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UnlikelyGrad

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Posts posted by UnlikelyGrad

  1. Is it apple pie? No way. It's RAMEN!!! ;)

    1) Cook ramen as usual - DO NOT add spice packet (save packet for later use in a veggie stir fry, as seasoning for grilled chicken, or use to season homemade soup)

    2) Add 1 peeled, chopped fresh apple; a handful of raisins, 1/2 tsp butter or marg, 1/2 tsp cinnamon, 1/2 tsp brown sugar

    3) Toss all together

    4) Eat while imagining pie

    OR

    you could eat ramen as usual, and make a baked apple with the rest. lol

    Sounds good! But I usually just make pie. It's one of the few things I spend effort on nowadays.

  2. I just passed my quals too. They are draining. I had 5 days of written exams plus two hours of orals--and if a couple of professors hadn't had a meeting to attend, I think the orals would have dragged on more than 2 hours.

    Like you, I also came out feeling disheartened. It's normal--everyone I know, even the most astute grad students, said they felt the same. [My sister, a tenured prof, told me afterwards that she classifies students into three categories: "Definitely fail," "he/she'll get there eventually but is still lacking," and "he/she's hot stuff but we don't want him/her to get too cocky."]

    I think the thing to do is to move pas it--focus on your project, focus on what weak spots you need to strengthen (that were turned up by the orals), etc. Within a week, I felt much better about myself (see my blog).

  3. I started at 37, expecting to be the oldest student in the department. I wasn't. We have one guy who's doing a part-time Ph.D. who's got to be at least 55--he's been working on his Ph.D. for 15 years!!

    Most people nowadays think I'm 30 tops, not 40 (thank you mom, for the good anti-aging genes). I don't know if this changes things or not, but I have no trouble fitting in: my friends at school range in age from 24 to 36. I'm the same age as many of the profs and the department chair, but it hasn't hindered my interactions with them much, if at all, either.

  4. I use a hard-copy notebook and it never leaves the building. (My advisor lets me take it to my office for data crunching, but normally it's up in lab.) When I go out in the field I have a separate hard-copy notebook that comes with me. This stays in my office unless I'm out at sea. When I graduate, both of these notebooks will stay behind. That's the rule. (My predecessors' notebooks are all sitting on a shelf in our lab.)

  5. Did your POI mention where he usually gets funding from?

    Different field here, but I had the same issue with Davis, my dream school, a few years back. My POI said he usually got his funding from two state-of-California departments. Given the budget crisis in CA at the time (and I don't think it's gotten much better in the last couple of years) I assumed that meant that he wouldn't be getting funding any time soon.

    I haven't regretted my decision.

  6. It also depends (1) how much research is going to be done in the first semester and (2) how much your project is linked to other projects in the group.

    Regarding (1): Some profs don't expect you to get much done during the first semester if your program has a moderate to heavy course load, in which case it wouldn't matter if the POI was gone.

    Regarding (2): My advisor was gone during my second year, which happened to be my labmate's first year. So, you guessed it, I got to bring him up to speed on lab procedures like how to run the equipment. My advisor is rarely in lab anyway, so I probably would have done it even if she hadn't been on sabbatical...

  7. Your main problem is going to be that you want to go into Analytical. Since its a slowly dying field in and of itself, a lot of departments don't even offer Analytical PhDs anymore, which way cuts down in your school options.

    Agreed, though there are still some schools left that do (Michigan State is the one that comes to mind).

    FYI, if you like analytical chemistry/methods development, look for a place that does environmental chemistry...environmental chemistry is VERY heavy on analytical stuff. (Says UnlikelyGrad with a sigh. Method development is HARD and takes FOREVER.)

  8. Even if you are married, it's not a shoo-in that your spouse will get a visa. One of my officemates had this problem. She and her husband did a very-long-distance relationship for two years while her husband frantically tried to get accepted to programs in the area (and looked for jobs, too). He ended up getting into grad school about 500 miles away, which was the only way he could get a visa. So now they're in a not-so-long-distance relationship. At least they now see each other every month instead of once a year. :(

  9. If your mentor at the small school is accomplished, I would go for that program. What you need as much as (if not more than) school ranking is NETWORKING...and a good mentor will do that for you. I'm not at a "brand name" school but my advisor has connections at Ivies and other well-known schools. I'm meeting (and collaborating with) people who could write high-impact letters of recommendation. (Actually, in my field, my advisor is a high-impact person despite being at a small school.)

  10. Don't forget, first five years of making payments on a house you buy goes directly to the interest. You must stay there five years to break even so if you only plan on being there five years I don't recommend buying

    With today's current interest rates, that's not necessarily the case.

    I know several students who have bought (besides myself; I'm a special case). In at least a couple of cases, their plan is to rent the house out after they're done with school rather than selling it. Since the homes are close to school, they know they can always find renters.

  11. Most campus's list stipends as being immune from the scourge of FICA. Hell some aren't taxable as personal income either (campus fellowships?).

    You call it a scourge...but for me, it would be GOOD to pay into. (I was a stay-at-home mom for long enough that, at age 40, I still don't have enough "credits" to receive a payout.) It's hard for young people to think about retirement but us older folks think about it a lot. And yes, I do contribute to my Roth IRA every year even though it is a real squeeze.

    Eigen: do you really make $40k/year? Wowza.

  12. Just FYI for the folks from India:

    On El Camino Real, on the border between Sunnyvale and Santa Clara (a few miles east of Stanford) is an area called "Little India". Lots of Indian groceries and restaurants. You can take the bus (route 22 or 522) if you don't have a car. Have fun!

  13. If you really do think that the onus will be on you to keep the conversation going, think of a few topics/questions in advance that you can utilize to do away with awkward silences.

    I used to be pretty socially crippled in high school and this was the thing that saved my bacon. I'd even run through imaginary scenarios in my head, having fake conversations with the "scary people", over and over, until I started to feel a bit more comfortable with the idea of talking to them.

    It takes practice, but it does get better if you're willing to put forth an effort.

  14. Generally, you put it on your resume, like this:

    Education

    Stanford University, Palo Alto, CA June 2013

    MA, American Literature

    UC Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA June 2011

    BA, English

    To be honest, I've never heard of an employer asking for your GPA. They may find out from your references (no doubt including your advisor) whether you worked hard or not, though.

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