I've been doing this research for a year now (well, winter qtr 2003, then August 2003 through now) with a professor of mine from the mathematics dept. It's been semi-interesting until about a month ago, it's basically playing with equations in Maple and trying to figure out any patterns (hint: I haven't found any yet.
). So I'm finishing up my quarter report right now, and I'm mulling over the question of whether or not I want to continue this next quarter.
Two lines of thought regarding this, one for, one against:
For: no matter what, research on your resume looks good. He's a good guy, as well, and I enjoy sitting around and talking with him. The research is also paid ($500 a quarter), which isn't much, but it's some scratch ($10 an hour, 5 hours a week).
Cons: It's boring. Not so boring that I fall asleep doing it, but I'm losing interest in it. Once I realized that mathematics wasn't my field of choice, I lost a bit of steam. I'd rather be doing research with a statistics professor (haven't had any luck yet) or a finance professor (haven't found one yet, maybe this quarter).
I'm thinking I'll probably have a finance prof this quarter who I'll get to know and I'll manage to worm my way into doing some research with them. Unfortunately this is not certain.
As I'm typing this out, I realized that I can't really think of a solid reason not to do it, other than I'd probably enjoy having the free time during the Spring.
Thoughts?
Cheers!
Nate
Two lines of thought regarding this, one for, one against:
For: no matter what, research on your resume looks good. He's a good guy, as well, and I enjoy sitting around and talking with him. The research is also paid ($500 a quarter), which isn't much, but it's some scratch ($10 an hour, 5 hours a week).
Cons: It's boring. Not so boring that I fall asleep doing it, but I'm losing interest in it. Once I realized that mathematics wasn't my field of choice, I lost a bit of steam. I'd rather be doing research with a statistics professor (haven't had any luck yet) or a finance professor (haven't found one yet, maybe this quarter).
I'm thinking I'll probably have a finance prof this quarter who I'll get to know and I'll manage to worm my way into doing some research with them. Unfortunately this is not certain.
As I'm typing this out, I realized that I can't really think of a solid reason not to do it, other than I'd probably enjoy having the free time during the Spring.
Thoughts?
Cheers!
Nate
