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Hello everyone and welcome to
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a different kind of video. Today I'm
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joined by Dr. Shayla Vradenburgh,
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who is the founder, what would
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you call it? Founder of Revolting
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Science Resources. And I'm gonna
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let her explain what that is. But today,
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because I was trained in the UK and
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Shayla was trained in the US, we are
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going to talk about the differences
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between the UK versus US PhD. So
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Shayla, do you wanna introduce
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yourself? So, yeah. My name is Dr.
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Shayla Vradenburgh. I am the founder
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of Revolting Science Resources,
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which is a company that's designed
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to bring the principles of project
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management to academic scientists
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and researchers. I realized while
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I was finishing up my PhD and
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afterwards when I kind of learned
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a little more about project management,
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how vital it is to the work that we
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do as researchers. And so I created
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a company that's all about kind of
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ways that you can implement
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some of those principles in the
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work that you do.
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And Shayla also gives presentations
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at conferences and at institutions.
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So, you know, please consider bringing
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her in. She is great. I did see her
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present at the National Postdoctoral
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Association. So yeah, that's a bit
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about Shayla. You all know me
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because you are on my YouTube
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channel. I'm Kate, I'm the founder
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of EduKatedSTEM, and normally I
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talk about education and professional
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development. So this slots in beautifully
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because at the beginning of your
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career you might be considering
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whether you should do a PhD. And
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also maybe where you should do
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one because whether you are
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international, whether you're from
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the UK, or the US, students come
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from each country all the time. And
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there are videos on YouTube already,
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from various people explaining why
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they chose various countries or not.
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So I encourage you to look at those,
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but Shayla and I will be talking about
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our personal experiences and also
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the information that is relevant today,
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which is in May, 2025 because we
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did do a little bit of researching
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around this area. So how about we
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talk about the application process.
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Do you wanna go first, Shayla?
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Yeah. So I will say it's been a few
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years since I've applied. I applied
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back in 2017, so it's again, been a
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few years, but for that application
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process, most of the time it looks
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pretty similar for a lot of different
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universities. And also what I'll say
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is I got my PhD in neuroscience
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and in a lot of institutions in the
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US that can be in kind of different
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places. For me, most of the places
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I applied, it was part of the school
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of medicine, but sometimes you
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can have it be parts of different
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biology departments or the college
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of arts and sciences. And so, sometimes
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things can vary based off of what
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department or school that you're
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applying to. For kind of mostly like
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these biomedical science school
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of medicine things, there's also
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sometimes umbrella programs.
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So some of the institutions I
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applied to, you actually apply to
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an umbrella program and then
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you kind of select your specialization
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afterwards. Some of them will let
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you apply directly to a specialization.
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So, some of those kind of nuances
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are a little different. But a lot of the
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time it requires some sort of cover
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letter or at least like personal statement,
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some sort of, you know, like basically
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talking a little about the things
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you've accomplished in a CV. Having
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letters of recommendation and a
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lot of it is really predicated on how
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much research experience you have.
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They really wanna see some tangible
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ways that you've actually gained
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some experience that's relevant to
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the work that you're hoping to do.
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And then there normally is an
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application fee. I know when I was
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applying, I actually went to a national
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conference called SACNAS, and
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while I was there, I actually was
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able to get a lot of waivers for
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different institutions that I didn't
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actually have to pay that application
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fee. But that can be another thing
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that kind of adds up if you're applying
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to a lot of different institutions.
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And yeah, I think those were like
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most of the components for kind
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of applying. I think it honestly was
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a little similar when you're thinking
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about like applying for undergrad
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versus applying for grad school.
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I also know too, like sometimes
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the GRE, or like the GMAT, was
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a test you would take. I took
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the GRE, it was required when
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I applied, but I think about two
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years into my grad program,
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they actually got rid of that
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requirement at my institution
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and at a good number of
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institutions. So something
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though to keep in mind to
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definitely think about is whether
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or not that test might be
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something you need to include.
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I will say that having sat on
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an admissions committee,
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how you do on the GRE or
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the GMAT does not indicate
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how well you do in graduate
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school which is one of the
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reasons why we discussed
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dropping it. Because you
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couldn't tell it really didn't
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indicate your success or not.
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Okay, so the British system is
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different. You apply to a specific
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research project with a particular
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professor. So completely different.
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You have to find the listings,
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you find the research that you're
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interested in, and then you
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apply specifically to work for
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that individual. So, you know,
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we don't normally have rotations
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like you do in America because
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you're specifically going for that
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particular project and professor.
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Which is good and bad, because
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what happens if you don't like
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the professor? You're kind of
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stuck. That's it. But that also
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means that you know what
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your project is as soon as you
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come in, there's no surprise.
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You literally applied for it.
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And at least when I applied,
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which was a very long time ago,
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over 20 years ago, there was
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no application fee. You just
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sent your materials off. So
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CV and a cover letter, maybe
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a personal statement. And
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definitely your transcripts
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and letters of recommendation,
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you just sent those off. I can't
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remember how many I actually
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applied for because there was
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no financial component. So I
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could have applied for every
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single one I looked at. And then
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I definitely had a number of
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interviews which were all quite
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different. So Shayla, do you wanna
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talk about your experience for interviews?
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Yeah. So I had a couple of interviews
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that I had scheduled. They look
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pretty much the same though,
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where essentially you kind of start
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by meeting maybe some people
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for an informal sort of like dinner.
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You meet some of the grad students
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or even the faculty that are part
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of the program. Then the next day
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it was normally kind of like a full day.
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You would do interviews with
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different faculty members.
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A lot of the time they'd give
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you the option of people
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you could select or you can
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request specific faculty members
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to meet with. And then they
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kind of have different grad
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students or people kind of walk
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you between all these different
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faculty interviews. And then
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there normally was some sort
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of a panel interview as well, so
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you would meet with, most of
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the time, it was mostly faculty
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with a couple of graduate student
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representatives. And then essentially
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you do a panel interview as well
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and kind of just answer lots of questions
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about your research, talk about
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their research. And I think what's
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also so valuable about this interview
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process is that it's not only an
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opportunity for, you know, these
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institutions to get to know you
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and why you might be a good
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fit, but you can also take that
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opportunity to get to know them
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and see how kind of the grad
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students seem to be in this kind
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of environment or how they seem
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to support them, and how you
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might fit in in that space as well.
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That's a great point. You are
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interviewing them at the same
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time because it's a huge commitment
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and if you choose the wrong
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school or the wrong program,
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then you might not enjoy the
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experience. You might decide
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to leave the program, which
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would be terribly sad. So for my
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interviews, I had to give a scientific
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presentation at some of them
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which was incredibly intimidating.
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I did that for Oxford. And then
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there's multiple interviews with
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different professors. Even if you're
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not wanting to work for them,
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you still get interviewed by
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multiple people. And I definitely
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had a panel interview for the
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PhD program I ended up going to.
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I had a panel and it was actually
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really interesting because there
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were four professors for four
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different proposals. And the
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professor that I interviewed
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for I actually am very glad
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he didn't choose me and I
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didn't get the project. But
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someone else didn't like
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any of his candidates, but
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he liked me. But because
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we'd all interviewed together,
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he offered me a position,
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so yay for the panel!
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Yes. And also, I guess I'm curious,
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for the presentation you had
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to give, was that like a slideshow?
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I know sometimes you do like
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kind of chalkboard.
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No. Full PowerPoint presentation.
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Like an hour long?
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God no, it wasn't an hour, maybe
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10, 15 minutes. Okay. And luckily
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it was because I had previously
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done research in America, so
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I presented on that research. But
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yes, everyone who was being
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considered for that particular
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program, we all have to give
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PowerPoint presentations.
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So I assume all of us had
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previous research experience,
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otherwise, what would you have presented on?
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Yeah, I was wondering that too.
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I was like, hopefully you have.
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Yeah. Similar to to what you said
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about people in like if you've done
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previous research experience,
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so in America, having those summer
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internships are really important if
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you want to move ahead into a PhD program.
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Yeah, for sure. I did a summer research
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program at the University of New Mexico,
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and I think that was one of the most
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kind of transformative things I could
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have done I think for my career. I
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think a) it was just a really hands-on
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time. I got to spend literally a whole
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summer just focusing on research,
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working in a different place, working
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with different lab members.
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Figuring out different techniques.
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And then I got to present that work
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ultimately too at places like SACNAS
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which also kind of helped just broaden
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my range of contacts and different
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people within kind of different areas
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of the world. So, yeah, I would highly
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recommend for anybody who,
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especially as an undergrad and is
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thinking about research, like take a
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summer, there's so many of these
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different programs and a lot of times
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they pay you stipends to participate.
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So yeah, I think it's an incredible experience. Yeah.
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Yeah. So I did a sandwich undergraduate,
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which meant that for my third year,
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my junior year, I had to leave and go
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and have a proper research job so I
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could have gone and worked in a
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pharmaceutical company. But I was
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selected to come to the University
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of Virginia to do a year of cancer research,
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which is how I started off my cancer
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research kind of career because I
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realized, oh, I can do that.
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Yeah, that's,
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and then because that was on
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my CV, and at the time it was
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more unusual in the UK. Because
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sandwich degrees I don't know
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how popular they are now, but
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back then they weren't terribly
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popular. I mean, I got interviewed
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at the majority of the places that I applied for.
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Yeah, I mean, that sounds like an incredible opportunity.
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It was good. Thank you UVA.
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Okay. So I think one of the key
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things about the differences is the
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duration, because a British PhD
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is much shorter. Right. So most
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people finish between three to
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four years. I actually submitted
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my PhD thesis or dissertation in
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under three years, which is unusual,
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but we get them through quicker.
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And we can talk about the reason
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for that in a moment, but Shayla,
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what's the, how long does an American one last?
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Yeah, it can typically range
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somewhere between five to seven
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years. I've seen people extend
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beyond that. I think most of the time
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when you would ask an institution
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what their average is, they'll
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probably say like five and a half to six.
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But yeah, that could definitely be
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a range. And I think especially after
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COVID, I think those numbers increased
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a little bit. But yeah, it's definitely a bit longer.
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Yeah. I've known a couple of
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students who've taken nine, so
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as have I,
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If your professor is willing to keep
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paying you, you just kind of hang
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around which is also not necessarily
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a good thing because you wanna
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get out and do a postdoc and move
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on to the next step of your career.
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Yeah. I think that's something too
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people don't talk a lot about is,
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you know, you generally don't make
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a lot with these PhD stipends.
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Really its oodles of money Shayla!
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I mean, you're right. What am I talking about?
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But, you know, I think for, if you
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think about how long this is, like
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five to seven years, that's a long
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time to be making not the most
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amount of money. And then especially
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if the next step is a postdoc, which
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they are generally underpaid as well.
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You know, you're going to, it's gonna
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take a lot longer before you're actually
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making a salary that kind of helps
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support your life and especially
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the kind of experience that you have.
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Let's talk money. So back 20 years
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ago, I got paid 12,000 pounds per
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year to do my PhD which at the
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time was a very well funded PhD
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and unusually. Tell me how you
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got paid Shayla. I got paid every three months.
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Interesting.
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So I had to budget really well for
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those three months.
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Yeah. That's interesting. Yeah.
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And for me, so my PhD was not
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terribly long ago. We actually saw,
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I think, two increases during the
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time I was doing my PhD, but I
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started at 30,500 and that honestly
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isn't like, I think that is a generally
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well-funded PhD. I think Charlottesville
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is a little bit of a pricier area, but
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honestly I didn't have a problem
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living with that stipend. We saw a
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couple of increases, so I think by
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the time I finished, I think it ended
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up around 33,500, somewhere
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around there. I think you asked me
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another question though, and I forgot it.
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No, I just realized, did I just say I
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did my research at UVA? I did it at VCU.
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Oh, yeah. Oh, so you did it at VCU?
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Wait, I just said the wrong university.
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I was like, I didn't know that you went to UVA.
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No, no. I've been to, I've visited UVA.
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No, I was in Richmond.
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Okay, that's close. It's really,
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I was like, it had Virginia in the title,
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but that is so wrong. Amnesia.
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I was like, I feel like Why, why did
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we not talk about this before?
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No, no. I went, it was a VCU. I was
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at the Massey Cancer Center
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the Virginia Commonwealth University.
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I'm going crazy at the grand old
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age of 45. When you said you, I
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was like, wait, I didn't go to Charlottesville.
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I am going nuts. I'm sorry, Shayla.
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Oh, that's fine.
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Okay, so, so that's how much you
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got paid. So how much were you
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making at the end? Because you
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started at 30.
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Yeah, I think it ended up around,
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I feel like it was 33, but there's a
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chance it was 35. One of those two numbers.
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Okay. So it went up a decent
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amount though, in a couple of years.
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Yeah. Ultimately it took me six year
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to complete my PhD. So over the
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course of six years that's how much we went up.
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Okay. So a stipend currently in the UK,
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and this is for 2025 to 2026, you
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would probably make just under 21,000
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pounds. And importantly that stipend
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isn't taxed, so you get all of the money.
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Yeah. Yes. And how much, how much is
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an American one? I actually don't
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know what the current numbers are.
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That's a good question.
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I put it in there.
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There we go. It's like 20 to 50.
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20 to 50 K. Yeah. I was like,
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I don't know. I, I think too, it's so
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varying depending on where you
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live as well. Like I know that some,
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you know, places, especially in
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pricier areas like California or
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New York, they might be able to
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give you a better stipend because
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your cost of living is gonna be
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significantly more than someone
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may be in Texas or Tennessee
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So it is like probably a very wide range.
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I think that that also is to do with
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humanities versus STEM because
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I wasn't necessarily looking just
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for STEM. Yeah. So I think that
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might've incorporated some
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humanities and they are
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unfortunately paid a lot less
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than STEM degrees, I don't know why.
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And Yeah. And being part of the
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School of Medicine, I think we
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some of the best paid grad students
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on the campus.
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Wouldn't surprise me.
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Yeah. Yeah. Unfortunately. But yeah,
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so, but ours is also taxed, so most
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of the time I think it sometimes can
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be a little confusing and maybe
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even frustrating about how the
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stipend works in America because
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you generally don't get something
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like a W2 that you can easily submit
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to pay your taxes. Nothing's withheld.
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So you need to withhold yourself
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and make sure that you're paying
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it properly. So it can be a little bit
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more to figure out and not as easy
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or convenient, but you do have to pay taxes on it.
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Did your graduate school have
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like a presentation once a year
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to help you do your taxes? Because
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I know some schools do that.
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No, and that would've been great.
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I know some do, and I know, I
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think even mine has started to do
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things, but when we were starting,
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they literally had kind of like meetings
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that were basically like, we will
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not help you with your taxes. This is
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your responsibility. You guys figure it out.
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The don't want to get sued!
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Like, I don't know what the ultimate goal
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of that was, but I'm glad they're
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starting to incorporate work.
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Yeah. No, we, we definitely did
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it until we got told that, you know,
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we could get sued if they got given
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the wrong information. So we did it for
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a while and then it stopped at the
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graduate school I was an associate
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dean for. Okay. So another big
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thing is the fees that you pay. So
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in the UK if you're a domestic student,
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you are gonna pay just short of 5,000
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pounds, and that's per year. If you're
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an international student, you are
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going to pay significantly more,
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anywhere between 20 and 35,000
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pounds. And then in addition to that,
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we have something called a bench
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fee or a research support fee, so
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that basically helps to pay for all
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of the things that you use in the lab.
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Which could be anywhere between
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1000 to 10,000 pounds and that's
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per year. And then obviously if you
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get a scholarship or some kind of
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thing through your program, they
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might pay for a portion or all of that.
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So luckily for me, I had to pay
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zero which is awesome. But some
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people do have to pay. So what
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are the fees in America?
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Yeah, so we also have tuition
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and I think there generally tends
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to be things like in-state versus
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out of state. And then obviously
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if you're an international student.
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What I will say is at least in the
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school of medicine, and when I
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was in grad school, we got our
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tuition waived. So no one paid
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for tuition. We also got free health
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insurance and yeah, so it, it ended
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up being something that wasn't
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really a cost that came out of the
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stipend that we received. Generally
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though, how it would work is there's
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like a period in which the actual,
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like the school of medicine paid
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for your stipend until you joined a
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lab, and then your PI would likely
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have to take over those tuition
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costs essentially from, yeah, the school.
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So even though you aren't gonna
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have to get it taken out of your,
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you know, like actual stipend,
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somebody is likely paying for it
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in some way, or there might be
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waivers that exist for portions
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or all of your kind of schooling
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or training there. But yeah, I think
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it totally just kind of depends
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on the program. And again, like
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the school of medicine got a
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lot of perks that other kind of
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departments and schools did
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not get so I think in terms of
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fees and things like that, if you
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are at universities that aren't
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going to offer tuition waivers
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or are gonna require you to pay
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for some of that, it could range
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anywhere from, you know, like six
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to $11,000 for instate up to 25
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plus for out of state or international
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students. So could be a big range.
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Yeah. And I think that it is important
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to note that if you're out of state,
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that's the same fee you pay as an
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international student. Yes.
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Which to me is incredible because,
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you know, if you go from, I don't know,
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Texas to California, it almost feels
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like you should be paying less than
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someone who's coming from an
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international country. So that's a
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bargain frankly. If you are going out
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of state, um, it's a little crazy. And
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then there is a difference between
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a public institution and a private
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institution. So did you wanna say
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what the difference between those are?
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In terms of the cost?
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Uh, well, the cost, but also like what
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is the difference? Like if someone
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doesn't know the difference between
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a public institution and a private,
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so what is the difference between them?
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Yeah. Most of the time that's generally
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kind of how they're funded. So a
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lot of public institutions are gonna
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be funded by state or even federal
-
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funds. Whereas private institutions
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are generally not, they might still
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receive them in some capacity, but
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they generally don't have to follow
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some of the specific kind of guidelines
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or rules. They get a little bit more
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freedom sometimes in the ways
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that they're able to operate and
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they generally aren't receiving those
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state or federal funds. But yeah,
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in terms of the cost, that generally
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makes those private institutions a
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lot more expensive. And so the public
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institutions tend to be a bit more
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affordable, especially when you're
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thinking about the tuition costs.
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And the way that I think of a public
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institution is it's usually like the
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state schools. So like the University
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of California would be a public
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institution or the University of Maryland
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or Virginia, or actually is UVA is that public?
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Yes, but the one that always trips
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me up is the University of Pennsylvania.
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That one is a private institution.
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Oh, it is? I'm pretty sure someone
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can come for me, but I'm pretty sure.
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So I know that if you're interested
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if you've heard of the Ivy League,
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that's only for a small portion of the
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country and it's only a few universities,
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but there's now lists for different categories.
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So there's now something called
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the Public Ivy League table, which
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comprises of universities across
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the whole of the country which is
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awesome. So if you want to go
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somewhere, which you're still gonna
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get a great education, but it's
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not gonna cost the world look up
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the public list of Ivy Leagues and
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just to give you a hint, my favorite,
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the UC's are all in there. So University
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of California, totally representing.
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Yeah. I think too, both of the schools
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I attended, the University of Virginia
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and the University of Florida think
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have made the public Ivy list. But
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yeah, so it's, yeah, you can still
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a great education and it not cost
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the world, which I think is something
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that people sometimes forget. Yeah. Yeah.
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Sounds, just because prestige doesn't
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mean that it's necessarily going to
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give you an amazing it. Remember, it
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also depends on your professor and
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the people in the lab who are training you.
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Yeah. Definitely, and I think, I honestly
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didn't even know that you could get
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paid at one point for going to a,
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especially like a PhD program, especially
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a lot of the ones in the United States,
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they tend to at least give you some
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sort of a stipend and a lot of the times they'll
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waive your tuition so you don't even
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have to pay those fees. But you're
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able to get a good education. You're
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maybe not making a ton of money,
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but you are getting that degree from
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a great institution for not quite as much.
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Possibly getting more than the Brits.
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I guess we need to do the, the pound
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versus dollar conversion. Yeah.
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That would've been clever for me to
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do that, but I did not look into that.
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I guess it depends on the day, so I guess it doesn't matter. True. Um, okay, so we, should we talk about funding? 'cause at home in the UK we have, um, a number of different ways that you can get funded. A lot of them are different research councils, depending on your research focus. Um, so a couple of them would be the Biotechnology and Bioscience Research Council, or the B-B-S-R-C.
Um, you also have the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, or the E-P-S-R-C, and then you can get private funding, um, from like Cancer Research UK or someone else. So it, it depends. You might be able to apply for your own funding, but usually if your professor has put a position out there, they've got the funding for three years.