coffeecake Posted February 2, 2017 Posted February 2, 2017 How can I improve my chances of doing more than grunt work & hopefully ending up with a publication? (I'm a first year so I wouldn't be getting my own project—I would be working with someone else). Doesn't seem to be too common at my university & any advice would be much appreciated.
St Andrews Lynx Posted February 2, 2017 Posted February 2, 2017 There are some labs where PI will place new grad students on a project that guarantees a quick publication (something that has already been partially-developed by a previous student, etc). Other times you'll work with a senior student in the beginning. This is something to clarify before you join the lab. You'll also need to see what is typical in your new lab - do most people get a publication before the end of their 2nd year, or do most people graduate before they can publish anything? You might have to tone down your goals (or find a new program) if your expectations don't match up to what ~80% current of grads in your program/lab actually achieve. The most obvious suggestion if you're stuck with a senior student...work hard and don't complain. Show you can do what is asked of you in a polite, timely manner. Make an effort to deploy your best experimental technique and show that you can work up to "publication standard" (in synthetic chemistry this would mean being able to isolate good yields of clean products and getting pretty NMRs for the paper's SI). Be engaged, mature and show you can handle responsibility. Psyduck_1 1
coffeecake Posted February 22, 2017 Author Posted February 22, 2017 On 2/1/2017 at 11:05 PM, matsguy said: What type of university? R1 or PUI? Large public university, not Ivy League but fairly research-intensive!
coffeecake Posted February 22, 2017 Author Posted February 22, 2017 On 2/2/2017 at 1:41 PM, St Andrews Lynx said: There are some labs where PI will place new grad students on a project that guarantees a quick publication (something that has already been partially-developed by a previous student, etc). Other times you'll work with a senior student in the beginning. This is something to clarify before you join the lab. You'll also need to see what is typical in your new lab - do most people get a publication before the end of their 2nd year, or do most people graduate before they can publish anything? You might have to tone down your goals (or find a new program) if your expectations don't match up to what ~80% current of grads in your program/lab actually achieve. The most obvious suggestion if you're stuck with a senior student...work hard and don't complain. Show you can do what is asked of you in a polite, timely manner. Make an effort to deploy your best experimental technique and show that you can work up to "publication standard" (in synthetic chemistry this would mean being able to isolate good yields of clean products and getting pretty NMRs for the paper's SI). Be engaged, mature and show you can handle responsibility. Thanks so much, this was extremely helpful!
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