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university for quick PhD |
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| Feb19-13, 07:58 AM | #1 |
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university for quick PhD
Does anybody know a university/country where PhD in Physics/Electrical Engineering can be obtained in less than 5 years?
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| Feb19-13, 09:08 AM | #2 |
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Germany
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| Feb19-13, 11:15 AM | #3 |
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| Feb19-13, 11:27 AM | #4 |
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Admin
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university for quick PhD
Check your junk mail folder, there are plenty of much faster offers.
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| Feb19-13, 11:27 AM | #5 |
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Mentor
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According to (2008)
http://www.iop.org/careers/workingli...age_39043.html in physics in Britain "A PhD usually takes three to four years to complete ..." |
| Feb19-13, 11:30 AM | #6 |
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PhDs in Europe are usually 3 years (you need a masters equivalent to get into them though) and by '3 years' they mean '3 years of funding'. After that, a lot of students aren't done, but you're paying for it yourself. In the US, a PhD is 2-6 years after the masters work (usually combined with the masters for a 4-8 year program) but you usually get funding until you're done.
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| Feb19-13, 11:59 AM | #7 |
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What about Canada, UK, Finland, Singapore, Japan, Australia etc.?
I'm thinking about whether the Fiscal Cliff and Debt limit will result in funding cut in US. |
| Feb19-13, 12:04 PM | #8 |
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Mentor
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| Feb19-13, 04:59 PM | #9 |
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The length of time for a PhD does not change significantly from one country to another. Schools that assign actual times (like 3 years) instead of a range of times are not telling you when you'll be done, only when your funding runs out. The 3 years in the UK/Europe assumes you've already done the masters (5 years there, 6 in the US).
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| Feb19-13, 06:54 PM | #10 |
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In the UK a PhD is usually 3 years.
A quick search of jobs dot ac dot uk under 'physics and astronomy' for 'phd' jobs returned 82 results. Only 8 of those had the term 'masters' anywhere in the title or advert. 'Electrical and electronic engineering' and 'phd' returned 57 results, with only 6 having 'masters' in them. Not all of these 14 stated a master's degree was necessary. In fact I have only ever noticed an abundance of UK PhDs (in mathematics, mind you) offered to those with just a bachelor's - in contrast to humanities subjects which I have only ever seen requiring a master's. |
| Feb19-13, 11:42 PM | #11 |
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Hmm. everything is pointing towards US. But I'm worried about possible funding cut due to US economic reason.
See this comic http://www.physicsforums.com/showthr...30#post4276830 |
| Feb20-13, 12:04 AM | #12 |
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Recognitions:
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The length of the PhD is 5 +/- some, with the +/- due to a few factors, but none are the university. The - is due primarily to people who are very bright and do enough good work for a thesis within 4 years. The + has a lot of experimentalists who need to wait for their data/experiment/equipment to function correctly for them to write a thesis. Among + contributions are also changes of advisors, personal matters interfering, and just general slowness. The moral is that the length of your phd is dependent on YOU, not your university.
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| Feb20-13, 12:40 AM | #13 |
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Mentor
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| Feb20-13, 01:31 AM | #14 |
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Recognitions:
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