Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- PART I The first couple of years
- 1 Choosing and handling your Ph.D. adviser
- 2 Motivation, time management, and multitasking
- 3 Handling the literature
- 4 Report writing
- 5 Powerful presentations
- PART II The end of the beginning
- PART III The transition to post-doctoral research
- PART IV Making it in science
- Epilogue
- Web-links
- Index
1 - Choosing and handling your Ph.D. adviser
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Preface
- PART I The first couple of years
- 1 Choosing and handling your Ph.D. adviser
- 2 Motivation, time management, and multitasking
- 3 Handling the literature
- 4 Report writing
- 5 Powerful presentations
- PART II The end of the beginning
- PART III The transition to post-doctoral research
- PART IV Making it in science
- Epilogue
- Web-links
- Index
Summary
Let's be upfront about one of science's biggest taboos: science can be unbelievably boring, especially other people's science. Doing most other people's Ph.D. or post-doc projects would simply drive many of us up the wall, so identifying your own is no trivial matter. Naturally, you become committed to your own projects partly because you know you just have to do the work. Hopefully, you are also genuinely interested in major aspects of your work; we all unconsciously ignore the boring bits to keep ourselves focused on the good stuff.
So an ideal start to a successful career at the ‘coal-face’ of human knowledge is to make sure that you pick a project that inspires you. Have you ever wondered why some people thrive on equations, whilst others are much happier staring down a microscope or trudging through the rainforest. What matters is that you identify your own little niche – somewhere you can work happily, animated by drive and passion for what you do. Finding the right project is a lot like falling in love: you might think you know what sort of person you'd go for, but that counts for nothing when your ultimate enchanter or enchantress walks in the room. Of my future partner my parents told me, ‘You'll know when you know’, and I have to say they were right.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Building a Successful Career in Scientific ResearchA Guide for PhD Students and Postdocs, pp. 3 - 9Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006