Schools How Should I Approach a Professor About Grad School as a Backup Plan?

AI Thread Summary
An electrical engineering student nearing graduation is contemplating applying to a master's program at their current school due to challenges in securing a job. They seek advice on how to approach a professor for a reference letter, considering whether to disclose that the master's application is a backup plan. The discussion emphasizes that applying to graduate school does not constitute a commitment to attend if accepted, similar to job interviews. It is suggested that being transparent with the professor about the situation could foster a better relationship, as a supportive supervisor is preferable to one unaware of the student's intentions. Additionally, pursuing a master's degree may provide valuable insights and a broader perspective, which could be beneficial in making an informed decision about their career path.
bleach2015
Messages
4
Reaction score
0
I am an electrical engineering student who will be graduating in the spring. I had previously wanted to join the workforce after graduation, but the job search has not gone well for me... So now, I am thinking of applying to the masters program at my own school (which has a later deadline) if I cannot get meaningful employment.

The concern is that I have to find a professor right now and that I still want to go work if offered an EE related job. I am wondering on how I should approach the professor. Should I be straightforward saying this is a backup option for me, or should I not mention this at all? If the latter, would it look very bad for me to ditch before September if I had found a job? Fellow professors, do you have any advice on how you would like students to approach you for a masters?

Thank you very much.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
In all cases I am familiar with, when you are applying to grad school all you are doing is applying. You are not making a commitment to go if accepted. Likewise when you go for a job interview. Is there some reason why this may be different for your situation?

jason
 
jasonRF said:
In all cases I am familiar with, when you are applying to grad school all you are doing is applying. You are not making a commitment to go if accepted. Likewise when you go for a job interview. Is there some reason why this may be different for your situation?

jason

My department offers a graduate student scholarship and needs a professor to write me a reference letter. I believe most people usually pick their (future) supervisor to write it, so I don't want to ask them to write it and then later drop them a surprise by leaving.
 
That is very considerate of you. But it's really acceptable for everyone if your first priority in this phase is your own interest. Even for a potential supervisor. My estimate is you're better off with a supervisor who knows, understands and accepts, than with a supervisor who doesn't know. And who might feel treated badly in case.

There's another side to this: you might well enjoy the broader perspective and the deeper understanding that comes with studying at master level. If you explain your current doubts, perhaps the professor you approach can help you to better weigh the pros and cons !
 
TL;DR Summary: What topics to cover to safely say I know arithmetic ? I am learning arithmetic from Indian NCERT textbook. Currently I have finished addition ,substraction of 2 digit numbers and divisions, multiplication of 1 digit numbers. I am moving pretty slowly. Can someone tell me what topics to cover first to build a framework and then go on in detail. I want to learn fast. It has taken me a year now learning arithmetic. I want to speed up. Thanks for the help in advance. (I also...
guys i am currently studying in computer science engineering [1st yr]. i was intrested in physics when i was in high school. due to some circumstances i chose computer science engineering degree. so i want to incoporate computer science engineering with physics and i came across computational physics. i am intrested studying it but i dont know where to start. can you guys reccomend me some yt channels or some free courses or some other way to learn the computational physics.
I'm going to make this one quick since I have little time. Background: Throughout my life I have always done good in Math. I almost always received 90%+, and received easily upwards of 95% when I took normal-level HS Math courses. When I took Grade 9 "De-Streamed" Math (All students must take "De-Streamed" in Canada), I initially had 98% until I got very sick and my mark had dropped to 95%. The Physics teachers and Math teachers talked about me as if I were some sort of genius. Then, an...

Similar threads

Replies
5
Views
2K
Replies
20
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
2K
Replies
14
Views
2K
Replies
32
Views
3K
Replies
22
Views
2K
Back
Top