I get this question frequently in my open office hours. I am still learning as well but I hope sharing my ✌💰 may be helpful to some.
Key idea ➡️ **Help them help you!**
How? Check out the thread 🧵
*Frequent update*
Setting up weekly meeting with your mentors is great. But, do NOT stay silent during the week. Nothing is more frustrating to learn that the student got stuck 20 mins after the meeting last week in a meeting.
Your mentors want you to succeed! Help them do so!
*Manage meetings*
Before: send results/agenda whenever they are available. Give your mentors time to digest them.
In the meeting: progress update. Reserve the last 10 mins to discuss next steps.
After: Send a summary and an actionable plan to keep everyone on the same page.
*Stick with the plan*
Once you have an actionable plan that everyone agrees with, please stick with the plan. Quite often junior students may go ahead and work on some other tasks instead.
If you think the plan should be revised, talk to your mentors and convince them.
*One single slide deck*
Put ALL the progress/results/figures/discussions in one single slide deck. This saves 5 mins in the meeting locating files and trying to retrieve results two weeks ago when someone asks for it.
*Pls no "It doesn't work."*
"Say sth like: I’ve narrowed down the problem to step B. Until step A, you can see that it works, because you put in X and you get Y out, as we expect. You can see how it fails here at B. I’ve ruled out W and Z as the cause.” people.csail.mit.edu/billf/publicat…
*Do not avoid meetings*
When you make less progress or get stuck somewhere, it feels right to cancel the meeting as you have nothing to report. No! That's a TERRIBLE idea! Discuss the problems with your mentors/collaborators. Help them help you get unstuck.
*Don't try figuring everything out yourself*
If you spend 15 mins googling and still don't know where to start, please reach out to your peers/mentors. Asking for help is not a sign of weakness.
That's all! I would love to hear more suggestions and feedbacks on how to work with mentors effectively!
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I enjoy reading/writing the related work section of a paper. It helps organize prior research and put the contributions of the work in proper context.
But HOW? Check the thread below👇
*Divide and conquer*
No one likes to read 1-2 pages full of texts. Identify a couple of important “topics” relevant to your research. Add paragraph titles (\paragraph{}) so that it’s easy to navigate.
*Topic*
For each topic, write about 1) the TRAJECTORY of the research progress as a story and 2) the RELATIONSHIP of prior art and this paper.
Sharing tips on preparing your presentation slides
Just attend many thesis presentations and qual exams at the end of the semester. I compiled some common pitfalls here and hopefully would be helpful to some.
Check out the thread 🧵below!
*Outline*
I am surprised to see so many talks starting with the OUTLINE.
No one, literally no one, will be excited by the: "I will first introduce the problem, then I discuss related work, next I present our method, I show some results, and conclude the talk".
*Be concise*
Do not treat your slides as a script.
Rule of thumbs for my students preparing a talk:
• Never write full sentences (unless quoting)
• Always write one-liners
• No more three lines of texts per slides
Sharing ideas on how to disseminate your research.
"I am THRILLED to share that our paper is accepted to ..."
Congrats! So what's next? No one is going to browse through the list of thousands of accepted papers. Ain't nobody got time for that.
Check out 🧵below for examples.
*Website*
Use memorable domain names for your project website so that people can easily find/share the link. No university account? That's okay. Register a new name for GitHub pages.
I recently found an easy setup to get into my slides. Compared to the standard zoom setup, it's fun, engaging, and allows me to interact with the slide contents directly.
Check out the thread below and set it up for your own presentation!
I mainly follow the excellent video tutorial by @cem_yuksel
but with a poor man's variant (i.e., without a white background or green screen).
Make sure to check out the videos for the best quality!
Step 1: Download Open Broadcaster Software (OBS) studio. obsproject.com
Why: We will use OBS to composite the slides and your camera video feed together and create a "virtual camera".
You can then use the virtual camera for your video conferencing presentation.