we happened to talk for almost two hours).

    I just got accepted into the school and he sent me an email with congratulation and saying that he enjoyed talking with me and look forward to seeing me if I choose to attend the school.

    Is this a good sign that he is really interested in me? Or is this just a routine, formal email that every student gets after being accepted into school?

    How should I reply to his email?

    If he took two hours to talk to you and sent you an email, he is probably interested in you. Are you interested in this lab if you go this school? I would probably say that if you are.

  14. i believe that's the way it works for graduate school in Canada. If 1 professor accepted you to his/her lab, then the program will accept you. You may consider this as unofficially accepted, but you'll still need to fill out the paperwork, application, and whatnot.

    I am in a similar mess with a lab in Germany. Many countries work this way: you find a lab and then apply to the program. I am not sure if a PI accepting you means that you will pretty much get into the program. I found a mentor in Germany and applied to the graduate program, but I have to give a formal presentation to the program after I start in his lab to determine if I get into the program. I am not sure what to do about this situation either. I think that the only thing we can really do is talk to our prospective mentor.

    You can try to talk to others that have been in the Canadian system, but at least with Germany my advice has not been completely accurate I think due to program differences. All schools that use this system seem to have a completely different way of doing this it seems :(

    I think that some of the canadian schools charge a lot more for international applicants and they do not accept as many international students. I would look into this for your program

  15. If i was actually a top choice for recruitment to UW-madison they would have made every effort to be accommodating. When duke called to invite me to interview I was told they would bring me on any weekend that was convient for me if I could not make the scheduled weekend. Since they showed so much interest I would be foolish to ask them to reschedule after they have already booked tickets for me. I suppose Its simply part of the process but I was hoping to avoid choosing between programs before I witnessed them first hand.

    How did you phrase your message about the conflict to UW-madison? What happened to you surprises me. I hope that you said something like I already scheduled another interview that weekend, and I am unable to change it. I am extremely interested in UW......(sentence or two on this). Is there a way for me to come visit another weekend?

    I do like the skype interview idea, if they will let you do it. Maybe they could consider doing that and then flying you out there later, if you are still interested in the program. If you acted uninterested in their program though in initial emails, then it is likely a lost cause.

  16. Maybe -- the school where I work signs a contract with the incoming graduate student that says (paraphrasing) "if your PI runs out of money, the university itself will pay your stipend/tuition reimbursement for the duration of the program." There are plenty of students here whose labs have run out of money, but they are still able to continue.

    maybe. you have to be careful about this though. I attended a rich private school that also said this, but the fine print was you have to find a new lab to support you. This slows you down a lot and it can be difficult to find a lab that will not require you to start over.

  17. I was going to write this myself, although I feel like we're in an okay spot at the moment.  The outcome of the budget cuts won't be known until march, and by then we should (hopefully) have some offers on the table.  If the cuts are as bad as projected, and NIH slashes 25% of their grants, those applying in the next few years are going to be in trouble.

     

    In addition, I think another factor is the crummy economy and people attempting to stay in school and away from the job market.

     

    I would really like to know if anyone has some inside information or hard numbers on the # of applications and offers made this year vs. previous years.

    If NIH continues to cut budgets as suggested, then all of us are screwed. We might get a graduate position, but the PIs will not have funding to take us when we get there. Funding is already bad enough as it is :(

    This makes me glad that I applied abroad too.

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