![]() ![]() You can simply ask about his/her style in terms of introducing new students to the research and lab. Most professors understand that you will not know everything when you first start grad school. ![]() I was nervous about being thrown right into the lab as well, and I think that that is a concern you could even bring up to the hands off professor. They know what the professors are actually like. Another piece of advice that a lot people have given me is to talk to the graduate students. ![]() Have you done undergraduate research? If so, you can try to see what you liked and didn't like with your PI. Even if this isn't available, having older graduate students in the lab can be an AMAZING resource as they have gone through all of this and would be there to guide you (or you ask them a million questions to get started).Įither way, I'd choose the professor who has a better publishing record, has better funding, and in general supports their graduate students on multiple levels (guidance, schedules regular meetings, etc). I'd say if you have a tech or a senior research scientist in the lab who knows where this and that are then it doesn't matter as you'll have people to guide you who a) have experience and b) know the ins and out of the lab. general practices people are doing, cleanliness, organization of stocks and materials). While there are times I think this is awesome, there are times when it would be nice is he was more involved and was aware of what was actually going on in the lab (e.g. I have a PI who is currently VERY hands off (he jokes that the run labs on its own without him.it does indeed). /r/Scholar/ for requesting and sharing specific articles available in various databases./r/AskAcademia/ for questions about academia./r/GradAdmissions/ for questions about graduate admissions./r/Depression/, /r/Anxiety/, /r/Getting_Over_It/, r/SuicideWatch/ for mental health assistance.Users who do not follow the general form may have their flair privileges removed. An asterisk (*) after the degree denotes active candidacy or study. The format should take the general form of Degree, Specialisation. Users may add their own flair to indicate their educational status, e.g. Read this if your post was automatically removed.Read this before posting surveys, links to collect data, etc.Read this before asking about how to get into Grad School with a low GPA.(Eg: political opinions, race, sex, academic affiliation, etc.) No belittlement of other users for any reason. Posts, comments, and replies must foster reasonable discussion. Discussion forum for current, past, and future students of any discipline completing post-graduate studies - taught or research. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |