Signup date: 21 Apr 2009 at 6:48pm
Last login: 22 Feb 2015 at 1:04am
Post count: 1332
When I had my interviews for PhD (about 5 years ago now but I can't imagine much has changed) they were all fairly standard - why do you want to do a PhD, what interests do you have in the subject area, what do you think are your strengths and weaknesses, what are you hoping to get out of a PhD.
The "why do you want to do a PhD" is particularly common - I had a lovely cheesy line about "not just looking for answers, but looking for new questions".
I like your style. I must admit I have done something similar, though I tend to just end up writing letters of complaint. I kid you not, I once complained to a supermarket that the path to the carpark sloped to one side so it was difficult to push my trolley to the car. 10 quid voucher, thankyou very much.
I LOVE the meat feast pizza complaint though! Maybe I should try it... should I sign my letter Dr DanB as well, just to be really arrogant about it?
Hi Mrrox, what field are you in?
http://www.conference-service.com/conferences/index.html has a list of Science ones. I used to have a great link to some Maths ones but can't find it.
Well 10-12 hours of productive work in a session is probably unrealistic but when needing to get my thesis finished I would often do it and rotate the tasks. So in terms of productive written work it might only be 4-5 hours, a few hours of various breaks, and then the rest doing formatting etc so making tables from data, adding entries to the bibliography I might have missed. I did a maths based PhD so I had to format my thesis in LaTeX which is challenging in its own right sometimes. But I certainly didn't do days that long every single day, it's just not necessary and counterproductive (in my opinion).
Happy Birthday Wally!
And I turn 29 in a couple of months and have no intention of doing any of those (that I don't do already). Especially Brut, ugh, I'd rather smell of cat vomit.
Why not delay those until the big 3-0 ? Yeah, that sounds like more fun to me :D
There it is, from the printers. 3 copies, 2 for uni and one for me. Mum cried at the acknowledgements bit where I mentioned my nephews.
Feels weird. Only graduation now to endure. But I have this brick looking at me, with my name on it. That I wrote. That I spent years working for. It's just... there.
How did others feel when you got it in your hands? All those years in a few hundred pages. Feels very odd!
Yeah I did that too when I moved in for PhD, but only have one flatmate now and he's a postgrad and really busy and said himself the other day doesn't really have any friends here! What a pair we are! Although he's only here for a few more months and I'm here for god knows how long so better get some friends or I'll go mad.
I do have one friend who lives nearby but I don't want to be hanging around like a bad smell all the time!
Do you find it hard to make new friends when you move somewhere new? I guess at Uni it's easy as you end up with lots of other students, even at PhD level, and find friends but what about when you get a job and move? How do you find some people to just hang out with and make life a bit less dull of the evenings? Especially when all your new colleagues live miles away and commute or have their own partners and friends etc?
Signed, Dr Billy NoMates
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