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sci.geo.meteorology (Meteorology) (sci.geo.meteorology) For the discussion of meteorology and related topics. |
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#1
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I was thinking of becoming a university professor. But I was deterred by the
thought of all those years as a lowly graduate student grading the work of undergraduates. And then all those years clawing my way through the ranks of academia and grading the work of graduate students. Then all those years of publications and peer review. Endless grading, no end to grading. Can anyone tell me if there is a golden path to excellence that short circuits all that boring grading? Thanks in advance for the help. |
#2
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Ms. 2 wrote:
I was thinking of becoming a university professor. But I was deterred by the thought of all those years as a lowly graduate student grading the work of undergraduates. And then all those years clawing my way through the ranks of academia and grading the work of graduate students. Then all those years of publications and peer review. Endless grading, no end to grading. Can anyone tell me if there is a golden path to excellence that short circuits all that boring grading? Thanks in advance for the help. Get your PhD in ethnic food preferences. ![]() -- Tom Sherman - 42.435731,-83.985007 LOCAL CACTUS EATS CYCLIST - datakoll |
#3
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In sci.physics Ms. 2 wrote:
I was thinking of becoming a university professor. But I was deterred by the thought of all those years as a lowly graduate student grading the work of undergraduates. And then all those years clawing my way through the ranks of academia and grading the work of graduate students. Then all those years of publications and peer review. Endless grading, no end to grading. Can anyone tell me if there is a golden path to excellence that short circuits all that boring grading? Thanks in advance for the help. Buy lottery tickets. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#4
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On Apr 16, 5:20*pm, "Ms. 2" wrote:
I was thinking of becoming a university professor. But I was deterred by the thought of all those years as a lowly graduate student grading the work of undergraduates. And then all those years clawing my way through the ranks of academia and grading the work of graduate students. Then all those years of publications and peer review. Endless grading, no end to grading. Can anyone tell me if there is a golden path to excellence that short circuits all that boring grading? Thanks in advance for the help. Buy out your teaching responsibilities. |
#5
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Ms. 2 wrote:
I was thinking of becoming a university professor. But I was deterred by the thought of all those years as a lowly graduate student grading the work of undergraduates. And then all those years clawing my way through the ranks of academia and grading the work of graduate students. Then all those years of publications and peer review. Endless grading, no end to grading. Can anyone tell me if there is a golden path to excellence that short circuits all that boring grading? Thanks in advance for the help. Come on, teaching is also fun. Currently I have a 10 week 10 students project, they are designing a virtual planetary satellite mission and it is always fun to supervise the project. Q -- The only thing to fear is invisible stupidity. |
#6
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On Apr 16, 9:20*pm, "Ms. 2" wrote:
I was thinking of becoming a university professor. But I was deterred by the thought of all those years as a lowly graduate student grading the work of undergraduates. And then all those years clawing my way through the ranks of academia and grading the work of graduate students. Then all those years of publications and peer review. Endless grading, no end to grading. Can anyone tell me if there is a golden path to excellence that short circuits all that boring grading? Thanks in advance for the help. Well, most people with brains build self-replicating machines, GPS, self-assembling robots, holograms, optical computers, HDTV, and on-line publishing anymore.Since many of those universty jobs were invented to study Precambrian weather than logic, science, or intelligence anyway. |
#7
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Ms. 2 wrote:
I was thinking of becoming a university professor. But I was deterred by the thought of all those years as a lowly graduate student grading the work of undergraduates. And then all those years clawing my way through the ranks of academia and grading the work of graduate students. Then all those years of publications and peer review. Endless grading, no end to grading. Can anyone tell me if there is a golden path to excellence that short circuits all that boring grading? Thanks in advance for the help. Obviously, you have no intention of working at all. /BAH |
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On Fri, 17 Apr 2009 07:32:16 -0400, jmfbahciv jmfbahciv@aol wrote:
Ms. 2 wrote: I was thinking of becoming a university professor. But I was deterred by the thought of all those years as a lowly graduate student grading the work of undergraduates. And then all those years clawing my way through the ranks of academia and grading the work of graduate students. Then all those years of publications and peer review. Endless grading, no end to grading. Can anyone tell me if there is a golden path to excellence that short circuits all that boring grading? Thanks in advance for the help. Obviously, you have no intention of working at all. /BAH The above exchange is one sock puppet talking to himself. -- I am working on creating wildlife habitat that is off-limits to humans ("pure habitat"). Want to help? (I spent the previous 8 years fighting auto dependence and road construction.) Please don't put a cell phone next to any part of your body that you are fond of! http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande |
#9
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On Apr 16, 8:20*pm, "Ms. 2" wrote:
I was thinking of becoming a university professor. But I was deterred by the thought of all those years as a lowly graduate student grading the work of undergraduates. And then all those years clawing my way through the ranks of academia and grading the work of graduate students. Then all those years of publications and peer review. Endless grading, no end to grading. Can anyone tell me if there is a golden path to excellence that short circuits all that boring grading? Thanks in advance for the help. You could be a perpetual post-doc. Some folks do that. No teaching responsibilities except cleaning up graduate student disasters. This, however, is not really a golden path to excellence. More like an aluminum path to passable competence. |
#10
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On Apr 17, 1:57 pm, PD wrote:
You could be a perpetual post-doc. Some folks do that. No teaching responsibilities except cleaning up graduate student disasters. This, however, is not really a golden path to excellence. More like an aluminum path to passable competence. Yeah. works pretty well if you are a mildly competent researcher. The only problem is that if you are brilliant, credit for all your wondrous insight and and discoveries will be grabbed by the full professor you are working for. Of course, you do get the satisfaction of knowing your hard work made the life of a fellow human being better... |
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