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Professor Fisher's dissertation
proposal/defense question checklist.
You will want/need to have
thought about answers to these questions in great detail if there is even
a minimal chance that Professor Fisher will attend your PhD proposal and/or
defense...
- What is the original
contribution of your work to the field?
- What are the major limitations
of your approach/process/methodology?
- What would experts in
the area of your research identify as the major criticism(s) of your work?
How would you respond to their comments?
- What are other methods
that one could use which would 'compete' with your dissertation work? Why
is your approach more favorable? What factors led you to select your approach?
- What distinguishes your
PhD dissertation from a series of MS thesis projects?
- What would the next
steps be in the development of your project (for the next student)? What
are the major recommendations you would suggest to
a new student wishing to extend your work in this area?
- How did
the advice of your Committee member, Prof. XXXXX, contribute to your project?
How many times did you meet with your committee members?
- How
does your work build off of previous work of your PhD advisor? At
what point (for what topics) did you take the lead, rather than your advisor?
(i.e. at what point in your research did your advisor ask you what should
be done, rather than you ask your advisor what should be done?)
- What graduate level
classes (inside or outside of the department) most contributed to your
research project? Of the material covered in those classes, what topics
were most closely associated with your research? For someone not familiar
with that area, can you succinctly describe (in 3-5 minutes) the basics
of that topic, how it relates to your project, and how your dissertation
extends the community's knowledge/understanding in that area?
- Summarize the critical
aspects of your work in X minutes (where X = 1, 2 or 5).[If
you can't do this, you don't understand the contributions of your work.]
- How would you describe
your work to a group of Y? (where Y = senior undergraduates
in your field, senior undergraduates in science/engineering outside your
field, science/engineering freshmen college students, or high school
students) [If
you can't do this, you don't understand the contributions of your work.]
Nanomechanics
and Nanomaterials Laboratory
Professor Frank Fisher
Department of Mechanical Engineering
Stevens Institute of Technology
Hoboken, NJ 07030
last update: June 9,
2009
for more information, contact: Professor
Frank Fisher, Department of Mechanical Engineering