Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Introduction

Not surprisingly I am a graduate student.  In the midst of my second year as a PhD student actually.  A little nobody in the big world of academia as it were.  But more on that later.  I got the idea for this blog from a class and some students of mine.  In the class we were discussing how scientists, as an overgeneralized whole, do not use new media like they should.  There can be great potential.  It had also come to my attention that many of my students were curious about academia, grad school, and beyond.  I also had a student from another university (with the intent of communicating with my advisor) contact me with a flutter of questions.  In all cases, I'm happy to oblige but I found myself reminiscing on what I went through when I was at that stage.  Terrified, confused, and oh so painfully naive.  I began thinking that there are precious few places in which academics can really go to ask questions and relate to one another on what goes on beyond the lobby doors.  Given the potential (and perhaps my naive dreaming that many will read this) for other scientists to follow me, I thought it would be a fantastic way to express and communicate scientific ideas and concepts at a scale well beyond anything I can do from my office, on a regular day at least. So, those are my goals with this blog 1) Present real life experiences in a way that others can learn from or relate to 2) Present real science (whatever that means I guess) and hopefully discuss and communicate with the scientific community as a whole (regardless of where or where not you are in your career).

Now, for the nitty gritty pieces.  It behooves me to say that whatever I say in here, though true to my beliefs and experiences, is not necessarily true in all circumstances.  The first thing I would always remind you is that every person, every advisor, lab tech, undergrad, grad, mentor, and mentee is different and will thereby foster different relationships.  You're welcome to take my experiences as advice (as they apply of course) but the best advice I could give here is "Adaptive Management."  Adjust to your surroundings and be flexible in the way you deal with things.  More flexibility will give you more bounce after all.  The second thing I want to say is I will be taking this semi-anonymously.  By that I mean I will be referring to real people, and some with very real academic careers.  Therefore you will not find any real names or places in this blog.  This will allow me to be more honest about the situation without worrying about hurting someone else in the process.  I'll make up names (likely to fill my fantasy void of stereotypic behaviors...) and places (my lab is actually divided into video game realms afterall) but the events themselves will be quite real.  And lastly, be sure to comment and discuss!  I love to see what others think and will be happy to do a topic based on what people want (need?) to hear.  So be heard!

For the posts I do put up, be patient.  They're disorganization may kill me since it'll be a mixture of things I experience now and some back experiences (plenty of those) I will refer to.  The chronology will be miserable.  More reason to request topics than to sift through my insane flow of thought ya?

Now, onto the more personal and the more fun.  As I mentioned before, I'm a grad student.  A second year PhD student with a long way to go.  I completed a 2 year Master's under another advisor in a semi-related field.  And obviously I have my BS.  I'm one of those crazies that has went straight through from undergraduate (standard college, 2-4 years) to my MS and now into my PhD.  It's one of those good/bad things.  I'm a female in my mid-late 20s.  My modest stipend allows me a little 2 bedroom apartment where I hide with my 8 year old blue russian cat and my partner.  My partner makes a particularly interesting person to vent too since he's a teacher (math if you can believe the insanity) so he relates to and sees things in a very particular light.  More on him later, often and regularly I'm sure.

At my school a PhD student makes around $20,000 a year (for reference equivalent of a McDonald's worker and a little less than a good construction worker).  The school covers your tuition credits up to 9 credits (keeping in mind 6 is full time for a grad-we put in more credit hours for one credit and have to work a full job within the U on top of that) and half of your forced student health insurance (more on that travesty later...).  You cover the other half of your insurance and the student fees.  Oh and living, if you can manage the whole being human thing of course :)  .  If you're like me and have some painful back bills from moving halfway across the country and refuse to live in a hovel with slanted floors you probably will take out student loans too.  I usually get ~12-14,000 a year, which breaks down into about $5000 a semester that I actually see, most of which is gone in a month or two paying of bills I'm behind on and honestly from getting excited from having spending money and, well, spending it.  If you're smart (and not like me) you'll save up chunks of this all year long since you'll be a lucky ducky to get paid in the summer.  If you're like me you like ramen and phone calls to mom.  You do get other perks though.  The whole learning thing of course, and pretty much free reign in the library (access to all kinds of stuff that I don't even know why they HAVE, but is cool anyway).  Finding an apartment is much easier, landlords respond really well to grad students as we tend to be quieter, have fairly steady income, and will be around for a couple of years.  And it's true, I'm definitely too old to be throwing up liquor 3 times a week over a balcony or what have you.  Besides, if the grad school will give you free beer, no reason to binge on it, enjoy the freebies. I get to travel lots of places too.  With part of my job being a field scientist I get to go in the field.  Basically get paid to boat on a lake, spend time in a national park, and put up and experiment on a coastline beach.  You get to go places to present your material too, to conferences.  Some in other cities, some in other countries and if you're good your school will give you money to do it.  Not a bad gig if you ask me.  Grad students can get really good freebies from the U.  Food, beer, game nights, bar discounts, ask and you shall receive sometimes.  Other times, as a close friend of mine would say, you drink away your grad school stress alone in lawnchair and spend all night drunkenly knitting under a dead tree.  Meh, it's a give and take world.

Those are my basics and for now that seems like a good start since I have no idea what I'm doing.  I'll sign off this first post with my favorite dorky quote. "My goal is simple. It is complete understanding of the universe." Stephen Hawking