Re: [ECOLOG-L] Graduate School Advice

2015-05-28 Thread Heather Anne Wright
Emily
I boldly proposed a project in a topical area related to my potential
advisors work, but it was not their primary area of focus. - Thus, it
brought something new to their research group when I joined the lab.
Not only did my advisor take a risk in accepting me as their student,
but this person went out on a limb, wrote a small grant proposal that
ended up being funded, and I was able to carry out the entire thesis
project as well. Neither myself, nor my former advisor - now colleague
- regret this route, and it led me to a second graduate degree in the
end. Just because one person has a predetermined project versus
another person having a completely exploratory approach does not mean
there is one steadfast rule on how to carry out a project.

You should be asking yourself instead, what do YOU want out of it?
WIll you intend on being a researcher in the future, or are you
looking to hone your interest and skills in a very specific aspect of
the field. There are ways to tailor your graduate research to
facilitate both. All other advice aside, I thoroughly enjoyed the
scholarship and intensity of graduate school and fondly recall another
mentors wise words - enjoy it now, you'll never have another
opportunity in your life to dedicate so much time to one question!

Enjoy and best of luck in your career pursuits.

Heather A. Wright
Technical Customer Support Associate
Fluid Imaging Technologies
200 Enterprise Dr.
Scarborough, Maine 04074 USA
E heather.wri...@fluidimaging.com
P  +1 207 289 3250
F  +1 207 289 3101



On Wed, May 27, 2015 at 2:21 PM, Emily Mydlowski
 wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I'm delving into the graduate school search (MS and PhD programs) quite
> heavily and am seeking advice regarding approaching faculty with a research
> project. The system I'm interested in working on is that which has many
> unanswered, interesting questions I would love to pursue. From a faculty
> perspective, is proposing a project topic (too) bold of a move to a
> potential advisor?
>
> Any advice would be much appreciated.
>
> All the best,
>
> Emily Mydlowski
> Northern Michigan University


[ECOLOG-L] SCIENCE Feb 11 issue special focus: data

2013-02-21 Thread Heather Anne Wright
Dear readers
Of interest to some folks might be the Feb.11th issue of Science magazine
http://www.sciencemag.org/site/special/data/

One article specifically addresses the use of open data in ecology:
http://www.sciencemag.org/content/331/6018/703.short

There is also a short article on data visualization. I find this issue of
particular interest since I now employ visualization as one of the integral
steps in my analysis of ecological data. Whereas in the past this article
makes the statement that visualization was regarded as the final step in
analysis. I see an exciting transformation happening in the field of
eco-informatics. This is a merger between data science, informatics and
computing, mathematics, simulation and ecology. It seems obvious to me that
visualization should be an important step in EDA and analysis now that we
have software to achieve sophisticated analysis to conduct network analysis
(eg.GRNs), and time series.

Regards,
-- Heather Anne
--

Heather A. Wright / heather.wri...@szn.it
Ecology and Evolution of Plankton
Stazione Zoologica Anton Dohrn
Villa Comunale
80121 - Napoli, Italy
Lab: +39 081 583 3224
Cell: +39 366 484 2196
Fax: +39 081 764 1355
--
 “The answers you get depend upon the questions you ask.” Thomas Kuhn
--

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