Seven Steps to Success in Graduate School (and Beyond)
Adapted from N.
J. Halas
The following is a list of essential skills that all successful
researchers have developed. Without these skills, you cannot expect to
succeed in research. If you fully develop your abilities in each of
these areas, you will lay a strong foundation for the rest of your
research career that will lead directly to success in research. The
responsibility for the development of these skills is entirely your
own. Your research advisor can provide guidance and assistance, but
your graduate education is your personal responsibility.
This list is meant to serve as a personal barometer for you to analyze
your strong and weak areas.
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WORK
Develop a sense of urgency and the habit of working hard at solving
problems. Execute a project, master the difficulties, debug your
theory.
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THINK
Understand, explain, and interpret your results. Learn how to perform
numerical experiments to gain insight and help construct theories.
Continually ask how far you can push and extend your idea.
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READ
Investigate your area. Learn its history and context, understand its
technical foundation and background. Learn to read technical papers
with a critical eye, and with the expectation of being able to
duplicate and extend what is described in the article. Follow your
field by reading current journals. Know who did what in your field as
well as related areas.
Learn about other areas. Broaden yourself by reading articles in IEEE
Spectrum, IEEE Signal Processing Magazine, Science, and others.
Become familiar with other theoretical fields and application areas.
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WRITE
Write concise and focussed technical papers. Write a larger and more
comprehensive document (thesis). Learn how to write proposals. Learn
word processing and text formatting appropriate for scientific
documents.
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SPEAK
Discuss your ongoing research with peers, colleagues, and visitors in
an informal setting and at conferences. Learn how to make a
well-organized, coherent, and engaging presentation of your research
results in front of an audience. Understand the differences in speaking
to a general audience versus a technical audience. Cultivate
professional contacts and associations.
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MANAGE
Time: Develop a sense of how long any specific task will take you to
execute.
People: Develop succesful working relationships with the people you
work with.
Research: Develop a research program, not just a number of
disconnected projects.
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C0NTEMPLATE
Anticipate where research is going in your area, both your own and of
your colleagues'. Become a generator of research ideas. Learn to be
able to judge when an idea is feasible and when a research direction is
important or impacting. Keep track of ideas, perhaps in a research
diary. Search for connections between ideas.