Signup date: 13 Mar 2013 at 9:53am
Last login: 17 Nov 2015 at 6:25am
Post count: 256
Can jet lag or irregular sleep cause cancer? :)
Don't feel nervous that you must perform very well in order to achieve your goal...
Perhaps you should also check whether this supervisor had any experience guiding PhD students...
Or get to know some of his PhD students...
Perhaps you can discuss with the other student about the situation... What if similar situation may happen to this student later?
However, to be fair to the supervisor, have you done something else that did not please you sup as well? Then negotiate or discuss with him? But you may let him know that you do not really need the degree... He may worry about the situation more than you.
You have already published two good papers. So you need not rush for publication now, but further develop it such that it is essentially your work.
In one educational research, students were asked whether they preferred the content knowledge should be related to certain "interesting hobbies" of students. For example, if students like "X-men", then the teachers should relate the concepts to X-men...
However, I feel that the learning of a concept should not be often related to pop culture...
For example, a chemical concept could be related to art, physics, biology, ethics, food, environment, history... not just X-men or angry bird...
On the other hand, some educational research studies suggest the importance of using computer in teaching. However, I was told that one lecturer only uses a marker, but his lessons often end in applause. Essentially, teaching philosophy may be as important as "substantial experience in teaching".
Alternatively, it could be possible for Zia to write a paper about the historical or educational aspects without using the "experimental data".
However, one high school student was telling me many educational research/papers can be quite questionable or crappy. Maybe this student is not completely wrong... :-)
According to Audrey Williams June, "Economics Ph.D.'s on the academic job market had fewer jobs to apply for in 2013 than a year earlier, according to new data from the American Economic Association. The number of new academic job openings listed with the association fell 6.6 percent, to 1,924, in 2013. However, the number of nonacademic jobs rose slightly, from 856 to 866".
What will happen if the academic job opening continues to drop, but PhD students are allowed to rise? :-)
The university will become richer? The students will be poorer? :-)
PhD students have to look for other jobs other than teaching assistantship...
Perhaps the government should help...
If you can publish some papers based on your thesis, then it is likely better than many other theses which are really questionable...
However, you still need his letters of recommendation for post-doc or academic jobs... Meanwhile, you may want to draft or polish your papers first.
It still smells fishy.
Some students got first class honours because they chose some modules strategically.
Their PhD theses can be quite disappointing...
Similarly, some students got distinctions for Master because their supervisors were more helpful or lenient.
It could be more reliable to judge the originality of the students' papers published.
However, even the papers published could be improved significantly with the help of the reviewers.
So, we should not simply judge a person based on all these classifications.
It is possible that "minor revision" may initially lead to "major revision", and "major revision" may finally result in "rejection".
There was an editor who praised my paper during a conference initially. However, it was reviewed by four reviewers... Then the editor "pointed a finger" to the reviewers. Anyway, the four reviewers' comments include "accept", "reject", "neutral"... Sometimes, it is a matter of luck...
Just a guess... Perhaps you had increased citations of someone during the previous revision.
This person is your new reviewer.
It happened that one of the reviewers was my examiner.
While he was discussing with me on the revisions of my paper, he told me that the reviewers in this journal are usually given two months deadline... In addition, there could be further delay because of admin matters and holiday seasons. So, it could be as long as two to three months, for example.
Of course, I'm not sure about your journal's guideline...
Have you tried to present your work in a conference?
Perhaps some professors will be positive with your research and agree to be your examiners?
My primary supervisor had great difficulty understanding my thesis. (She was unable to help or revise my work.)
However, I met an professor in conference who could understand my thesis...
He became my examiner and passed my thesis with minor revision...
We even discuss to publish several papers together.
Actually, publication in conference proceeding is not necessarily a good or bad thing.
It is a good thing because you have "one more line" in your CV.
However, it may be bad for a few reasons:
1. Because of imminent deadline, the paper may not be of high quality.
2. You may feel bad later because there could be some typo errors or missing references etc...
3. The reviewers of your paper may know who you are...
When you submit a paper for publication, it could be improved significantly by several reviewers.
It is also possible that your supervisor may not be as good as these reviewers.
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