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Viết thư làm quen với Prof.

Chủ đề trong 'Du học' bởi berlioz, 13/01/2008.

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  1. berlioz

    berlioz Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    13/01/2008
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    Viết thư làm quen với Prof.

    Chào các bác, em là newbie nên không có kinh nghiệm gì trong lĩnh vực này cả. Em đã đọc được trong bài nào đó nói là nên contact với giáo sư, nên cũng muồn tập tọe thử xem sao. Em cũng đã "chấm" được một vài người nhưng không biết bắt đầu từ đâu cả? theo các bác thì em nên bắt đầu từ: tao đọc thấy rất hứng thú với các article của mày, hay là: đây là một số thứ tao biết trong lĩnh vực này, hay: đây là một số thứ tao đã làm được, hay: cho tao lời khuyên trong công việc tao đang làm... hay: cho tao vào trường mày
    Túm lại là các bác biểu quyết cho em cái cớ với. Em nghĩ topic này cũng rất cần với những người mới bắt đầu khác.
    Thanks very much!
  2. vanhoivanbinh

    vanhoivanbinh Thành viên tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    28/09/2005
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    BẠn có thể tìm trên mạng có rất nhiều FORM mẫu cho đề tài này
    Mình post thử cái FORM ngày xưa mình đùng
    Advice for Prospective Research Students
    Like most professors, I get several hundred emails a year from prospective students interested in coming to UVa for graduate school and joining my research group. I try to reply to all messages that are not obviously spam, but find most messages I receive make me less likely to want to accept the students sending them. This page provides some advice for prospective grad school applicants considering emailing me, but most of it probably applies to any other professor you want to contact also.
    Who To Contact
    Its a really bad idea to send spam emails to long lists of professors. These emails will never help you, and some professors will maintain blacklists of applicants who do this to make sure their application is rejected without consideration.
    Your goal in sending email is not to contact as many professors as you can, but to identify a few professors who you might want as your research advisor and then to find which of those seem most promising as advisors and convince them that you would be a worthwhile student.
    You should only contact professors with whom you have a genuine interest in working based on knowing something about them and what they do. You can find out about professors'' research by looking at their web pages (professors who don''t have web pages about their research are either not interested in recruiting students, not doing any research, or so famous they probably have someone to filter their email for them).
    Do Your Homework
    Before contacting a potential advisor, do your homework: read the advisor''s home page (mine is http://www.cs.virginia.edu/evans/) and at least one recent paper (links to my papers are available at http://www.cs.virginia.edu/evans/pubs/).
    If doing this doesn''t give you any interesting ideas, this is probably not someone with whom you want to do research so you shouldn''t waste time contacting her or him. If it does, send a short introductory email.
    First Email
    A typical message should go something like this:
    From: Flipper Wordsfish <flipper@adou.edu>
    Subject: Prospective Student Interested in TSU Problem Make sure your from address and subject lines are useful
    Dear Professor Nemo, Greeting: its safest to be a bit formal here.
    I will be finishing a BS degree in Underwater Mathematics at the Atlantis Deep Ocean University this year. I am considering applying to UVa''s PhD program and would be interested joining your Octople Cryptology research group. Briefly introduce yourself in at most two sentences. Don''t tell your whole life story. Be direct and clear about applying to grad school.
    I found your paper, "A Linear-Time Solution to the Travelling Sea Urchin Problem", on your website (http://www.smith.org/urchin.html). I was fascinated by your result, especially as I have spent several summers studying the similar travelling sea cucumber problem as an intern at Microshifty Corp in the Attle Sea. (You can find a paper about my work on this at http://www.flipper.com/research/tscp.html) Explain specifically what you read and where you found it (people sometimes publish several papers with similar names and forget which is which). A touch of flattery never hurts, but don''t go overboard. If appropriate, relate it to your background and interests and briefly plug your work.
    I believe your result is even more important than your paper implies, since it can be extended to solve the Travelling Salesman Problem and thus to prove P = NP. Concisely describe your insight or why you are interested in the work.
    Do you think it would be worthwhile to pursue this line of research? If you are interested, I can send you a proof sketch. End with a clear, simple question.
    Offer a suggestion on how to proceed.
    Regards,
    Flipper Wordsfish (flipper@adou.edu) Closing ?" make sure to include you name and email address.
    Of course, your insight isn''t likely to be so significant as Flipper''s. But, you should make an effort to raise an interesting question about the work described in the paper, *****ggest extensions or applications of the work, or to relate it directly to something you have done.
    It is definitely worth taking time to write clearly and consisely using correct spelling and grammar. As with all emails, the message should be broken into short paragraphs, the sentences should be simple and straightforward, and no line should have more than 80 characters.
    What Not To Do
    Never do any of these:
    ? Don''t send information about your GRE scores, GPA, class rank, cholesterol levels, favorite movies, etc. and ask what your chances of admission are. Standardized tests and grades have minimal influence on your chances of admission and reveal very little about your potential as a researcher. No one can or should tell you anything about your chances of admission based on an email.
    ? Don''t send a first email longer than one screenful (about 60 lines). You should be able to get across everything you need in a first email concisely and use longer emails if technical depth is required in follow ups.
    ? Don''t waste space and time telling me how hard-working, creative and smart you are ?" demonstrate it with the contents of your message.
    ? Don''t waste space and time telling me how brilliant I am. The fact that you are interested in joining my research group is flattery enough.
    ? Don''t make generic statements about being interested in my work or how well it relates to your interests. I have projects in several different areas and can''t figure out what you mean unless you describe a specific connection or interest.
    ? Don''t attach anything to your email. If you want to provide ad***ional content, you should do this by sending a URL (as plain text, not a link). If you are not able to create a web page, you may mention that you have a relevant paper and will send it to me if I request it.
    ? Don''t use HTML encoded email or non-standard character sets. If you are a non-native English speaker, make sure your "From:" address appears using the English alphabet. If you have a common or difficult for English speakers to pronounce Chinese name, it is to your advantage to use a name that English speakers can pronounce and remember. I do realize it is very unfair for us to expect you to change your name for our convenience and cultural ignorance! But, once you get admitted you can and should tell people what you want them to call you.
    ? Don''t use any fancy formatting in your email (including your message signature).
    Follow Up
    Since most professors get lots of email, there is some chance that even if you do everything right, your message will get lost in my inbox and you won''t get a reply. If you don''t get a reply after about a week, send a follow up email that politely asks if the message was received and includes the previous message. If you still don''t get a response, that''s a pretty good sign that the potential professor you are contacting is not someone you want as your advisor.
    Conclusion
    Getting into a good PhD program is extremely competitive and professors are strongly motivated to identify and attract the best possible research students to their group. At any department you would want to go to (including UVa), the acceptance rate is usually in the single digit percentages. At the most competitive departments, only a few slots every year are awarded to students without recommendation letters from people the faculty know well.
    It takes work to find the right PhD program and advisor, but contacting potential advisors directly is your best way to find a research group that matches your interests and goals well and possibly to improve your chances of being admitted.
    Once you''ve read and followed these directions, please feel free to contact me about coming to UVa to do a PhD in Computer Science. Your goal is to start an interesting email conversation about research ideas.
    If you find that my research does not fit well with your interests, feel free to contact me for general advice and suggestions on other professors to contact. If you follow the suggestions above, I am likely to reply, especially if you ask questions that are not answered by http://www.cs.virginia.edu/WhyUVA/.
  3. berlioz

    berlioz Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    13/01/2008
    Bài viết:
    15
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    0
    Cảm ơn bác rất nhiều, em thấy bài bác post rất có ích.
  4. smile134

    smile134 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    03/05/2007
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    Vote cho bác về bài viết có ích!
  5. phamyen09

    phamyen09 Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    27/08/2007
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  6. Submarine

    Submarine Thành viên quen thuộc

    Tham gia ngày:
    06/12/2002
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    Bạn có thể xem thêm ở đây: http://vietphd.org/showthread.php?t=467.
    Chú ý không nen dùng free mail như yahoo., mèng ra cũng fải là gmail.
  7. thanhdaus

    thanhdaus Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    04/01/2008
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    Mình vẫn dùng yahoo ấy chứ. Các giáo sư không care đâu. Quan trọng là cái nội dung thôi.
  8. cariboo

    cariboo Thành viên mới

    Tham gia ngày:
    16/02/2008
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    cảm ơn bác đã lập topic này nha. em got được nhiều kinh nghiệm qua mục này lắm.
    em đang học năm thứ 3 secondary education, T.4 sang năm là tốt nghiệp em muốn đi U.K. xin học M.A. educational management... tốt nghiệp xong thì muốn đi apply HB ngay nhưng thú thức em chưa có kinh nghiệm xin học bổng vả lại cũng chưa biết là nên xin học bổng gì nữa... vì em mới biết đến TTVNOL. em đang bắt đầu lục lọi các bài viết ở đây.
    tuy nhiên, em cũng có suy nghĩ là xin professor scholarship, bác có cơ sở thông tin về các trường của U.K có ngành này ko? chia sẻ em với...
    em nên tìm một số professor trong nganh nay ở các website ntn bây giờ ạ?
    tnx bác rất nhiều
  9. vanhoivanbinh

    vanhoivanbinh Thành viên tích cực

    Tham gia ngày:
    28/09/2005
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    657
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