Aaron,
I very strongly disagree with your statement about not coming up with your own 
research idea.  My advisor expected all PhD candidates to work on their own 
projects - not feed off of his.  Masters level students were held by the hand 
much more, and they did projects that were spin-offs from my mentors line of 
interest.  
 
PhD's should be "creative" and the best place to learn this is in grad school 
where your creativity can be monitored and mentored.  Just working as another 
pair of hands in the lab is a waste of time.  My mentor asked only to be second 
author on the first paper that came from the part of the project that involved 
his greatest level of mentoring and help.  He clearly stated that all other 
papers were solely mine.  I have continued to work with the same system since 
grad school, and there has been no issue with him stealing my ideas.
 
I learned an incredible amount by working out how to do the experiments I 
needed to do; how to carry out statistical analyses I never learned about in 
class.  I could go on, but you get the idea.  I am quite amazed at your 
strongly negative opinion about this approach to grad school.  And, by the way, 
I am one of the 14% (as reported in the a recent article in BioScience ) of 
female students who was successful in landing a desired academic position - so 
there was no effect on my career.
Liane
 
****************************************
D. Liane Cochran-Stafira, Ph.D.
Associate Professor
Department of Biological Sciences
Saint Xavier University
3700 West 103rd Street
Chicago, Illinois  60655

phone:  773-298-3514
fax:    773-298-3536
email:  [email protected]
http://faculty.sxu.edu/~cochran/

<http://faculty.sxu.edu/~cochran/> 

_______________________________
 From: Aaron T. Dossey <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2013 8:25 PM
Subject: Re: [ECOLOG-L] Advice for 36 year old trying to get into M.S. program

If you do for some reason (which I cannot currently imagine) to go to graduate 
school, here is some advice that will help you get the most out of it without 
putting the future of your career at risk: 1) pick a very HANDS-ON professor 
who spends a lot of time with his or her students and postdocs (eg: they spend 
lots of time in the lab) in a successful lab with a great reputation (lots of 
publications, with students and postdocs who have left it and have successful 
careers currently who can attribute it to having worked in that lab) and 2) 
insist that you ONLY will work on work that is from the professor's own ideas - 
from their grants and based on their ideas.  Do not fall into the trap of 
working for a professor who expects you to come up with your own projects.  You 
are there to learn from them primarily, and also to do parts of their research. 
 If you already have a certain skillset and can come up with your own research 
projects and successfully
 execute them, you do NOT need to be a student (at least in that lab).  Pick a 
lab and a professor who have a lot to offer you in the form of TRAINING, 
connections and projects likely to be very fruitful.

IF and when you have your own ideas you want to pursue, keep a log book of 
those and save those for when you graduate and are on your own/independent.  
Otherwise, it can get ugly.  Many professors will, to put it bluntly, steal 
credit and reward for your ideas and independent work.  Might as well avoid 
that pitfall and keep everyone happy (and keep you learning) by doing whatever 
work originates from the professor - besides, it's their job to drive the 
research and come up with the ideas.

Basically, pick a prof and lab who seems to have YOUR CAREER INTERESTS at heart 
and act like it.

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