How to become a professor

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  • čas přidán 4. 01. 2009
  • How does one rise from being a lowly undergraduate to an esteemed professor? Three scientists explain how the academic system works and how they won recent promotions. More about what science is REALLY like at www.test-tube.org.uk/
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Komentáře • 507

  • @bobstephens5599
    @bobstephens5599 Před 6 lety +490

    Physical Biochemistry, for when you can't decide which science to pursue so you just do all of them.

  • @BlackGhost1370
    @BlackGhost1370 Před 11 lety +58

    I earned my Ph.D (Doctorate in Philosophy) at 55-yo. It required 5 1/2 years and $10,000.00 and a small library to get there. Now I have my own Research Project. I am 67-yo now and am very inspired and motivated to assist others that has a hunger to ascend to a higher plane of mind. Peace

  • @drbonesshow1
    @drbonesshow1 Před 6 lety +421

    Step 1: get a jacket with elbow patches. After that you're on your own.

    • @janpeternelj2309
      @janpeternelj2309 Před 5 lety +10

      It's called a blazer. -Barney Stinson

    • @beldiman5870
      @beldiman5870 Před 4 lety +4

      Step2: Mount steel, sharp spikes on those elbows.
      Step3: Hit very hard with those elbows everytime you need to eliminate competition.

    • @quantummath
      @quantummath Před 4 lety

      :-))))

  • @rainers10
    @rainers10 Před 11 lety +247

    50 to 500 pages? 50 pages it is!

    • @mahlstadt
      @mahlstadt Před 4 lety +10

      rainers10 A mathematics PhD thesis for you then. Full of equations.

    • @raleigh2747
      @raleigh2747 Před 3 lety +4

      Depends on what you study. It very well may take 500 pages to discuss, prove, and defend your research.

  • @manusharamanayake8142
    @manusharamanayake8142 Před 7 lety +310

    "Professors in the top of the food chain"
    does that mean they eat students

    • @supermarc
      @supermarc Před 5 lety +32

      Yes, but indirectly

    • @forkevbot
      @forkevbot Před 5 lety +10

      @@supermarc Yeah, they tend to eat the lecturers and post-docs who eat the graduate students who eat the undergrads

    • @6023barath
      @6023barath Před 5 lety +2

      @@forkevbot And what do the undergrads feed on??

    • @Osama-Bon-Jovi-01
      @Osama-Bon-Jovi-01 Před 5 lety +15

      @@6023barath Beans on toast.

  • @CorporaMedicina
    @CorporaMedicina Před 5 lety +72

    1. be smart.
    2. be lucky
    3. know people.

    • @DrWhom
      @DrWhom Před 5 lety +5

      Be nasty. Be dishonest.

    • @dankuman6728
      @dankuman6728 Před 5 lety +1

      Deipatrous, no be a liar but kind

    • @dildobaggins2759
      @dildobaggins2759 Před 3 lety +3

      4. Do an insane amount of work and try to come out sane on the other side.

  • @Timbyte
    @Timbyte Před 9 lety +184

    "easy"

  • @foozlefoozle
    @foozlefoozle Před 15 lety +29

    Researchers, in general, are not necessarily trained to teach... that is one hole in the schooling. Some of the top universities require PhD students to do some teaching, as a teaching assistant. This is very useful.

  • @Gassaroth
    @Gassaroth Před 8 lety +183

    This was a really well edited video.

  • @TheBoss2288
    @TheBoss2288 Před 7 lety +267

    This job literally has no extrinsic value, at least not until one climbs the ladder, but the process is so long and strenuous that one has to wonder if the reward at the end does any justice to the investment demanded all throughout. It is so sad, these are the people that truly make a contribution to humanity, but what else can one expect from a society that does not value education. I now have a much more profound respect for all my tenure professors.

    • @yoshtg
      @yoshtg Před 6 lety +15

      the internet will fix a lot of the stuff you said, give it 20 more years and humanity will value education more

    • @mushypork1272
      @mushypork1272 Před 6 lety +10

      ibrahim, true, the worst enemy of a researcher/academic is universities themselves and university administrators. it's like reliving some Kafka's novel.

    • @dutchmountainsnake5379
      @dutchmountainsnake5379 Před 5 lety

      TheBoss2288 well don't feel too compassionate.... cause they themselves won the lottery too so

    • @QuasiELVIS
      @QuasiELVIS Před 5 lety +7

      What do you mean by "all my tenure professors"?
      In my whole degree I was never taught by one full professor, they're too busy running their departments to be giving classes to undergrads. I had plenty of senior lecturers or associate professors but not *the* professor, let alone more than one (were they from different departments?)

    • @forkevbot
      @forkevbot Před 5 lety +1

      @@QuasiELVIS Perhaps where you live it is somewhat different? I had a number of tenured professors who ran courses. I had one in sociology, one in math, one in a critical reading course, and one in physics at least. So quite a wide range of disciplines. It was in the US. It was at a very large university that has a lot of research, and was somewhere between average and ivy league as far as ranking/reputation in most areas. In all of these cases, the professors enjoyed teaching. Also I think maybe I actually had 3-4 tenured professors run my courses in physics (my major) because the department was somewhat small and a large portion of the upper level electives are taught by tenured professors.

  • @Melthornal
    @Melthornal Před 12 lety +12

    In high school my longest paper was maybe 8 pages. In college I studied psychology with a minor in neuroscience and another minor in chemistry. My first semester psychology course final was a 20 page paper. First semester sophomore psych paper was 40 pages. Junior final was 60 pages. Senior final was a 12 month long intensive research project with a 100 page written thesis. It ramped up slowly, perhaps, but by the end it was hardcore.

  • @maujo2009
    @maujo2009 Před 9 lety +158

    "easy" steps.
    "Easy"
    [sigh]

  • @dean8147
    @dean8147 Před 10 lety +72

    HOLY **** and I thought that obtaining a PhD was something prestigious...

    • @orestesvega2475
      @orestesvega2475 Před 4 lety

      I KNOW SOME WITH MASTERS ARE WAY BETTER THAN THOSE WITH PHD

    • @frazerlaing7264
      @frazerlaing7264 Před 3 lety

      Dean Bellamy it is?

    • @robinthebobin6537
      @robinthebobin6537 Před 3 lety +2

      It is, but this video makes it sound like it's just the "first step" lol, I do see why it's gone over so quickly in this vid TBF though, being a professor is an insanely high level to reach

    • @dean8147
      @dean8147 Před 3 lety +3

      @@robinthebobin6537 made this comment as a young individual prior undergrad/post grad studies. Needless to say my MSc experience will be the last. Academia is interesting, but not for me entirely.

    • @robinthebobin6537
      @robinthebobin6537 Před 3 lety +3

      @@dean8147 Fair enough, GL with your future ventures!

  • @sidewaysfcs0718
    @sidewaysfcs0718 Před 8 lety +118

    why are so many people demoralised? becoming a professor means doing research and hard work...why would you think everyone has to be easy so everyone can be a professor?

    • @OppaiAI
      @OppaiAI Před 8 lety +2

      +sidewaysfcs0718 lol

    • @Aurasmae
      @Aurasmae Před 8 lety +7

      +sidewaysfcs0718 Because some people find it easier to rely on the bible and pretend all these scientists and doctors are wrong and are studying lies!

    • @demonetizeddemonetisedinmy1890
      @demonetizeddemonetisedinmy1890 Před 7 lety +7

      +The Aura Tree Or maybe I don't have 180 IQ and I'm not the next Einstein, you imbecile.

    • @demonetizeddemonetisedinmy1890
      @demonetizeddemonetisedinmy1890 Před 7 lety +2

      The Aura Tree Even easier to guess yours considering your tendency to be prejudicial.

    • @demonetizeddemonetisedinmy1890
      @demonetizeddemonetisedinmy1890 Před 7 lety +1

      The Aura Tree​​ If your ignorant mind doesn't know this: the "le" was put in due to associating Reddit and sticking "le" in everything during the old times of Reddit - times when you still were in kindergarten.
      You contradict yourself as you call yourself "smart" yet you "judge a book by its cover", the least intelligent thing to do.
      I appreciate your trolling efforts and your display of ignorance, but the block button says otherwise.
      If you will continue to troll like you usually do in your pathetic life, then it will be put to use.

  • @conorreddy3510
    @conorreddy3510 Před 9 lety +273

    Wow, as a first year undergrad with aspirations of one day making a living from research, this is so demoralising!

    • @CastelDawn
      @CastelDawn Před 9 lety +92

      Moses Bullrush
      lol, let me guess, no universty wanted you so now you're mad? pathetic.

    • @mosesbullrush8051
      @mosesbullrush8051 Před 9 lety +8

      CastelDawn lol Let me guess, the video link in my comment was beyond your comprehension - congrats, you qualify for University admisson - followed by flipping burgers.
      I suppose you also believe in Anthropogenic Global Warming even though you can't show any causal correlation between atmosheric CO2 concentrations and Earth Temperature.

    • @justtoleavecomments3755
      @justtoleavecomments3755 Před 9 lety +32

      Moses Bullrush Whether "global warming" is real or not, the effects of addressing are beneficial for 99.9% of the human population (the 99.9% that don't make billions of of selling oil,coal etc.) why?
      Simple, because the hydrocarbon bi products of burning fossils fuels are harmful to human health. Replacing them with a clean, harmless energy source isn't a bad thing, and any sane person would be wise to encourage governments to address the issue of "global warming" even if they do not believe in it, for the sole purpose of creating a cleaner, healthier environment for everybody.

    • @mosesbullrush8051
      @mosesbullrush8051 Před 9 lety

      just to leave comments Hydrocarbon emmissions have been cleaned up by catalytic converters, acid rain and smog have been dealt with, CO2 emissions remain and that is why cars and power stations are evaluated according to the CO2 emissions.
      CO2 is not pollution, we need more CO2 which will boost plant growth and make the earth bloom with abundance, that is why they want to squash CO2 emissions and limit food production and limit population survival.
      Video Title: Seeing Is Believing
      /watch?v=P2qVNK6zFgE
      Do you really believe they want to limit CO2 because they care about us? The EPA movement is designed to crush the economy of America and force Americans down to lower economic levels which make ordinary people dependent on the Government. Land and resource control is all about enviro-green- communism. The NWO Corporations behind de-forestation are the same people as the Koch Bros and the Wall Street Fake Global Warming Carbon Tax Swindlers who want to treat all humans like Palestinians.

    • @mosesbullrush8051
      @mosesbullrush8051 Před 9 lety +1

      just to leave comments You can't show any historic or current correlation between atmospheric CO2 concentrations and Earth Temperature therefore Global Warming propaganda is promoted by Wall Street Carbon Tax Swindlers and the beneficiaries of their Trillion Dollar per year Carbon Derivatives Market. Global Warming is just a bigger version of ENRON.

  • @cow_tools_
    @cow_tools_ Před 8 lety +90

    Oh dear, that post-doc trap sounds scary. Why didn't they go into more detail on how to avoid that! Just "you're in trouble", great.

    • @cow_tools_
      @cow_tools_ Před 8 lety +3

      He also implied the more post-docs you end up doing, the worse it gets. Surely having to do more post-docs on your way up the ladder couldn't hurt in of itself, as long as you didn't do poor research?

    • @cow_tools_
      @cow_tools_ Před 8 lety +12

      The One Yeah. I'm just finishing my Masters, and I'm having to really decide where in the world and in what exact area of nonlinear optics or laser tech I'm going to apply for a PhD in. It's too much to think about. Almost wish I had an agent, hahahah.

    • @cryora
      @cryora Před 6 lety

      University of Rochester is well known for optics. University of Colorado Boulder is well known for Atomic, Molecular, and Optical Physics. But every big university should have research groups in most major categories of research. I sort of let fate influence my decision. I was told I should choose the school that I am are willing to live in for years, and that what specifically you do in research comes secondary. I chose the University of Maryland College Park because it was more metropolitan (near DC) among the two universities :( that I got accepted to. I'm hoping to take advantage of my 1st year lab rotations to get some breadth and exposure, but ultimately, I will probably work in the field of ultrafast lasers.

    • @NawidN
      @NawidN Před 4 lety

      @@underpowerjet Weird that they don't desire it. You can do interdisciplinary research after that. That's very valuable!

  • @foggy808
    @foggy808 Před 7 lety +5

    This video was a fantastic inspiration to me and probably a lot of other scientists in training. Makes me value the genius of the professors I have access to even more. I'm definitely going to stay in active research though!
    Editing was really really good too.

  • @DrSaxxy
    @DrSaxxy Před 13 lety +18

    When I first got to university I was surprised to find out that some of the professors were horrible at teaching! :-( They may be very competant in their field of studies, but it seems like sometimes their ability to pass on their knowledge to others wasn't given much of a look at.
    Of course, from what I've seen from these videos that certainly isn't the case at Nottingham! ;)

  • @josephjackson1956
    @josephjackson1956 Před 3 lety +6

    Must be nice to have professors who actually know the material they teach.

    • @11thBlockParty
      @11thBlockParty Před 9 měsíci

      Subjective….. there’s always someone in a class who can’t stand the professor.

  • @gilesy5
    @gilesy5 Před 15 lety +6

    What an insight! So interesting and a revelation about what it takes to become a professor. What an achievement, well done. Not sure I could do it!

  • @mustaphasanio2568
    @mustaphasanio2568 Před 9 lety +4

    Wow!!! Hard work, determination + patience.....

  • @p6tan
    @p6tan Před 15 lety

    Well done! it's nice to hear good things and how well people are doing. Stuff like this should be in the public eye like the news, radio, papers etc etc which can encourge others to go for it.

  • @boldger13
    @boldger13 Před 13 lety +6

    Congratulations to all who were promoted! I'm sure it was well deserved.

  • @SuperMangn
    @SuperMangn Před 12 lety +6

    It sounds impossible but it depends how good you are at a subject. Gifted people are frustrated by the amount of time it takes and get very angry that they are being held back and wasted by the system.

  • @abhijitborah
    @abhijitborah Před 5 lety +1

    Thanks. Comforting video.

  • @smbhax
    @smbhax Před 14 lety +2

    Very very informative, and I know it's late but congrats on the promotions, guys!

  • @james4727
    @james4727 Před 5 lety +3

    i think its a serious shortcoming of universities to not explain this stuff. I am in my last year of a biology degree, and it basically takes me picking the brains of my tutors and professors duing labs to get answers about career paths, and basic things like what tenure is. There really should be a webpage or a lecture where they talk about all the career related things.

  • @stivenap156
    @stivenap156 Před 5 lety

    Thanks for this post! i really enjoyed the content.

  • @BobStinkfulla
    @BobStinkfulla Před 14 lety

    Excellent information, no-one has ever explained this to me before.

  • @sieracki001
    @sieracki001 Před 8 lety +12

    Basically it's publish or perish. To get an entry level assistant prof you need some pubs and conference proceedings. The exception is at a teaching college but for the most part those pay less than tenure track.

    • @oldtwinsna8347
      @oldtwinsna8347 Před 7 lety +2

      Overall pay is less but per hour break down is much more. Teach class, office hours, a few commitee meetings every so often, and youre done. No evenings, late hours, or weekends, and summer terms off.

  • @ianc8054
    @ianc8054 Před 6 lety +18

    3:24... "Lecturer, what I call the first grown up job in academia"... which you might get by your mid 30s...
    It turns out that after 10-15 years of training, 90-95% of postdocs are simply discarded... despite being the principal agents involved in research (lecturers usually have to divide their time between writing papers, lecturing, and applying for grants, rarely stepping into the lab...)
    A pretty shocking way to run an industry, and curiously relatively recent. I have met many retired professors who got their first 'grown up job' after their masters degree at age 23-24.

  • @Roddyoneeye
    @Roddyoneeye Před 15 lety

    Congratulations to all of you !

  • @gh0stmast3r
    @gh0stmast3r Před 12 lety +10

    this is an insanely good video, it clearly explains the path to becoming a professor and how much you actually have to work in order to get into a position like that. look out world you'll be seeing a new professor soon enough!

    • @addy7464
      @addy7464 Před 4 lety +5

      What are you doing now.... Its been 8 years?

  • @TheBandScanner
    @TheBandScanner Před 12 lety

    This video was quite good, and I hope it helps develope the standard worldwide. Having taught at large for years, it always sad how many students are given no understanding of the educative process.

  • @Sickboyfriend
    @Sickboyfriend Před 10 lety +2

    I just started my first semester as a phd student. This video puts a brake on my desire to pursue a career in academia.

  • @laurenl154
    @laurenl154 Před 5 lety +3

    sheesh...I want to be a professor and do research on the side but this is such an arduous process, I don’t know how they do it.
    I always wondered why I have some professors that are in their late 70’s still teaching and now I know why - it takes forever to just earn the title of professor!

  • @tinegregory1808
    @tinegregory1808 Před 7 lety +50

    LOOK FOR MY COMMENT IN 25 YEARS WEN AM A PROFESSOR

  • @TheScienceiscool
    @TheScienceiscool Před 14 lety +2

    I want to be a professor, getting there sounds hard, but it is worth it.

  • @031288ful
    @031288ful Před 12 lety

    the formal time is 3 years. but it depends on your subject and research. if you doing researching in chemistry and stuff you might need more time because of the experiments. it also depends on if you have funding. if you do and it is for 3 years usually people stick to that period of 3 years because they do not have the money to fund themselves for more years. so an average time i would say is 3 to 5 years (there are exceptions to this however)

  • @Somaysoma
    @Somaysoma Před 2 lety +1

    I loved the "easy" steps.

  • @AtomSmashingMachine
    @AtomSmashingMachine Před 9 lety +13

    It's my goal to be a research professor in chemistry. I hope I make it this far.

    • @AtomSmashingMachine
      @AtomSmashingMachine Před 6 lety +29

      Hey, 3 Years later I’m about to graduate with a bachelors in biochemistry. I’m about to pursue a Master’s in bioinformatics. I don’t want to be a chemistry professor anymore

    • @jamesb6923
      @jamesb6923 Před 6 lety +1

      AtomSmashingMachine why not?

    • @stivenap156
      @stivenap156 Před 5 lety +1

      thanks for the update! Im also pursuing Masters.

    • @stevec7819
      @stevec7819 Před 5 lety +1

      @@AtomSmashingMachine nice

    • @mishaseka5813
      @mishaseka5813 Před 4 lety

      Update? :D

  • @mateoquiroz5203
    @mateoquiroz5203 Před měsícem

    I'm 18 turning 19. Will be finishing my first year of university soon. I already have some ideas of what to do research in. Long way ahead will get there.

  • @setboy1
    @setboy1 Před 11 lety +1

    I know in the USA that at some junior colleges you can teach with a masters. And even other non-"junior" colleges will sometimes give teaching jobs to people with masters. It all depends.

  • @mkwarlock
    @mkwarlock Před 11 lety

    Thank you for the info.

  • @harlowsolid
    @harlowsolid Před 12 lety +15

    What I got from this video is that the 50-500 page thesis is the easy part.

    • @LameGeneration91
      @LameGeneration91 Před 6 lety +1

      from what I know, this step is not that bad actually. You just cut and paste the results that you have been working on for the past 4 years. The rest is just a motivation for the reader in the form of a historical introduction and possible applications, so writing the thesis isn't that bad. The hard part, and it depends mostly on the level of assholeness/professionalism of your advisor, is coming up with the results.

  • @B.A.Gondal
    @B.A.Gondal Před 10 lety +18

    Professors are on the top of the food chain when it comes to the knowledge of the world.

  • @Jtking3000
    @Jtking3000 Před 15 lety +2

    wow this'll definately help me to know how become a proffessor one day great vid!

  • @puretroubleman
    @puretroubleman Před 15 lety

    I've never even thought about this, very interesting video.

  • @dr.jamesabiye2825
    @dr.jamesabiye2825 Před 6 lety +2

    Great video. Some of us started late...we might not become professors till we retire.

  • @Greylin91
    @Greylin91 Před 12 lety

    brilliant video

  • @dat3tree
    @dat3tree Před 11 lety +3

    5:30 probably the most beautiful thing ive ever heard

  • @PHILLYMEDIC69
    @PHILLYMEDIC69 Před 5 lety +13

    hmm it almost feels like it would be easier to become a doctor..

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 Před 9 lety +1

    Congrats to all.

  • @sanketmishra2969
    @sanketmishra2969 Před 3 lety

    Thanks for this video👍😊

  • @nazrulhabibi3444
    @nazrulhabibi3444 Před 9 lety

    I love it. Thanks my sir

  • @ayasarsour2860
    @ayasarsour2860 Před rokem

    Thank you

  • @dadt8009
    @dadt8009 Před 5 lety +1

    Some people think you must have a phd to be a professor and some are asking do you need a phd to be a professor. First of all, between these two, getting a phd is the easy part. Secondly, no, actually you don't need a phd to become a professor even at a prestigious university, but those appointments are quite rare. You need to have a very distinguished career. To get a famous director to teach film studies, a former president to teach politics, a former Fortune 500 CEO to teach business, etc, a university would appoint them as full professors. For eg, Tim Berners-Lee is apparent a professor of computer science at both Oxford and MIT and as far as I can find he doesn't have an earned phd.

  • @zece51
    @zece51 Před 13 lety

    @Tactic11 Not necessarily: john nash received a doctorate on a 28 page thesis (but then again he did won the nobel prize partly due to that paper...). So less likely but possible nonetheless.

  • @Tucknrollgrampa
    @Tucknrollgrampa Před 12 lety

    Very informative!

  • @qhaweteyise1955
    @qhaweteyise1955 Před 8 lety +8

    Greetings and best wishes from South Africa

    • @kronek88
      @kronek88 Před 6 lety

      Stop killing white people.

  • @davidwilkie9551
    @davidwilkie9551 Před 7 lety

    ..pleased someone does the job because they like it, I like what they pass on to us.

  • @jamesmterrell
    @jamesmterrell Před 5 lety +2

    Do you use graduate students to teach classes like we do in the USA?

  • @MsMotron
    @MsMotron Před 11 lety

    what du you have to do if i want to be part of a group directed y a proessor and helping at reserches

  • @swicheroo1
    @swicheroo1 Před 3 lety

    This applies to scientists. The Postdoc scenario is less common in Humanities....thought that also means the PhD takes longer...as you're expected to publish a significant amount of original research on your own without corporate authorship...by the time you go out on the job market.

  • @rif6876
    @rif6876 Před 6 lety

    Does anyone know the analogous process in the US? As I recall, the titles were bachelor's degree, master's, PhD, then post-doc, associate prof, assistant prof, full prof. I don't recall the lecturer steps.

  • @DFX2KX
    @DFX2KX Před 10 lety

    intresting to hear how that's actually done. I didn't realize that "Professor" wasn't just the name they gave to any collage staff teaching. I went to a tech collage, the term was not used.
    Whether I'd bother doing that myself? Ehhhh, not my calling. Though, most of my areas of interest and/or expertise are more aptitude-oriented then academically oriented (I took computer programming and networks. A gifted non-grad who's got work in the field will be the first hired. Mainly because they can pay 'em less)

  • @CoolMinty
    @CoolMinty Před 15 lety

    There are at my university (manchester) but then it is reknowned internationally (although I thought many were). We have a lot of chinese lecturers and asians and a few fins too.

  • @DOA13
    @DOA13 Před 14 lety

    awssssooommmeeee video. it taught me soo much
    thanks :)

  • @erictaylor5462
    @erictaylor5462 Před 9 lety +5

    9:30 That has GOT to be the longest damn flight in the history of aviation!

  • @andrewmontgomery3099
    @andrewmontgomery3099 Před 11 lety +20

    This is depressing. It just takes so long...

  • @abpabpabp6153
    @abpabpabp6153 Před 5 lety +2

    Nice guys. Clearly deserve it.

  • @Pumbear
    @Pumbear Před 6 lety +1

    What I think people in the comments are missing is that yes, it's a long road with a lot of steps, but if you're passionate about it then all the steps in between should be worthwhile to you. If you view the road to professor as the longest internship ever then it's not the right work for you.

  • @GopalanRamaswamy
    @GopalanRamaswamy Před 9 lety +1

    Great inspiration to aspiring academics. had the pleasure of interacting with Pete Licence during his India visit. He is bound to contribute to science in a big way in times to come. best wishes Dr.Ramasawmy Gopalan CChem FRSC , India

  • @DiamondSword10
    @DiamondSword10 Před 11 lety

    TUDO QUE SE CRIA,TEM UM BOM PROFESSSSSSSSSSORRRRRRRRRRRR

  • @dojokonojo
    @dojokonojo Před 12 lety

    I've had Lecturers in economics courses who were still PhD students, due to there being a shortage of Econ professors at my university. But is it common for PhD students to teach a class of 100 people elsewhere?

  • @sethewing2576
    @sethewing2576 Před 6 lety

    I hope this changes by the time I get there.

  • @ghelyar
    @ghelyar Před 12 lety +10

    One of my A levels was 120 pages for half the grade of the subject, so 50-500 for a PhD isn't too bad.
    This video really reminded me why I hated my experience at university so much though. I don't know why anyone would want to stay there long enough to become a professor.

  • @PotaoDude
    @PotaoDude Před 12 lety +2

    The longest essay I've had to write is 500 words, and I'm going into grade 12 this September. I certainly can write a fairly long thesis, but I do agree that the schools are not properly preparing us for university.

    • @mistersandmere335
      @mistersandmere335 Před 3 lety

      It’s been 8 years since you commented. Would you mind if you explained what you pursued?

  • @yourtruthwithin
    @yourtruthwithin Před 11 lety

    What does everything think about your highschool records affecting your chances at a professorship? Should your pre-undergraduate academic record be impressive?

  • @magnetacyde
    @magnetacyde Před 12 lety +10

    so what ur sayin is i should start writing the 500 pages now

  • @leonard1871
    @leonard1871 Před 5 lety

    wait what does a physical biochemist do and what lines of research can they peruse ?

  • @Watupm
    @Watupm Před 11 lety

    almost done 2nd year mech eng. wow I've got a long way to go xP

  • @Retsam19
    @Retsam19 Před 15 lety

    Ya i know that, that's what i said. You said that the universities must open their doors to the ordinary public, which implied that they were shutting ordinary people out.
    In fact the problem lies in the secondary schools, universities are just as open, if not more so, as they used to be.

  • @AartiSharma-my4cl
    @AartiSharma-my4cl Před 6 lety

    Sir book kon c Leni h or study Kaha se start kru history net k liye Delhi se krni h pH.d

  • @swelihlenzama7303
    @swelihlenzama7303 Před 4 lety +2

    I'm a postgraduate student studying towards BEd Honours degree, my goal is to obtain a PHD before reaching 35 years.

    • @leea8706
      @leea8706 Před 3 lety

      I hope you achieve your dreams 😊

  • @jordan3012000
    @jordan3012000 Před 8 lety +9

    How do you decide what to research?

    • @zee119zee
      @zee119zee Před 7 lety +1

      Find a problem and try to solve it

  • @caustic128
    @caustic128 Před 11 lety +1

    My entomology professor recently told me that for him becoming a professor was a great career choice but today, as he is about to retire and I am about to start my career, things have changed. He practically begged me to not attempt his career path because it is not what it used to be. I would basically be a slave with with no recognition and poor salary only to be fired at a moments notice because of budget cuts. The age of the wealthy tenured professor is over for my generation.

  • @JellyIsPeng
    @JellyIsPeng Před 9 lety +2

    could anyone explain in a bit more detail what the fellowship is?/

    • @BinarySounds
      @BinarySounds Před 9 lety +1

      research fellowship is typically a position where you sign up to a university as an employee working on research as part of a group with a specific focus. post doc and fellowship are not mandatory in my experience but they help a lot if you are looking to become a lecturer. with some luck and if your PhD is in a field that a university is interested in, you may jump to lectureship immediately.

    • @cryora
      @cryora Před 6 lety

      In many universities, you can become a teaching assistant or research assistant which brings in a stipend that funds your education and living expenses. The funding comes either from the department or from the professor's grant of whom you are doing research for.
      A fellowship is money from a different source, and usually the stipulations for a fellowship doesn't nearly involve the type of time commitment as a research assistantship. This would allow you to not have to be a TA and not have to draw money from the professor's grant, which could potentially free up time on your end, and the professor's grant money - that would have been used to pay for your RA stipend - could be used for other purposes (i.e. purchasing lab equipment).
      A fellowship is essentially free money with some minor stipulations. Of course, you would have to be 1) eligible for it 2) apply and be selected for it. There are different fellowships for different purposes, like fellowships that support people in specific fields, fellowships that support people of certain demographics, fellowships that support people in certain stages of their education, fellowships that support people with specific career interests. The application process involves writing a personal statement and getting letters of recommendations (usually 3).

  • @NebulousFound
    @NebulousFound Před 10 lety +1

    well I have just finished my Masters thesis, going to move forward to a Ph.D hopefully and after that.... well, you watched the video.

  • @dragonworld2008
    @dragonworld2008 Před 11 lety

    some on please tell me whats the name of the Professor that travel around the world to make music with all kinds of native Indian tribes .

  • @ChangeHistory-FaizanMuhammad

    If student learning skills have not been developed by high school then it is unlikely that they can survive academic testing system at university level. To be successful at university level students must possess following s skills:
    Writing & Language Skills, Mathematical skills, IT Skills and interest and experience of the subject area.

  • @setboy1
    @setboy1 Před 11 lety

    i stand corrected then. I always thought I saw job postings from small colleges looking for "professor" positions and only needing a masters, but I guess I'm just remembering wrong.

    • @JohnnyDoeDoeDoe
      @JohnnyDoeDoeDoe Před 7 lety +1

      setboy1 My understanding is that it varies greatly from university to university

  • @PrinceRightyI
    @PrinceRightyI Před 11 lety

    I want to be like Prof Poliakoff (especially his hair). Unfortunately, I began to lose my hair in my first year. Now in my second year, more hair fell down. I still love chemistry, even though i don't and won't have that buckyball hair... -.-

  • @ElveeKaye
    @ElveeKaye Před 14 lety

    Aww, who made the cute drawing of flowers and hearts in the background? =D

  • @chrisdowling1997
    @chrisdowling1997 Před 12 lety

    And I thought it would be so easy!!

  • @Chobonaru
    @Chobonaru Před 15 lety

    Turn up your volume.

  • @hawwaamaryam
    @hawwaamaryam Před 8 lety

    how exactly do you make money while in the process of becoming a professor? would you need a part time job like you would while getting an undergraduate?

    • @hawwaamaryam
      @hawwaamaryam Před 8 lety

      ***** Thank you for the clarification

    • @Blaze-ls3zw
      @Blaze-ls3zw Před 7 lety

      iluvmaryam You would get a scholarship paying for your studies and basic living cost. If you don't get a scholarship... Well then your qualifications and the research you are doing doesn't seem to be impressive to those sponsoring bodies, so better up the ante!

  • @rmcewan10
    @rmcewan10 Před 8 lety

    Cana anyone tell me if it would be worth going into post doctoral studies if I plan to go into industry? As in would it be worth doing a PhD or msc before going into industry and will it have any effect on my future salary?

    • @nicksepulveda6662
      @nicksepulveda6662 Před 8 lety +1

      +rmcewan10 Having higher level degrees does indeed give you a slight boost in your salary. But not that much. For example, someone getting a job as a researcher with a bachelors might have a salary of $70k/yr. Someone with a masters might get around $73-74k/yr, and people with doctorates would recieve around $76k/yr.

    • @johnfedorov8089
      @johnfedorov8089 Před 8 lety

      Depends on what you want to do in the industry. There are quite a few research based industry jobs, and for those you usually need a PHD (in extremely rare cases, people with their masters can get these positions as well).
      You also have to think about the time required to get a graduate degree. A PHD usually takes anywhere from 4 to 6 years, and in many cases longer (depends on the field of study). These are all years that you could have been working with an undergraduate degree and getting promoted in your job.
      If I'm remembering correctly, the best option in terms of making money is: Masters > Bachelors > PHD. A masters degree only takes 1-2 years and they earn a considerable amount more than a bachelors degree. With a PHD , you DO make more money than a masters but like I mentioned before you have to take into account the 4-6+ years it will take you to get one.
      *Basically, to sum it up:* If you want a research job (whether in academia or industry) try and go for a PHD. If you want to maximize earnings, then generally a masters is your best option.

  • @picobyte
    @picobyte Před 8 lety

    Live long and make it yourself hard. I'm professor of anything walking the sweeping machine here while keeping updated via CZcams because i can :D To me being is like being Dr who? Lots of fun and leaving most people who ask can't grab it.

  • @caribaez5711
    @caribaez5711 Před 6 lety

    what if i want to be a molecular genetics professor?