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八. Molecular Biology
1.Know yourself and know what doctoral study entails
Have a clear goal as to what you want to accomplish and how/when you want to accomplish it, then make sure everyone in the program is aware of what your goal is and agrees to help you achieve it.
Know what you want to do with your degree and why it is necessary. Just because you excel in a subject in your undergraduate education is not a good reason to get an advanced degree in that area.
I would strongly advise that people considering graduate school work for a year or two in some capacity in the area they wish to work once they get the advanced degree, in order to determine if they really want/need it.
Don't enter graduate school unless you are sure you need to for your career. Be aware that non-academic jobs or academic jobs in schools other than Research One institutions are frowned upon.
Choose your advisor carefully. Be sure that your advisor will let you develop as a scientist rather than push you to conform to his or her ideas. Your advisor is a HUGE part of your graduate experience. Be careful working with a new hire--they may be denied tenure. Be careful working with a tenured faculty member--they might not give a shit.
Be aware that the job market is very bad and that many people have to do more than one postdoc to get first faculty job.
Be aware that a majority of grad students are unhappy. Be true to your own needs and career goals--don't hang in there just for the sake of not being a quitter.
Be aware that academic ideals do not play a major role in your career. Rather, politics, money, and sexy research are more important for career success than good solid work.
Graduate school is a very arduous process. You should make sure that you know what the hell you're getting into. You'd better have spent some time as a research assistant, a tech, or something like that. It's very difficult and fraught with setbacks and emotionally draining experiences. And when you're done there's no definite future. It's very hard to get a job in academic research. If you don't want to do academic research, don't go to grad school. If you want to work in industry, go work in industry with a B.S., you don't need a Ph.D. Unless you just want to do grad school for the mental experience, be very careful about your experiences. Of course, when you finish it's quite a sense of personal reward after doing all of this. (I defend in two weeks.) Just make sure you've thought through it and know what you're getting into.
Graduate school in Molecular Biology is not a decision to be take lightly (which is probably true for all fields). One should choose such a course because he truly enjoys the research, and questions, and the search for answers. Success does not come easy, so in order to make it through the dry seasons, you should really love what you are doing.
Make sure you REALLY want to do it, because it is a lot of hard work without readily available gratification or compensation (monetarily or emotionally). Additionally, it is a huge commitment. You will have to or be forced to give up most outside interests. Particularly in science, only those who sell their souls to science will really make major accomplishments or succeed in advancing.
If you are a woman and want a family as well as a respectful career in science, forget it. Maybe you'll be a respected, successful scientist if you give up all other hopes and dreams, but this is not a guarantee. If you happen to become both, a mother and a scientist, one will suffer. Usually it's motherhood and the children. Most scientists are crappy parents. Our society does not encourage bright, talented women to breed. Particularly in science, women are punished for breeding. Neither sex is encouraged to be attentive parents, active members of their community, or maintain outside creative interests/hobbies.
In general, if you have multi and variable interests or if you desire a fulfilling life defined by an active family life, social life, and financial security, and time to enjoy it along the way, do not go into science.
Be prepared for failure of experiments most of the time.
Also be prepared to stay in the graduate program for a really long time. 4 years is not the norm--more like 6 or 7.
Make sure you know why you are there and what you want to do with your degree. Then make sure your advisor knows, too. Make a plan with your advisor that will both satisfy his/her requirements for your degree, and still get you out in a timely manner so you can go on to the next phase of your life.
I would advise them to have clear goals in mind--personal and long-term goals. Do you really need to go to graduate school to obtain your goals?
The first couple years are challenging, but there are milestones, qualifying exams, etc...and it's exciting to go to meetings and get caught up in it all. But once you’re a dissertator, the pace changes...the learning curve plateaus and everyone wants to know when you're graduating. And you struggle to get publications and look back on your time and energy and the payoff is very, very little. Even an outstanding student has only a small chance at getting the academic position (after a post-doc or two). And there are many other opportunities, but we are trained to be academics and those of us already saying we'll do industry instead are sad at the prospect of only researching ideas that marketing has deemed worthy.
Do not go to grad school simply because you can...cause you're smart enough, etc.....You have to know that you need the Ph.D. to do the things you want, because that is the easiest way to get through the toughest times, and they are more tough and more depressing than any of my classmates had imagined. And most of us work in an energetic, positive environment. Realize that if you are excellent, you will spend 5+ years working 60+ hours a week and finally, you'll write a 200-300 page thesis that only 3 people will read besides yourself. If you're excellent and lucky, you'll get the great publication and have a little easier of a time getting your foot in the next door.
Consider if graduate school is for you! I love graduate school, love the challenging environment. However, I think the amount of energy and time I'm putting into graduate school is way too much for the current career prospects. After many years of graduate school, you'll have to do a post-doc (4 years is common) and it will be extremely hard to find a job even then. After graduate school only chances of finding a job in science are null: You're overqualified for many industry positions and not good enough for others (e.g. academia team leader). While people that are half as smart and dedicated to work as you are buying their first house...you're just a student with bad job prospects and a lot of work to do!
Determine what your goals are and whether graduate school is necessary to accomplish those goals. I think a lot of students go into this without any clear idea what they want 10 years in the future. |
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