1. Finding the “right” Advisor -- How to research an advisor or thesis committee member
“ideal advisor will be in the area you're interested in working in, will actively be doing high-quality research and be involved in and respected by the research community,…”
“Talk to other graduate students and recent graduates. Ask them how their relationships with their advisors are/were, how quickly the advisor's students graduate, and how successful (well recognized, high-quality) their research is.”
excerpted from How to Succeed in Graduate School: A Guide for Students and Advisors (Part 1 and Part II) by Marie desJardins and, if you cannot access Marie desJardins' article published in Crossroads (because licensed journals require valid UC/UCLA IP addresses) Bruin Online offers dial-up, proxy, wireless, and VPN access. You will need to obtain a UCLA Logon ID.
- How do you find an advisor’s students so you can ask these questions?
- Search by ADVISOR in ProQuest Dissertations & Theses (PQDT).
- Note: Digital Dissertations provides full text of UC dissertations (1997+) and 24 pages of others (1997+).
- “Read PhD theses” from Graduate School Survival Guide.
- Reading dissertations, especially using their literature reviews (extensive bibliographies) can be helpful.
- How do you know if an advisor (or an author of an article or book you are reading) is actively doing high-quality research, involved in and respected by the research community?
- Use Web of Knowledge (Web of Science) to find how much their works are cited and who is citing them. In your search results, use UC e-Links
to obtain article text or call numbers.
- Read articles to see HOW other researchers are using their works, what research they have published, and in which journals. Use Article Databases appropriate to your discipline.
- Use Journal Citation Reports to evaluate a journal’s impact in a field of research.
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Just remember, librarians are here to help you with your information questions.