Changes between Version 1 and Version 2 of Recruiting
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- 04/18/12 14:51:37 (12 years ago)
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Recruiting
v1 v2 3 3 If you're interested in joining ANSLab as a researcher, make it a point to read this ''entire'' page before taking any action. 4 4 5 == Studentship s Currently Available==5 == Studentship Opportunities == 6 6 7 === Fall, 2012 === 7 8 8 Studentship opportunities for 2011 admission will depend on the availability of funds. At this point, I hope to have funding to accept at least one student to work in the area of mesh-solution interactions. This project is likely to focus on applying techniques currently under development for analysis of unstructured mesh finite-volume schemes to analyze schemes for inviscid compressible flow and use the results of that analysis to improve the discretization scheme, the mesh generation process, or both.9 At this point, our admission cycle for fall 2012 has ended. The application deadline for January, 2013, is May 1, 2012. 9 10 10 What Kind of Guy Am I to Work With? 11 === January, 2013 === 11 12 13 In January, 2013, I expect to accept one or two students, depending of the availability of funds. I have projects planned for mesh-solution interaction and unstructured mesh adaptation. 14 15 In mesh-solution interaction, we are studying the accuracy characteristics of various unstructured mesh discretization schemes on realistic meshes. Over the next year or two, we'll be studying discretization schemes for both inviscid and viscous compressible flow, as well as re-examining approaches for gradient estimation. Ultimately, we expect to use the results of that analysis to improve the discretization scheme, the mesh generation process, or both. 16 17 The second project aims to extend our recent work on anisotropic adaptation, including smoothing anisotropic meshes to make them quasi-structured, from 2D to 3D. This is simple in principle, but the details will be challenging. This work will fit together nicely with ongoing work in parallel meshing and turbulent flow simulation. 18 19 = What Kind of Guy Am I to Work With? = 12 20 13 21 I firmly believe that the most important thing a grad student learns is how to do research independently, in the sense that when they're done, they should be able to successfully complete a research project of comparable complexity to their thesis without direct supervision. Not too surprisingly, this means I'm not a micro-manager. Obviously in the early stages, supervising a grad student includes a lot of one-on-one tutoring to get a student to the point where they understand the background well enough to proceed effectively. As time goes on, I try to transition from telling students what to do, to helping identify what directions to work in next, to offering advice to improve the plans that students have already formed. By that last stage, the main learning objective of the thesis is over, and it's a matter of getting to that satisfying result that you can communicate to the world (another important objective, obviously). I run a very informal group, in no small part because I consider grad students to be junior colleagues rather than minions. Besides, frequently a student will do something clever that I hadn't thought of (or thought was impossible), so crushing creativity would be a bad idea. 14 22 15 Depending on their projects, my students also tend to collaborate with each other. For example, a recent student I hadwho was working on mesh adaptation was working both with a student working on mesh generation (to fix bugs he'd discovered in the insertion code) and a student working on flow solver stuff (who was a "customer" for him).23 Depending on their projects, my students also tend to collaborate with each other. For example, a recent student who was working on mesh adaptation was working both with a student working on mesh generation (to fix bugs he'd discovered in the insertion code) and a student working on flow solver stuff (who was a "customer" for him). 16 24 25 In addition to weekly one-on-one meetings with students, we have a weekly group meeting. These alternate in focus between discussing a specific paper (either from within the group or from outside) and talking about software engineering issues (debugging, makefiles, programming best practices, etc). 17 26 18 General Info about Graduate Programs 27 = General Info about Graduate Programs = 19 28 29 All students accepted into the group are hired as research assistants. MASc students receive a stipend of Can$18,000, guaranteed for two years, subject to satisfactory academic progress. PhD students receive a stipend of Can$20,000, guaranteed for four years, subject to satisfactory academic progress. The primary duty of research assistants is research work aimed towards their thesis, though other related small projects may be assigned occasionally. 20 30 21 All students accepted into the group are hired as research assistants. MASc students receive a stipend of Can$16,500, guaranteed for two years, subject to satisfactory academic progress. PhD students receive a stipend of Can$19,000, guaranteed for four years, subject to satisfactory academic progress. The primary duty of research assistants is research work aimed towards their thesis, though other related small projects may be assigned occasionally. 31 Students with reasonable knowledge and English skills can easily supplement that by about $2K/semester with teaching assistantships, which typically require 56-84 hours/semester. (For reference, in my second year fluids class, the TAs are responsible for running the tutorials and marking the midterms for a class of 130-140 students; that and a few minor add-ons works out to about the full 60 hours. Other faculty no doubt have different expectations....) 22 32 23 Students with reasonable knowledge and English skills can easily supplement that by about $2K/semester with teaching assistantships, which typically require 56-84 hours/semester. (For reference, in my fluids class, the TA is responsible for running the tutorials, holding some office hours for students, and marking the midterm for ~100 students; that and a few minor add-ons works out to about the full 84 hours. Other faculty no doubt have different expectations....) 33 As for time requirements, for a MASc, a typical time to completion is about two years + one semester (28 months). In terms of actual degree requirements, our current course requirement is 18 credits (six courses) beyond the BASc, plus a 12-credit thesis. 2 credits go to a mandatory seminar course, which would leave you with five courses to take, if you pick the right five. 24 34 25 As for time requirements, for a MASc, a typical time to completion is about two years + one semester (28 months). In terms of actual degree requirements, our current course requirement is 18 credits beyond the BASc, plus a 12-credit thesis. 2 credits go to a mandatory seminar course, which would leave you with five courses to take, if you pick the right five. 26 27 PhD students typically require three-four years after the MASc. The course requirement (in practice) is 15 credits beyond the MASc, including a 3 credit mandatory seminar course, leaving you to take four courses. 35 PhD students typically require three-four years after the MASc. The course requirement (in practice) is 15 credits (five courses) beyond the MASc, including a 3 credit mandatory seminar course, leaving you to take four courses. 28 36 29 37 How ''Not'' to Apply … … 37 45 = How to Apply = 38 46 39 Interested students should apply for graduate admission to the UBC Department of Mechanical Engineering. Simply contacting Dr. Ollivier-Gooch isn't sufficient, as candidates can not be accepted without completing the full UBC graduate application. 47 Interested students should apply for graduate admission to the UBC Department of Mechanical Engineering. Simply contacting Dr. Ollivier-Gooch isn't sufficient, as candidates can not be accepted without completing the full UBC graduate application. While I will occasionally specifically encourage an applicant whose record catches my attention, I can't make any promises about admission based solely on email exchanges, not least because I can't know what the applicant pool will look like until all the applications are in. 40 48 41 Students are also strongly encouraged to contact Dr. Ollivier-Gooch, providing a cover letter, a recent CV, and electronic copies of unofficial transcripts. 49 Despite this, students are also strongly encouraged to contact Dr. Ollivier-Gooch, providing a cover letter, a recent CV, and electronic copies of unofficial transcripts. This gives you a chance to provide information in addition to what the formal application asks for 42 50 43 Also, candidates should answer the questions found here; these are intended to provide information that is very useful in making admissions decisions that doesn't ordinarily appear on a typical CV.51 Also, candidates should answer the questions found [wiki:GradQuestions here]; these are intended to provide information that is very useful in making admissions decisions that doesn't ordinarily appear on a typical CV. 44 52 45 53 Finally, candidates for whom English is not their native language, should where possible submit evidence of English language proficiency, either by confirming that they have a degree from a university whose language of instruction is English or by providing a score on one of the standardized tests of English proficiency (TOEFL, IELTS, etc). 46 54 47 If you'd like confirmation that I've gotten your email, request a return receipt when you send your email. 55 If you'd like confirmation that I've gotten your email, request a return receipt when you send your email. For obvious reasons, I don't reply to every admissions-related email that's sent to me, and sending me the same email again and again because you've not heard back isn't good etiquette. 48 56 49 57 50 About UBC 58 = About UBC = 51 59 52 The University of British Columbia is located in beautiful Vancouver, on Canada's west coast. Both mountain and ocean activities are easily accessible, as well as the amenities and attractions of Canada's third-largest city.60 The University of British Columbia is located in beautiful Vancouver, a culturally rich and diverse city on Canada's west coast. Both mountain and ocean activities are easily accessible, as well as the amenities and attractions of Canada's third-largest city. Unlike most of Canada, Vancouver has a mild, though wet, climate. 53 61 54 55 For further information56 57 Please contact Dr. Carl Ollivier-Gooch.