this post was submitted on 28 Aug 2023
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Hi I have one. Grad school was the most fun part of my life, but let me give you some advice:
Your relationship with your advisor makes or breaks grad school for you. Don’t take a gamble.
Research is not what most people think it’s going to be. Almost regardless of field these days, get ready to learn how to write code, and get ready to teach yourself everything.
If they don’t have a plan to pay your salary for at least 4 years, don’t bother. No, you can’t count on external money in this funding climate.
Read the book “getting what you came for”
Talk to potential advisors. The ones you want to be with won’t have time to talk to you. It’s a paradox.
You want to be a person who wants a “hands-off” advisor, and then you want to get one. If you want a hands-on advisor, my advice is to go do some work on your confidence, and come back when you think you’re ready to teach yourself everything.
Don’t go into grad school thinking you know what you will work on. Projects evolve and change based on funding and whims and chance.
Adding to this:
Also don’t worry about your research being irrelevant. Most phd projects are niche and cutting edge. You will be pushing your field forward, you’re not just along for the ride anymore as a phd.
That’s all fantastic advice, thanks for adding to my post! Especially agree about not worrying about broad impact in grad school.
Yes and no. I would say for the field OP is in, a lot of jobs will have B.S. or M.S. as the "required" education, and then M.S. or Ph.D. as "preferred". The U.S. just dumped $280B into the CHIPS act, so now is a pretty good time to be in semiconductor R&D. The folks I work with seems to have little trouble popping back and forth between industry, academia, and government.