Sunday, June 15, 2008

Back

I'm back! Actually, I've been back for a few days but I haven't gotten around to posting because I had so many posts to read. You people are just far too interesting.

So, the meeting was fine. It was an annual workshop that I've attended before, so I didn't get as much out of it this time. The participants were all students, at all levels, in a range of disciplines. Personally, I think the workshop program needs major overhauling in order to meet the very difficult task of providing something valuable to all members of such a wide audience. They ask us to come for an entire week in June, the time when people are finally freed from the classroom to focus on research or need to be working outdoors in the field, so I think we should be able expect to really benefit from the program that takes us away at such a crucial time. The worst part for me was listening to several of the same talks, positively steeped in opinion, that I heard last year. The best part was interacting with the many undergrads who were eager to learn all about grad school, what it's like to do research, and the science everyone is doing. The even better part was that more than 50% of the people there were women, some from very male-dominated fields.

My talk was okay, but not as seamless and interesting as I would have liked. As I was working on it, I realized that I don't have a super good grasp of how the work fits with some of the recent literature. One lab group has published several very nice papers in the last 6 months or so that put forth a new concept substantiated with several lines of observational evidence. I need to study those papers to figure out how my research adds to that body of work rather than simply confirming it. So, that's why my talk last week was so unsatisfying. However, I think I know what I need to do next (before my presentation at the big August meeting).

Since I've been back, I learned that Research Advisor finally started to do a Lab Thing that has been holding me up. She didn't finish it, but we decided I could move on with part of it in the meantime. I'm glad because waiting for her had me suck on two different projects and I was starting to resent it. But before I do any work in that lab space, I have to clean it because someone did Something Bad in it and now I don't trust the integrity of samples processed in it. Poo. On the personal side, yesterday we met a bunch of friends at a festival where I saw 1. a man wearing a black cowboy hat, cowboy boots, and tiny briefs that had "evil" written in glitter across the ass, and nothing else. and 2. a man wearing tiny denim briefs and nothing else. There was also a marching band band that was awesome and seriously, the most openly-affectionate same-sex couples I've ever seen. That was really cool. Today I had grand plans for doing all sorts of housework, work reading, etc., but ALL I've done is read blog posts. Maybe I'll get my ass into gear and at least go to the grocery store.

5 comments:

Amanda said...

I'm glad that your talk went well.

The festival also sounds like a lot of fun. Especially the marching band (but that could be because I'm a dork).

Academic said...

Welcome back! I'm sure you've had a lot of reading to do around the blogosphere... It's amazing how fast we all generate content!

Mad Hatter said...

Glad to hear your talk went well! Is it common for undergrads to attend conferences in your field? I've never seen undergrads at any of the ones in mine! Welcome back. :-)

EcoGeoFemme said...

Amanda: there was a huge crowd for the marching band band, so even non-dorks liked them. We saw them at the bar later, but I was too shy to tell them how much I liked their show.

Academic: and how!

Mad hatter: I usually encounter a handful of undergrads, but it depends on the conference. When I was in college, I worked with a professor who took me and some other undergrads to a meeting. She regularly brings a gaggle of undergrads to meetings, but I think that is partly because she works at a mostly undergrad university. Anyway, in this case it was a workshop for students in my fellowship program, which include grad students who are funded year round and undergrads who just do a summer internship that is facilitated by this program.

CAE said...

Good to see you back!

The festival sounds like a hoot.