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UnlikelyGrad

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Everything posted by UnlikelyGrad

  1. I don't normally like jewelry--unless it involves very pretty rocks. (NOT diamonds.) Too much temptation in the vendor hall. My poster session is done and I've been to all the sessions I want, so just having fun from here on out.
  2. Meeee! If I haven't been on a lot lately, it's because I'm trying to whip my data into some semblance of shape. I am doing a poster on Wednesday morning. eta: I have family in the Bay Area too, and a gazillion friends (I lived there for over a decade). And my sister is presenting at the same conference! Whee! This is gonna be fun!
  3. I met a number of grad students last year who were former teachers, so it's not at all uncommon. I had serious doubts about my ability to get into grad school too--I'd been a stay-at-home mom for years when I applied--but what it came down to was the ability to put the right spin on things. Obviously, I can't guarantee that you'll get in, but I'd bet that you have a better chance than you think. You never know until you try, right? As for the whole kids-and-depression thing: I've totally been there, done that. It is doable. I'm not saying it's easy--it isn't--but it is doable. I have a labmate who is single, no kids, seems not to have mood swings...and I still can get more done than he can. (I've learned to prioritize my time better.) As my sister once said (paraphrasing): "I work like crazy when I'm not depressed; then, when I can't get anything done, they don't seem to notice as much." P.S. One nice thing about being a student is that you frequently have access to free counseling.
  4. I never make myself impossible to identify (I've certainly linked to things with my own name on my blog) but I do attempt to make it impossible to reverse-Google: i.e. when I go to get a job, and an employer Googles my own name, he/she won't find my blog, or anything on this site, or whatever. I talk about other people pseudonymously for the same reason: don't want people Googling my advisor and then telling her, "Hey, did you know that one of your grad students blogs about you?" (Although she would probably find my pseudonym for her very, very amusing.) So I'm sure you found my sister. She is indeed at an R1 in the midwest, and as far as I know she has no research twins. BTW, she's a great example of a non-traditional student as she spent many years doing stuff like being an auto mechanic before she got her bachelor's degree. (In fact, it was working with engines that got her interested in particulates.)
  5. InquilineKea--she did her BS at the University of Washington. Isn't that where you went too? Being pseudonymous, I try not to give out info on where she actually teaches right now, so I will just say that it is one of the top state schools in the coutnry. She's not much into predictive modeling--more into the lab/fieldwork side of things--so maybe things are different on her side of the arena.
  6. Absolutely not. My sister is a prof and she likes to make jokes about people who think this sort of letter is appropriate. I don't care if they are your second family: you don't have family write letters of recommendation, period.
  7. I don't have young children, but rather teens (who honestly eat up more time than babies in some ways). Time management is critical, as mentioned above--but also finding an advisor who believes in work/life balance. Luckily my advisor had her daughter right as she was going up for tenure (!!!) and knows that a certain amount of flexibility is necessary for being successful on both fronts.
  8. Uh...my sister (the one who got the Hertz) is a tenured professor who does research related to climate change. It is a 'hot' field right now. Hot enough that, even with all her funding, my sister can afford to be very particular about which grad students she takes...she turns down a lot and still has a fairly large group. I don't know how NSF groups applicants, sadly...otherwise I might have had more of a shot at it myself.
  9. I guess it kind of depends how you do it. If you have a packet of papers with their name written on it, then yes, that is presumptuous. If you have a generic packet w/o their name, it might be OK. I personally went for the "bring-it-by later" approach, but I didn't arrange a meeting. I just swung by during their next office hours (because hardly anyone ever goes to office hours, so I knew they were free), handed them the packet, and then thanked them effusively for offering to write my letters.
  10. Eh...my sister got the Hertz (in an extremely interdisciplinary field; she actually does climate stuff as well). She did not go to a name-brand school for her undergrad. Granted, it is not unknown, but not Harvard or Yale or MIT caliber. She also got an NSF fellowship. As far as picking the field goes, try not to pick the field in which climate change researchers function. It's supposedly very competitive. Aside from that, I don't have much input, sorry.
  11. Sorry, haven't been here much in recent months (have been in just enough to do moderator duties and haven't read through new posts) and am just now seeing this. I had depression for many years before starting grad school. Nice thing about being depressed in grad school: free counseling through the student counseling center! Eventually I was referred to a specialist (but the school still covers most of the cost) and put on anti-depressants. Anyway, I have blogged quite a bit about this. http://unlikelygrad.wordpress.com/category/depression/
  12. I'm trying to decide if my friend John would do it. He has experience in editing for businesses (and has even taught business writing), but I'm not sure he's ever done a Powerpoint before. You can contact him and ask. http://www.practicalenglish.biz/
  13. Define "affordable"!! It's Silicon Valley so nothing is cheap. But compared to San Francisco it's probably not too bad. I'm a little behind the times (haven't lived there for 3 years now) but odds are pretty good that you'll want to get a roommate--it's pretty expensive there.
  14. My department (chemistry) does lots of materials science research. So I have lots of peers who do research that might be found in a materials program, but would rather have their degree officially say "chemistry" for some reason or another. I also have peers who started in chemistry and transferred to our school's materials science program without a hitch... So I don't think a chemistry background will necessarily be a hold-up for you. Do try to maximize the number of related courses you take (e.g. as much inorganic chemistry as possible, surface chemistry if you can, etc.)
  15. Yes, I did end up with nice frames....I guess. They all looked weird to me because I'm just not used to seeing my face with glasses on. I'll get used to it. Eventually.
  16. I went in for an eye exam, and it's official. I need glasses for reading and driving.
  17. YEAH!! My advice: go out and have a super-duper ice-cream sundae or whatever your favorite treat is.
  18. I agree. Just interact with your cohort as if they were the same age as you; treat them with respect. Most people don't figure out my age until they see me with my (old) kids or see the pictures of my kids in my office.
  19. I don't think it's wrong to date someone in the same department, assuming your department is reasonably-sized. But dating someone in the same research group would be terribly awkward. (It's happened in our department, and the people in question had to continue working together for years after they broke up. Ugh.) Our department shares a building with another department, which a lot of grad students I know have used as a source of people to date. As for me, I will date outside of school...only because I'm so much older than the other students. I am *not* going to be a cougar!!
  20. Not really. I still wouldn't 'friend' a current student (though I have friended two past students at this point--both of whom came into my office hours for serious conversations/advice/whatever in addition to homework help). I will not friend any professors who are either in my department or on my committee until after I graduate.
  21. Yes. THIS. To tell the honest truth, I got on board with my project because I liked my advisor. The grant I originally started on (which was mildly interesting) has been mostly passed on to my labmate at this point, as my advisor decided that I was the one who was best suited for being lead researcher on the new cool grant that got me super-excited. Now I love my work. I help a friend with her research on the side (basically, one week of field work per year, plus one afternoon a month or so), mainly because I have more geology training than she does and she needs to pick my brain. My advisor is totally cool with this because I don't let it hold me back from getting a reasonable amount accomplished on my "real" project. I think she already knows what I've discovered--that sometimes if you do some dabbling just outside of your primary sub-field you end up with really interesting angles on how to tackle your main project.
  22. Yes, they typically do expect you to do research simultaneously, though my advisor did back off on her expectations a bit (only a bit). I had actual written exams, but several of my officemates (in a different program) have the sort of non-thesis proposal thing that you describe. I got a week off for my actual exams, but was more or less expected to keep up with stuff otherwise. So I'd try to spend an hour or two studying each day--usually in the morning, when I think best--and get into lab afterwards. Sometimes I'd be running a kinetics experiment in which I'd take time points every couple of hours or so; in this case I'd study in between time points. I felt like I was juggling fifty things at once and on the verge of dropping them all.
  23. Going along with what anthroDork said, I know a guy who got a TT position on the West Coast (where they wanted to live) after his wife had already started a TT position on the East Coast (which they didn't like so well). They tried really hard to get her a job near his university, but no luck...so he eventually (after ~3 years of trying to get two jobs in one city) ended up taking a job at a school near his wife's. They really don't like it there, but they're happy that they no longer have to do the commuting thing. Good luck with your search. And keep us posted, will you? I also am geographically limited (joint custody with the ex) and am always curious to see how these things work out.
  24. I made far more friends through interactions on campus, or through outside activities, than I did from living next to them. As far as proximity goes, I've lived relatively close (1.5 miles from campus) and currently live relatively far (10 miles). I generally enjoy living farther out. For one thing, I always felt kind of awkward bumping into my profs (and my students) at the grocery store. Really, what it comes down to is that I want to be able to separate my school/work life from my home life, and physical distance really helps me do that. Of course, when I'm running a long-duration experiment and have to drive back to school to do a time point at 10 pm, I do wish I lived closer. That's about the only time I regret living this far out.
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