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Finding the right advisor can help you immeasurably in successfully completing a thesis. You should ideally have selected the schools you applied to by identifying faculty members you'd like to work with. If not, start looking around as early as possible. Of course, the ideal advisor will be in the area you're interested in working in, and will actively be doing high-quality reseach and be involved in and respected by the research community.
Read research summaries by faculty members (which are usually published by the department), go to talks they give, and attend or audit courses given by professors you might be interested in working with. Talk to other graduate students and recent graduates. Ask them how their relationships with their advisors are/were, how quickly the advisor's students graduate, and how successful (well recognized, high-quality) their research is. What kinds of relationships do they have -- frequent interactions, collaborative work, encouraging independence? handing out topics or helping students to create individual research areas, or a more hands-off style?
Other things to find out about potential advisors:
A good advisor will serve as a mentor as well as a source of technical assistance. A mentor should provide, or help you to find, the resources you need (financial, equipment, and psychological support); introduce you and promote your work to important people in your field; encourage your own interests, rather than promoting their own; be available to give you advice on the direction of your thesis and your career; and help you to find a job when you finish. They should help you to set and achieve long-term and short-term goals.
Once you identify one or more potential advisors, get to know them.
Introduce yourself and describe the area you're interested in. Attend
their research group meetings if they hold them regularly. Give them
a copy of a research proposal if you have a good idea of what you want to
work on, and ask for comments. Ask whether they have any TA or RA positions
available, or if there are any ongoing research projects that you
could get involved with. Read their published papers, and the work of
their students. Drop by during office hours and ask questions or make
comments. Offer to read drafts of papers -- and do more than just
proofread (see Section ).
The type of relationship that each student needs with an advisor will be different. Some students prefer to be given more direction, to have frequent contact, and to be ``checked up on.'' Others are more independent. Some may need contact but be self-conscious about asking for it. Other things that vary include what kinds of feedback is preferred (lots of ``random'' ideas vs. very directed feedback (pointers)), working individually vs. in groups, working on an established research project vs. a new, independent effort; working in the same area as your advisor or doing an ``outside'' thesis.
You may find that your thesis advisor
doesn't always give you all of the mentoring that you need. Multiple
mentors are common and useful; they may include other faculty members
in your department or elsewhere, senior graduate students, or other
colleagues (see Section ).
You may want to seriously consider
changing thesis advisors if your advisor is inaccessible or disinterested,
gives you only negative feedback, doesn't have the technical background
to advise you on your thesis, or harasses you (see Section
).
The most important thing is to ask for (i.e., demand politely) what you need.
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