The overworked
grad student seems to embody the most pointless aspects of academia.
Not exact matches
That abundance
seems unlikely to vanish anytime soon, as last year ATLAS had 1000
grad students and CMS had 900.
Given this situation, I find it amazing that most graduate
students, especially those in their first couple of years of
grad school,
seem to be in a collective state of denial about their career prospects.
I think the perception that industry postdocs are more amorphous (so I'm told) has to do with the perception that industry
SEEMS more amorphous to
grad students and postdocs who have previously had little or no exposure to industry.
It
seems that the
grad student is the initial culprit; he was in a direct position to corrupt the data.
It only
seems harder these dayss (30s,
grad student, super broke) to make new friends (and dates, ugh), especially if you're not comfortable with online meeting / dating culture.
Bradley Cooper is Eddie Morra, a divorced «writer» who
seems to have gotten a book contract by dint of dating an editorial assistant (Abbie Cornish, given little to do besides resemble a
grad -
student clone of Nicole Kidman).
As
grad students and young workers who had never bought anything more expensive than a used Honda, stretching our bankroll to purchase something with so many zeros on the price tag
seemed like the physics of another dimension.
On the other hand, Oscar Murillo and Michael Williams still look like promising, slightly too energetic
grad students, and it
seems a little cruel to expose their weaknesses in public when some good might still come of them if they are left to develop at their own pace, undisturbed.
You
seem to find it believable that the vast majority of scientists in the climate field — researchers,
grad students, reviewers and national academies — are actively falsifying their work out of some combination of greed, confirmation bias and ideology.
You don't
seem to have done that, and neither has Donna Laframboise, who appears to be the source of the oft - repeated claim that I was a
grad student when selected as IPCC lead author and coordinating lead author, at the tender ages of 24 and 28, respectively.
Whether you are a looking to go to law school, you're a current law school
student, or even a recent
grad, there are likely so many options available to you that narrowing down the best fit can
seem to be a daunting and endless task.