Signup date: 13 Sep 2010 at 6:14pm
Last login: 11 May 2022 at 8:10pm
Post count: 1875
I think I might add a link to that from my webpage / blog after I've given it a read.
The link does work by the way.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
It's none of his business. You manage and therefore he needs not be concerned.
Whilst the hours a PhD candidate puts in can be quite heavy, it does feel as though one or two academics expect people to spend every waking moment on their work. This is not possible and people do have lives away from work and study that they manage fine without someone creating a problem where there is none.
If the remarks are just a minor nuisance value, leave it be for now if things are going okay otherwise. If the supervisor starts to create a situation, then you do have grounds for complaint on the basis discrimination. It reads to me as though the person concerned has assumed you are going to bear the brunt of the child's care responsibilities (you're a woman, etc.) and that is an archaic attitude that should indeed be left back in the 1950s.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 11 Sep 2012 08:25:36 =======
The mods over there have deleted the message. Although I said it was serious, it appears they have viewed it otherwise.
I'll get one of the mods there onside and try again.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
Done - Charmless, don't you dare identify me!!! :-)
http://www.readytogo.net/smb/showthread.php?p=13415919#post13415919
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 10 Sep 2012 20:44:10 =======
Oh hec, I forgot about this.
I'll get something stuck up on the other forum I was on about.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 10 Sep 2012 15:07:10 =======
There's Foxit to read PDFs and Foxit Pro that does all the Adobe Acrobat stuff at a lot less cost.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
On Office 2007, 2010 and the forthcoming 2013, when you save off the file you can chose to save your word file as a PDF. Make sure you staill save as a Word file too as you will not be able to edit the PDF.
This page will tell you more.
http://office.microsoft.com/en-us/word-help/save-as-pdf-HA010354239.aspx
Note on Office 2007, you may have to download an extra Add-In to add this feature.
http://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/details.aspx?id=7
Regards,
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 09 Sep 2012 19:44:12 =======
======= Date Modified 08 Sep 2012 17:10:42 =======
From memory, contact was restricted to possibly dealing with the departmental secretary or accounting clerk - they were great and the departmental secretary became a personal friend of mine.
Apart from that, with the main University staff (equivalect of 'central' mentioned by Dalmation) they did their thing and you did yours and never the twain met. As long as you followed the way they did things, they left you well alone and the most you got was a grunt from them as you handed over paperwork to them for processing of purchases or paying off accounts, etc.. The problem was no one knew what what their way was and this might be changed on the whim of a senior office clerk (alledgedly a bit of a good looking girl - probably to another dragon) who I never met face to face. And you were expected to know.
It led to some classic confrontations, including a demand for my sacking from my first post-doc (serious and comical hissy fit) because a rep said he needed a photocopy of some paperwork so we could get some equipment repaired. My sin with this clerk was to photocopy said paperwork.
If I hadn't, the repair would not have been done and I'd have been in trouble for not getting the equipment repaired. Our departmental clerical staff placated the main University clerical staff without the senior academics ever knowing.
Everyone got roasted by the accounting gnomes at least once, so the above was pretty much par for the course (demanding someone's dismissal was pretty much like eating and breathing for the accounts people and they were pretty much ignored). If they were that obsessed, then a couple of hours for new PhD students and post-docs in a lecture room to explain how to process orders and bills would have been the way forward.
IT were the other ones to watch, however, when a PhD student sets up point-to-point file sharing on their PC and there are five thousand people (this has to be an exaggeration by the IT lads that) accessing the PC to download music, I guess they had every right to go nuts. The file sharing was slowing down network access for the whole of her department to a snail's pace. Unlike accounts, they could get people sacked or registration suspended if there was a serious abuse.
Tell that to the lecturing and research staff who were known to download pornography and were completely ignored. The story of one lad and how he got caught out is unfortuatley not repeatable on here (PM me for the story, anyone who wants to know - suffice to say I was told he should have washed his hands).
I'm sure there's stories that could be compiled into a good comedy book out there. :-)
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 09 Sep 2012 19:44:39 =======
Someone else such as a PhD Student or a Research Associate does the work and the papers. The senior academic then has their name placed on the paper as an author, even though they might not even have significantly contributed. Their contribution as such will probably be they head the research group and no more.
Cynicism is a wonderful thing!!!
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 06 Sep 2012 17:01:34 =======
I did an M.Sc. Computing conversion course years ago ages before my PhD. What basically happens is the University concerned tried to cram as much of a degree into a year as possible.
In my case, a modular format was followed. Firstly, there was an intense crash course in basic programming lasting a couple of weeks, the target being to bring you close to the standard of a end-of-first year undergrad (though honestly, we were still miles behind). This was followed by a set of six modules covering the first semester and a further six modules covering the second. Exams were held at the end of each semester. The project was conducted over the summer, this to be submitted late September and this represented the equivalent of the undergrad third year project.
It's high intensity and not for the faint hearted. Expect to do excessive hours if you expect to approach three year degree level by the end of it. My health failed during it and to be honest I thought I'd failed and I decided to re-enrol on a different M.Sc. (Quality Engineering) not too far removed from my Materials Science undergrad degree. But lo and behold, I ended up gaining the first M.Sc. as well after major corrections to my M.Sc. dissertation.
It helped me decide I did not want to follow computing as a career as also I got through, I felt I did not have the aptitude to succeed in computing. I returned to my core area in Materials Science and made a go of that instead.
The M.Sc.'s did help me later with PhD, as I gained some of the writing skills and structural / experimental design thought useful in PhD (I will admit the Quality Engineering helped more though). So if you intend to follow an academic path for which a PhD is advisable, it may give you at least a grounding for that.
However, if you intend to follow a career in computing in the real world bear in mind your competition includes people who have studied three year full time or four year sandwich degrees (one year industry), who will have that edge over you in the jobs market. That said, some IT recruiters have taken people from any numerate or technical degree with the thinking that a blank slate is better than an already fixed mindset of an IT graduate.
It depends exactly what you want to do afterwards as to how much it helps you and if you intend to go into academia, the fact you already have an undergrad degree preceding the M.Sc. conversion course may offset the advantage that former full time or sandwich people have.
Mine was at Newcastle University, however, there are a number of places that do conversion courses and I would shop around.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
I'm going to take a slightly different angle on this, as I see what Ariel is saying. I've been there in my varied path through life.
Going back as a PhD student is different as you're not mixing with large classes of undergrads as you did before, so yes it can be lonely. I know the feeling of it being time to move on as well. I felt that at Newcastle after completing masters there and the suggestion I might want to do a PhD straight after masters at Newcastle did not appeal. People had moved on as you say and whilst I would no doubt have got to know new people, it would feel empty without the people who had left.
To give a little background, I'd ended up previously doing two masters back-to-back (health reasons meant I thought I'd failed the first so I tried a different subject and ended up gaining both) and I can say the second felt a lot emptier. All I saw around me was lots of new, strange faces and I felt the extra one who no longer belonged. That made me not the most pleasant of company if I'm honest. PhD at Newcastle at that time would not have been a comfortable experience given those feelings and I probably would have pulled out very quickly.
I finally did PhD five years later strangely enough at Northumbria, a stone's throw away. However, it was five years on with slightly different immediate surroundings and a completely different set of new faces. There were no old lecturers or other staff that gave a feeling of what I had slowly fading away. The time gap and the fact it felt like a fresh start meant those feelings of no longer belonging no longer applied.
If you feel those feelings might be such that going back to Nottingham might make the experience uncomfortable, then I would actually leave it for the time being as a PhD is hard enough without feeling you shouldn't be there. There's no point in taking a position where you're not happy and deny the position to someone who would be happy there. Give it a year if possible to defer and you might feel differently.
However, if funding is going to be difficult to find for a PhD elsewhere then I would think long and hard before turning this chance down as funding will only become harder to come by. You're as entitled to join the student societies as the undergrads as a way of making friends and if things go well, you should make new friends with other post-grads in your department.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
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