How to Survive as a Graduate Student - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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How to Survive as a Graduate Student

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Title: How to Survive as a Graduate Student


1
How to Survive as a Graduate Student
2
How to Survive as a Graduate Student
  • Francisco Pereira
  • Chris Colohan
  • Ted Wong
  • Sean Slattery
  • Alma Whitten
  • Rob Deline
  • Brian Noble
  • Jay Sipelstein
  • Jonathan Shewchuk
  • Benjamin Pierce
  • David Dill

3
How to Survive as a Graduate Student
  • Francisco Pereira ?
  • Chris Colohan Google
  • Ted Wong IBM
  • Sean Slattery Credit Suisse First Boston
  • Alma Whitten Google
  • Rob Deline Microsoft
  • Brian Noble University of Michigan
  • Jay Sipelstein Susquehanna
  • Jonathan Shewchuk University of Berkeley
  • Benjamin Pierce University of Pennsylvania
  • David Dill Stanford University

4
Why are we here?
  • Learn how to survive and thrive
  • Hear from the "experts

5
Outline
  • Getting started
  • The early years
  • The middle years
  • Black Friday
  • Fortune cookies

6
Format
  • Question my authority!
  • Focus on new students
  • No names

7
Getting started
  • Getting here
  • Attending the Immigration Course
  • Picking your new advisor

8
Getting here
  • You have the ability to graduate

9
Getting here
  • You have the ability to graduate
  • You are responsible for graduating

10
Finding an advisor step 1
  • Go to lots of IC talks!
  • Learn about what you are interested in
  • Find out what you may not yet know
  • you are interested in!
  • Find out who is leading what research
  • Find out who is looking for students
  • Go to the social events
  • Get to know the other students
  • Get to meet faculty in a relaxed setting

11
Finding an advisor step 2
  • Find out more about them
  • Ask them for a meeting
  • Talk to their students
  • Talk to their ex-students
  • Read some of their papers
  • Maybe attend a project meeting

12
Finding an advisor step 3
  • Come to an agreement
  • Tell them youd like to put them down as your 1st
    (2nd, 3rd) choice
  • Verify that theyll ask for you too
  • Fill out your handshake form accordingly

13
Finding an advisor step 3
  • Come to an agreement
  • Tell them youd like to put them down as your 1st
    (2nd, 3rd) choice
  • Verify that theyll ask for you too
  • Fill out your handshake form accordingly
  • Dont try to game the system
  • Almost everyone gets their first choice
  • Assignments are biased on your favour
  • Be open to different possibilities

14
Why is an advisor so important?
  • Your advisor is your mentor
  • Your advisor is your manager
  • Your advisor is your advocate

15
What do you look for in an advisor?
  • Approachability
  • Compatibility
  • Durability
  • History
  • Research

16
What do you look for in an advisor?
  • Approachability
  • Can you talk to them?
  • Can you have discussions with them?
  • Can you talk about personal matters if
  • they affect you or the research?

17
What do you look for in an advisor?
  • Compatibility
  • Do you have similar working styles?
  • Hands-off, hands-on, hands-on-your-throat?
  • What do they expect from their students at
    different stages?
  • 40 or 60 hour work week?
  • What counts as research?
  • How do they react if expectations arent met?

18
What do you look for in an advisor?
  • Durability
  • Will they be here for all of your stay?
  • Do they often go on leaves of absence?
  • Do they have a business on the side?
  • Are they near their tenure case decision?
  • Are they new faculty?
  • Are they established or a rising start?

19
What do you look for in an advisor?
  • History
  • Have they graduated other students?
  • How long did that take?
  • Are they successful now?
  • Alive? Embittered? Divorced? Insane?
  • Have they lost a lot of students through
    advisor changes or departures?

20
What do you look for in an advisor?
  • Research
  • Are you interested in their research?
  • How far along is it
  • exploration
  • implementation
  • paper writing
  • Research group structure
  • large group working on one problem/system
  • individuals working on unrelated problems
  • Are there more faculty/students involved?

21
Multiple advisors more of a good thing?
  • Pros
  • Span research areas, skills, or styles
  • Combine strengths of each advisor
  • Parents v2.0
  • Cons
  • Must manage several relationships
  • Must balance demands of each
  • Must ensure they meet every so often

22
Changing advisors
  • When to do it
  • If your research interests diverge
  • If your "styles" truly don't match
  • No problem, happens often

23
Changing advisors
  • When to do it
  • If your research interests diverge
  • If your "styles" truly don't match
  • No problem, happens often
  • What to look out for
  • Changing frequently
  • Changing right before Black Friday
  • Changing more than twice

24
Outline
  • Getting started
  • The early years
  • The middle years
  • Black Friday
  • Fortune cookies

25
The early years
  • Building up your advisor relationship
  • Taking classes
  • Fulfilling requirements
  • Doing research
  • Avoiding common distractions
  • Fear, uncertainty and doubt

26
Building up your advisor relationship
  • Meet regularly with them
  • Communicate openly with them
  • Manage them
  • Accommodate their needs

27
When advisors go bad
28
When advisors go bad
  • (S)He doesnt look at me the way he used to

29
When advisors go bad
  • (S)He doesnt look at me the way he used to
  • (S)He doesnt spend time with me anymore

30
When advisors go bad
  • (S)He doesnt look at me the way he used to
  • (S)He doesnt spend time with me anymore
  • (S)He falls asleep when were together

31
When advisors go bad
  • (S)He doesnt look at me the way he used to
  • (S)He doesnt spend time with me anymore
  • (S)He falls asleep when were together
  • (S)He never compliments me anymore

32
When advisors go bad
  • (S)He doesnt look at me the way he used to
  • (S)He doesnt spend time with me anymore
  • (S)He falls asleep when were together
  • (S)He never compliments me anymore
  • (S)He never tells me whats wrong

33
When advisors go bad
  • (S)He doesnt look at me the way he used to
  • (S)He doesnt spend time with me anymore
  • (S)He falls asleep when were together
  • (S)He never compliments me anymore
  • (S)He never tells me whats wrong
  • (S)He never answers my calls/emails

34
Taking classes
  • The old way (previous century)
  • Concentrate on research
  • Pass your classes (B-), get an A in your area
  • The apocryphal new way (this century)
  • Do well in your classes (A) and your research

35
Taking classes
  • May seem very hard or very easy
  • Theory folks hate systems classes
  • Systems folks hate theory classes
  • Its not unusual to fail one,nor is it a big deal
  • Always take more time than they should
  • Dont forget your research!

36
Doing research
  • Acquiring tools and concepts
  • Learning how to survey an area
  • Identifying a problem
  • Solving it
  • Dealing with yourself throughout
  • Listen to/read Manuel Blums advice
  • More later

37
Fulfilling requirements
  • Teaching
  • Teach a basic and an advanced class
  • Keep close watch on the clock (1/2-time)
  • Writing and speaking
  • Practice these skills early and often
  • Get lots of feedback before trying to pass

38
Avoiding common distractions
  • Zephyr is not research!
  • but it can help you with many practical things
  • (http//zarchive.srv.cs.cmu.edu and also live
    with xemacs)
  • Dont mix work and play
  • Try to work hard at least one hour a day
  • Make that hour the first hour
  • If you cant work, go do something else!

39
Avoiding common distractions
  • Zephyr is not research!
  • but it can help you with many practical things
  • (http//zarchive.srv.cs.cmu.edu and also live
    with xemacs)
  • Dont mix work and play
  • Try to work hard at least one hour a day
  • Make that hour the first hour
  • If you cant work, go do something else!
  • Community service is not a "distraction"!

40
Avoiding common distractions
  • Community service
  • Traditionally students run many services
  • Helps you meet many more people
  • Gives a warm fuzzy feeling
  • Faculty know who you arehttp//www.grad.cs.cmu
    .edu

41
Avoiding common distractions
  • What can I do?
  • Coke Machine (servicecoke_at_cs)
  • Espresso Machine (serviceespresso_at_cs)
  • Software Collections (help_at_cs)
  • DEC/5,The Guide To Living in Pittsburgh
    (decfive_at_cs)
  • Student Seminar Series (sss_at_cs)
  • Tea (freecsd-tea_at_cs)
  • IC/open house
  • Admissions Committee

42
Outline
  • Getting started
  • The early years
  • The middle years
  • Black Friday
  • Fortune cookies

43
Research Hows Your Ego?
  • Undergraduate work
  • given a task, complete it well, get cookie
  • Graduate work
  • Find a problem you want to solve
  • Get grudging support for working on it
  • Have to justify why your work is worthwhile
  • Do it because you want to

44
Staying Sane
  • Dont get isolated
  • spend time with people
  • talk to people about your work
  • Remember
  • theres life after CMU
  • theres life outside CMU
  • you do this because you want to

45
Staying Sane Maladies
46
Staying Sane Maladies
  • Impostor syndrome
  • You think youve been successfully faking being
    good enough to be here, but one day youll fail
    and everyone will scorn you
  • Is very, very, very common
  • Best cure
  • Talk to other students, admit feeling that way

47
Staying Sane Maladies
  • Spiraling perfectionism
  • You think your work is too trivial for anyone to
    care about and you spend a lot of energy
    improving it or
  • trying to avoid presenting it
  • Best cure
  • Read papers, go to talks, go to conferences,
    recalibrate
  • Derive satisfaction from what you do,
  • not from comparison with others

48
Staying Sane Maladies
  • Trouble and panic
  • Failed exam or course
  • Research stalls or doesnt pan out
  • Fight with advisor
  • Best Cure
  • Remember it happens to everyone sometime
  • Help is available
  • Older colleagues
  • Student ombudsperson
  • Frank Pfenning/Sharon Burks

49
Staying Sane Maladies
  • Depression
  • Loss of energy and interest
  • Unhappiness
  • Change in sleeping or appetite
  • Fuzzy thinking
  • Best Cure
  • CMU counseling center
  • Many grad students encounter this

50
Beating pre-proposal FUD
  • "I'm not cut out for research."
  • It takes time to transition to self-direction
  • It takes time to find thesis topic
  • It is hard to figure out how to do research, let
    alone do it
  • "I want to leave."
  • It is OK to leave (and you get a MS)
  • Leaving is NOT failure!
  • Staying out of stubbornness often leads to failure

51
Sort-of-current Survival Rates
52
Black Friday
53
Black Friday
  • Don't panic!
  • Ensure that you have an advocate
  • Talk to your advocate before BF
  • What have you (not) done
  • What do you expect to do (be reasonable)

54
Black Friday how it works
  • You fill out a form for your advisor
  • You go to the Black Friday TG! Meanwhile

55
Black Friday how it works
  • You fill out a form for your advisor
  • You go to the Black Friday TG! Meanwhile
  • The faculty meet and discuss each student
  • Key questions
  • are you progressing
  • do the faculty believe you will finish eventually?

56
Black Friday how it works
  • You fill out a form for your advisor
  • You go to the Black Friday TG! Meanwhile
  • The faculty meet and discuss each student
  • Key questions
  • are you progressing
  • do the faculty believe you will finish
    eventually?
  • Your advisor writes a letter giving you feedback
    and setting goals for next semester
  • Frank signs the letter

57
Black Friday why?
  • Black Friday is a good thing
  • Gives you official feedback
  • From more than just your advisor!
  • Gives your advisor official feedback
  • Helps them (learn how to) advise

58
Black Friday the letter
  • "We are pleased. Next semester
  • Keep up the good work!
  • Making satisfactory progress
  • Try to reach suggested goals
  • Alternatively, reach equivalent goals
  • "To remain in good standing, you must"
  • Reach required goals
  • No, really reach required goals

59
Black Friday more why
  • Lack of communication
  • Advisor might not be able to express
    disappointment
  • Certain advisors may be less patient.
  • Language issues.
  • Lack of funds
  • In our socialist funding system we are
  • the means of production, not just the People
  • Lack of direction
  • Once classes and TAing are over, fewer excuses

60
Useful information
61
Wrap up
Things we wish we had believed a few years ago.
62
Fortune cookies
Never surprise or be surprised by your advisor.
63
Fortune cookies
Once an advisor, always an advisor.
64
Fortune cookies
Talk with other students and faculty to get an
outside perspective on your research
65
Fortune cookies
There is more than one partner in a
marriage. Being concerned with only one of them
is a BIG problem.
66
Fortune cookies
You probably cannot write or speak as well as you
can hack. Practice early and often.
67
Fortune cookies
Hacking is not research.
68
Fortune cookies
If you want to work, work. If you want to play,
play.
69
Fortune cookies
Work at least an hour a day. Make that hour the
first hour.
70
Fortune cookies
Keep outside interests and activities.
71
Fortune cookies
Be honest to yourselfabout your abilities and
limits.
72
Fortune cookies
Your thesis has less to dowith your career than
you think. What you can say about your thesis
has more to do with your career than you think.
73
Final fortune cookie
Have fun!
74
Saga of Student X Part 1
75
Saga of Student X Part 2
76
Saga of Student X Part 3
77
Saga of Student X Part 4
78
Saga of Student X Part 5
79
Saga of Student X Part 5
Now
Now faculty at a famous university!
80
Historical Survival Rates
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