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The Gradual Life and the Personal Hair Dressing Degree. The Graduate Life and the Ph. D. Degree. Douglas Wick, Ph. D. Department of Chemistry SCCC. Application . Undergraduate research experience Strong references Review professor’s research
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The Graduate Life and the Ph. D. Degree Douglas Wick, Ph. D. Department of Chemistry SCCC
Application • Undergraduate research experience • Strong references • Review professor’s research http://chem.chem.rochester.edu/~wdjgrp/wdj_home.html • Consider new geography • GRE requirements • Language requirements
Visitations • Interview Professors • What projects are planned? • What are the funding sources? • Where do graduates go, industry, academia? • Interview Graduate Students • Get the pulse of the lab • Learn about the demands of the professor • Learn about how social life mixes with scientific life
The Process • Year 1: Course work, qualifying written exams, choice of lab, TA work, research, say goodbye to summers off if you were fortunate to have done so previously • Year 2: Research, group meetings and presentations, Ph. D. candidacy exam (an oral presentation with many interruptions), TA or RA
The Process • Year 3: Research, (TA work), group meetings, departmental literature lecture, thesis committee meeting • Year 4: Similar to Year 3 • Year 5: Final experiments, writing, writing, writing, post-doctoral position or job campaign
The Process • Dissertation (thesis): oral presentation to public, closed defense with thesis committee: advisor, 2 chemistry faculty, outside chemistry faculty, non-chemistry faculty • Celebration (brief, often anti-climactic) • During the process years you will attend professional meetings, and usually give posters and/or talks depending on the progress of the research project. Usually, but not always, at least one paper is published by the end of your graduate career
Things to Know • You are paid to do research and teach • $15,500 in 1993, ~$22,000 today • Tuition & Fees paid by overhead on research grants • You will become a devotee of pasta in its only form, i.e with sauce from a jar, coffee and/or beer • You will be socialized through softball and volleyball in the summer and at departmental holiday parties • Medical school students have the best parties
Better Things to Know • You will contribute new information to the scientific knowledge base and in doing so find your “scientific voice” • “No one ever got the Nobel prize by doing too few experiments” • You are developing the skills needed to investigate new phenomena and to test existing theories as an independent investigator
A Human Experience • An up and down life • Attrition of fellow students • More is always expected • Mentors can be hard to come by • A remarkable experience of truth, endurance, ego, and humility • And you get to meet some really cool people and thinkers • You get to do some great science
Questions • 1. What are the best ways to contact and maintain contact with professors with whom you're interested in working? • 2. What are the advantages & disadvantages of getting Ph.D. instead of first getting a masters and then a Ph.D.? • 3. How does one decide the best research topics for graduate level work? • 4. What are some resources for grant writing? Do you “starve” while doing your research? • 5. Where is the work? What is the demand for Ph.D.s? Where is it highest? • 6.Why get a Ph.D.?