CMSC 601: Time Management & Success Strategies Adapted from slides
22 Slides1.17 MB
CMSC 601: Time Management & Success Strategies Adapted from slides by Prof. Marie desJardins March 2011
Sources Robert L. Peters, Getting What You Came For: The Smart Student’s Guide to Earning a Master’s or Ph.D. (Revised Edition). NY: Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, 1997 Richard M. Reis, Tomorrow’s Professor: Preparing for Academic Careers in Science and Engineering, IEEE Press J. Cuny, Time management and family issues, CRAW Workshops H. T. Kung, Useful things to know about Ph.D.thesis research, CMU Immigration Course, 87
Outline Early in your graduate student career Late in your graduate student career General
How long is a graduate career? Lots of variables: MS vs. PhD, part-time vs. full-time, discipline, school, student characteristics, advisor characteristics, age, etc. Typical mean-time-to-finish in Computer Science, full-time, starting with a BS – MS: two years – PhD: five years
The First Two Years (or So)
What Matters? Taking core classes is important. –.but not as important as finding an advisor. .and a topic. –.which means that classes in your area matter most Grades are important. –.but not as important as research
Peters: Things to Do Right Away Buy a good computer Set up a calendar system Set up a filing system Keep a log of daily progress Apply for fellowships Set up regular meetings with your advisor Create or join a grad student support group Start looking for a thesis topic
Electronic or Paper Calendar? Use whatever works for you Many technically savvy people still prefer a traditional date book Electronic calendars have their advantages Google calendar seems to be achieving a dominant position – UMBC will switch to using Google calendar as its official calendar for staff – Its well supported on many devices (e.g., phones)
Balancing Classes and Research This is the biggest challenge of the first one to two years Our old PhD comprehensive exam system emphasized classes – Must pass three core exams and two elective exams. Two tries. Our new PhD portfolio system privileges research accomplishments – Get good grades in core classes. Show progress on research: papers, proposal, etc.
Last chance to take classes You probably won’t take any semester-long classes again – You’ll take tutorials and maybe a short course or two – You may teach a course you never had, which is a good way to learn If you think you should really understand a topic in depth for your future career, take the course now
The Third (or So) Year and Beyond
The three most important things Finishing your dissertation Finishing your dissertation Finishing your dissertation
Graduate School Characteristics Unstructured environment Few landmarks or milestones Have to balance many things Reading Thinking Sketching out ideas Talking to colleagues, advisor Designing and implementing systems Learning your craft Empirical evaluation Theoretical analysis Writing
Time Management Divide and conquer – Make a list of tasks and refine them until they’re doable Do something every day – Have easy tasks and hard tasks on your To-Do list Set weekly goals – Review these with your advisor and/or “research buddy” Set deadlines – Even if artificial, they help to create structure Make time for other important activities – Prof. service, extracurricular activities, exercise, socializing Keep a journal and/or notebook – Jot down stray thoughts; review to assess your progress
Making Steady Progress This is the biggest challenge of the third year and beyond
General Tips
Prioritize What is most important? What is most urgent? Long-term vs. short-term priorities –Use your long-term goals to prioritize shortterm tasks –Plan for the year/month/week, not for the day Avoid extreme reactivity Avoid queue starvation
Organization Systems Timeline for graduate school – Classes, comps/portolio, prelims/proposal, deadlines Monthly calendar Weekly schedule Daily log Prioritized and organized task list – Bring this up to date periodically Peters suggests monthly progress reports – Weekly progress reports, emailed to your advisor, can be very helpful for both of you
Things to Track Deadlines for filing paperwork, forms, etc. Conference deadlines – Know what the important conferences are, when they are held, and when the paper deadlines are Course assignments and exams Meetings Use an electronic calendar effectively Put items with deadlines on your electronic calendar with one or more email and/or popup alerts
Keep a notebook Many people use a notebook for meeting notes and research ideas – Save them as they fill up for later reference Others always have a laptop or tablet and take notes on that – Searchable, but not good for sketches Others use random scraps of paper to take notes and then lose them Find out what works for you and try to be consistent
Filing You will probably have to do this both on paper and electronically! Papers you read –organized by topic or author’s last name –cross-indexed in a BibTeX-like database Papers you write –organized by topic or venue Research ideas Back up your electronic records or keep them on a server or in the cloud