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Tuesday, August 11, 2020
Weathering the weather
Weathering the weather So its snowed something like 15 inches in Cambridge in the past 14 hours, and Im feeling a little guilty. See, its the MIT biology interview weekend, and over the course of my travels to California schools this month, I met a few California kids who told me they were also interviewing at MIT this weekend. They were all really concerned about the weather, and I assured them that it had been warm all winter and had hardly snowed at all. And now all these southern California kids are in Boston and its snowed 15 inches. Oops. Im trying to decide if I want to venture outside to go to the happy hour with grad students from 5-7, or just go to dinner with my student host from 7-9 or if I even want to leave at all. Its snowing so hard right now that I cant see across the river to Boston, which is about 1/4 mile away. And its pretty tempting to just stay inside and ride out the storm (and watch the Olympics with Adam he knows, according to his own estimate, 70% of the skiiers on the US Olympic team, and he gossips about them to me). D-Entry is having a Bacon Fest 2k6 right now every time we have a big snowstorm, Mark 07 and Dave 07 go to the store and buy many, many pounds of bacon (both piggy and turkey and if we had any vegetarians, Im sure theyd buy tofu bacon too), then cook it up and serve it to everybody with hot chocolate. Im not exactly sure why bacon but it was pretty tasty! People have been playing out in the snow all day on Briggs Field, which is the main sports/pick-up games field on campus. Briggs happens to be right outside several of the dormitories, including Burton-Conner, Macgregor, New House, Next House, and Simmons Hall meaning that its prime real estate for snowball fights, snowmen, snow angels, and writing giant messages with feet in the snow. Ahh, nothing more fun than a real Boston noreaster to liven up a winter weekend. Questions: 1. Jay asked, Hey Mollie, can undergrads start UROPs by themselves, i.e. Plan a project, approach a Professor, get a lab and start work? Ive always been very interested in making hydrogen powered supercars. And I was wondering if students at MIT could do their own projects instead of helping Professors Certainly its possible my friend Carl 07 won an Eloranta fellowship a few summers ago to develop a certain kind of airplane on his own. But most of the money which is available for research is through the UROP program, which requires that you find a faculty sponsor for your project and most faculty are looking for people to help advance their projects in return for payment. The key is to look for professors who are doing research you yourself are interested in my friend Ethan 05, for example, did research on hydrogen-powered fuel cells for a faculty member, but he was given a lot of freedom regarding the direction of the project and was researching something both he and his advisor were excited about. 2. Mike asked, I dont want to sound materialistic or whatever, but can you get paid for a UROP? How much? First, money is important for college students, so dont worry about being materialistic! Yes, you can do a UROP for payment (you can also do it for credit or as a volunteer). Campus minimum wage for UROPs is currently $9.00 per hour; if you get paid by your supervisors research funds rather than the UROP office (like Adam and I do), you can get paid more. 3. sr said, Mollie, Im going on an interview to a biology grad program soon and have some questions. Are your interviews intense, or is it more of a youre in unless you do something stupid? Do they tell you up front what is the acceptance rate for those who interview? Also, can you give tips on how to prepare what are the specific points they are looking for? I wasnt told up front what the post-interview acceptance percentages are (although Ive heard from current grad students that interviews are usually intended to only weed out, in my friends colorful terminology, the psycho kitten-eaters). Interviewers are mostly checking to make sure that youre as enthusiastic about biology in real life as you were on paper, and that you can converse intelligently about your research and other peoples research. Dont worry about memorizing each interviewers research beforehand, but do be prepared to talk at length about your own previous research. 4. Dan commented, Hmm I looked at one of those math professors research on his page and it didnt seem very mathematical to me. But maybe hes just not showing the math, and just showing descriptions that hes mathematically analyzing on his own. Well, anywaysthanks! I love how you said the sample is skewed. Have you ever taken any statistics course? Yes, I have taken a statistics course, and I loved it all course 9 majors are required to take 9.07, which is a statistics course. The reason I said my sample was skewed might be illuminating most of the people I know who are math majors are doubling with something else (physics, computer science, etc), and their UROPs are in that other field. Im sure single majors in math do research, but Im not sure what that is since I cant think of any single majors in math that I know. A final treat: I bring you this video of my boyfriend dancing (openable in Windows Media Player) on our way to Macgregor Convenience (the convenience store on the first floor of our dorm), which is pretty much the only place you can eat during a blizzard unless you feel like putting on snow pants and a heavy coat.
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