CyberShot said:
I'm not sure why you call it "transferring." Isn't the masters degree separate from the PhD? You graduate with a masters, and the PhD is a whole different degree, and thus you need get re-matriculated. (Unless you're starting a PhD to begin with)
That's not how it works for US physics/math/astronomy programs. The standard path is that you get admitted with a bachelors degree into a Ph.D. program. Once you finish the course work, they hand you a masters.
UK/Canada apparently is different, and it's also very different in other fields. My wife has a Ph.D. in education and in that field it's standard for people to get a masters, go to work, and then get a Ph.D. some years later at a different school.
I meant according to US News Ranking. And let's be honest, even though some may question its validity, getting your PhD from Princeton, Harvard, or MIT is much more prestigious than from UC Santa Cruz, or UofArizona (even if it is in radio astronomy).
U Arizona is optical. It's U Virgina that is radio astronomy...
Among people that don't have a clue about physics, maybe, but among physicists (i.e. people that will hire and give you jobs), it's not.
First of all, no one really cares about what school that you went to. They care a lot about who your dissertation adviser was.
Second, the "big name schools" in physics are often not the "big name schools".
Sometimes there are physics reasons for this.
For example, the reason that University of Arizona and University of Hawaii are just much better schools for optical astronomy than MIT is because it makes more sense to put a telescope in the middle of the desert or on a high mountain in Hawaii than it does to put one in downtown Cambridge. If you go to Arizona or Hawaii, you will be able to use the telescopes they have without fighting (as much) for time.
The other thing is that certain people are at certain universities. If you are doing late time stellar evolution models and you go to UC Santa Cruz, I'm going to be impressed, since it means that you are learning from one of the gods of the field.
The reason to get a PhD from a top 10 school is that, statistically speaking, you have a better chance of getting hired as faculty, and the prestige opens more doors in terms of postdocs (working with more established faculty, higher chance of working with renowned advisor, better equipment, more funding, etc).
Can you show me these statistics?
Something that may be misleading is that if you look where faculty got their degrees from, you'll see a lot of big name schools, but if you look at the dates, you'll see that a lot of those degrees were from the 1960's and 1970's. In the 1960's, the big name schools were the only game in town so to speak, but what ended up happening is that the faculty from those schools ended up starting departments in the mid-West.
One consequence of this is that you end up connected to the networks where ever you end up.
If two people have very similar stats when applying for a postdoc, but one of them got a PhD from a top tier school, you'd be inclined to higher that student. It's not really fair, but it's really the best metric the hiring committee has, (a lot like the SAT).
Maybe, but "top tier school" in physics is different from "top tier school" according to USNWR. If I knew nothing about a Ph.D. other than they went to SUNY Stony Brook or Harvard and the post-doc was for nuclear physics, the SUNY Stony Brook person would get hired because in that area it's the "bigger name."
Also, since you are probably not going to get a research professorship anyway, I don't think that increasing your odds should matter much.
There is a reason those top schools are hard to get into.
And curiously it's harder to get into Hawaii than it is to get into MIT.
I don't really understand when people say not to look at prestige when it comes to graduate school, because in the end, it really does matter.
And you know this how?
Prestige *does* matter, but USNWR is a horrible measure of prestige when it comes to physics graduate schools. If you want to know which physics schools are good, then go into the academic literature, surf the web, and if you find a bunch of papers and professors that excite you, then they will likely excite other physics people.
Also since you've mentioned UC Santa Cruz, you should know that one of the "gods of supernova nucleosynthesis calculations and late time stellar evolution codes" happens to work there.
Also you can change the prestige. The thing about most graduate schools is that they are tiny. If there is a graduating class of two, and you are one of them, you can radically change the prestige of the university that you graduate from. Once you get to Ph.D. programs, you change the prestige of the university more than the university changes you.
"3.8 UC Santa Cruz < 3.5 MIT" GPA-wise
Again, I have no idea about UC Santa Cruz, but in my experience, MIT grades more harshly than UT Austin, so someone that gets a 3.5 at UT Austin would in my view be "sharper" than someone that gets a 3.8 at MIT. If you want me to compare UT Austin with MIT GPA's, I'd give a small correction factor.
Now one reason I don't consider GPA that important is that if you give me a UC Santa Cruz student, I have no clue what the correction factor is.
UT Austin is an example of how stats can be misleading. Personally, I think that the median UT Austin student is less mathematically sharp than the median MIT student *however* my experience has been that the media UT Austin student in science and engineering is just as competent as the median MIT student in science and engineering.
One thing that I'd like to know from you is "who is telling you this?" You are saying things that make no sense to me, and I'd like to find out who is giving you this bad information so that I can have a talk with them.