how to supervise your supervisor?
Don’t even dream about quoting me on this one and, of course, it does not apply to me Fabien GANDON
do I really want to do this?• why did it have to be me?
• do I really want to do that?
• am I so far from research now?
• how many enemies can I make in less than 1 hour?
• can I survive this presentation?
“State of the spark”,“Brainstorm” by Michael Zhang
Largely based on…• “Managing your Supervisor” by Toby Walsh
and…• Things I wish I knew when I started my PhD
http://betweenarock.co.uk/phd-musings/things-i-wish-i-knew-when-i-started-my-phd/
• How can PhD students establish good relationships with their advisors https://www.quora.com/How-can-PhD-students-establish-good-relationships-with-their-advisors
• 10 truths a PhD supervisor will never tell youhttps://www.timeshighereducation.com/features/10-truths-a-phd-supervisor-will-never-tell-you/2005513.article
• Ten types of PhD supervisor relationships – which is yours?http://theconversation.com/ten-types-of-phd-supervisor-relationships-which-is-yours-52967
• Researcher’s Bible, Alan Bundy et al.http://homepages.inf.ed.ac.uk/bundy/how-tos/resbible.html
• PhD problemshttps://www.findaphd.com/advice/doing/phd-problems.aspx
• Effective PhD supervisionhttp://rozenbergquarterly.com/effective-phd-supervision-chapter-5-the-relationship-between-phd-candidate-and-supervisor/
• http://www.theguardian.com/higher-education-network/2014/dec/29/phd-supervisor-university-research-tips-relationship-work
• http://www.otago.ac.nz/study/phd/handbook/otago001978.html
Spirit of the presentation
Not too serious
“it goes without saying,but it goes better when you say it”- an old math prof. of mine.
Take it with a grain of salt or, better, a grain of sugar.
the Ph.D. – or the chronicles of a scientific divorce foretold
• a project by and for research
• normally a project with at least two heads
• with a switch in the middle
• implies getting the autonomy
clarify the roles• Supervisor: integration, valorizing,
motivating, introducing, controlling, strategy, scientific culture, method, jury, ethics, feedback, suggest, quality evaluation, time keeper, judge of progress, encouragement, constructive environment, etc.
• Supervisee: try, report, organize, structure, experiment, go into depth, write, search, learn, study, check, prove, etc.
many students, many profs, many supervisions
• no unique recipe
• not always compatibleAdvising and Supervising Doctoral Students: Lessons I Have Learned, Gordon B. Davis, Honeywell Professor of Management Information Systems, Carlson School of Management, University of Minnesota, Revised May 24, 2004
skills• did a PhD and reviewed others
• identified an initial problem
• judge the SoA and originality
• have the big picture
• assess difficulty
• show the direction
• identify common pitfalls
• keep an eye on the clock
• decide when to stop
• guide writing and structure
• prepare viva and questions
common pitfalls : solving the world, cold start, ivory tower, no longer see difficulty, addict to complexity, lost in abstraction, ambitious paralysis, self confidence, fear of exposure
• not the money
• give back do academia
• not the money
• create legacy
• not the money
• augment output
• not the money
• build a network, trend, etc.
• make a change
• not the money
Hates• students who quit or finish late
• waste time, resources, grants, etc.
• spend time to correct spelling mistakes
• have the feeling to preach in the wilderness
• to have his ego hurt(he already gets many opportunities)
• <add_yours_here/>
no real training for supervisionlet us take a minute as a
gesture of respect for my first two students…
practical ontology:• only humans
• makes mistakes
• overbooked
• makes mistakes
• info overloaded
• makes mistakes
• forgets
• makes mistakes
• switch task every 10 min
• makes mistakes
being
human inhuman
perfect beingacademic
PhD student PhD Supervisor
Corollary
• You have a scientific problem, a technical problem…
• You have a health problem, a car problem, an accommodation problem…
• You have a visa problem, a family problem,…
• You broke up with your girlfriend, boyfriend, goldfish…
• You have a problem…
…say it.
Social skills“There's something curious about professors in my experience -- not all of them, but typically, they live in their heads. They live up there, and slightly to one side. They're disembodied, you know, in a kind of literal way. They look upon their body as a form of transport for their heads. Don't they? It's a way of getting their head to meetings.” Ken Robinson, Do schools kill creativity? TED Talk
Academics can have the empathyand social skills of “autistic zombies”•we leave in our abstractions
•communication is vital.
Incentives and manipulating your supervisor
(please note I prefer black chocolate 72%)
Chocolate is heavily used by members of Wimmics and SPARKS to manipulate me
Work hard : an impressive result will motivate an impressive reaction and investment ; motivation has virtuous circles and vicious circles.
make yourself invaluable(reviews, conference volunteer, lab/team life)and doing so prepare yourself for the job.
be positive • try to find solutions, not only problems
• come with propositions, suggestions
• e.g. of the +1/-1 rule
your best friend for your career: it’s good forhim too. • say what you want to do next
(industry, academia,goat-cheese,…)
• experience other labs(and report back)
• link with teammates,visiting prof, PhD juries…
• organizing events givesvisibility
• learn about all possiblejobs (e.g. patents)
“Online or invisible”
help us help you: make it easy to point to you, introduce you, talks about you, reference you, etc.
1. Have a decent Web page
2. Maintain the f*** HAL
give deadlines to your supervisor
• avoid the“I attached the paper for MOGUAII 2016. Cheers,”
• rather say“I need your review on this paper for MOGUAII before 15/10/2015 23:59 Hawaiian Time”
MOGUAII 2016Mining, Ontologies and Graphs for Ubiquitous Artificial Intelligencesand InteractionsThe first 37th conference on Mining, Ontologies and Graphs for a Web of Artificial Intelligences happenedthe 30th of February 2016 at the UCA JEDI skyscraper of the Multiplex of Sophia Antipolis. About 23654.7persons attended the events with 27 parallel track and 2K papers presented as lightning talks of 138seconds. The proceedings are available on F*** HAL but we could not set the date properly. The galadinner took place around the swimming pool of Inria after a 4-hour ceasefire was signed between I3Sand the institute. The keynote speakers were: Alan Turing, now emeritus at the U2NM (Unified Universityof Nice Marseilles) on “Today I’d fail my own test”; Ada Lovelace, consultant at AI Musician Corp on“Generating HaRd Rock with R”; Vanevar Bush on “Why after 70 years I still don’t have a usableMemex!”; and Warren McCulloch on “If you mine too much you Pierce the kernel.”.
Call for papers (that have nothing to do with ‘paper’ anymore)Topics that can be of interest or not include:
• literature reviews, active reading, biblio
• notes, minutes, meeting summary(keep a trace & clarify)
• research reports
• workshop, conference, journal papers.
Writing tips.• Don’t use the supervisor as a spellchecker:
it will save you iterations.
• Always have a (shared) working document from the first day.
• Write your thesis as you go.