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  2. What's my professional title while working full time on my PhD?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/40329

    The returns were prepared by a tax-specialist CPA who agreed with "Student". I had a lesser form of the "oil baron" issue Nate Eldredge mentioned: the change in occupation from "Computer Architect" to "Student" explained both the disappearance of the relatively high wages I had been reporting, and the appearance of educational expenses.

  3. research undergraduate - Advantages of professional (student...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/158152/advantages-of...

    As you progress in your research, the discount for conference attendance also becomes useful. Many ACM-sponsored conferences require students to be ACM members in order to get the student discount (in part because asking the ACM "is this person a student member?" is a lot easier than verifying individual proofs of student status).

  4. If you are a member of a professional society you can contribute, create projects, connect/meet people, improve skills, etc. In the other hand you can get/receive benefits: academic. professional prestige; international spot; professional collaboration; economic (commissions) training/organizing for events/congresses

  5. If a student feels mocked or belittled, then chances are what they need to know is that you respect them and that making them feel otherwise was a mistake. That is the professional thing to do, but unfortunately you can't start doing it until you know the details, and you don't know the details yet.

  6. Meaning of undergraduate, graduate or post-graduate in US

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/45097/meaning-of...

    Ph.D., etc.) Depending on context, this term may also include professional degrees (J.D. for law, M.D. for medicine, D.D.S. for dentistry, D.V.M. for veterinary medicine, etc). An undergraduate student (or simply an undergraduate, or colloquially, an undergrad) is a student who does not yet have an undergraduate degree, but is studying to earn one.

  7. What is your correct title while working on a PhD?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/197556/what-is-your...

    But you are a student. Once you pass certain milestones, you might be called something like a degree candidate but that isn't a title. Titles (other than hereditary titles) require earning some achievement that you haven't yet earned. Some people might want to use "Master" after earning a MSc, but that is also often used for, say, five year old ...

  8. What should a proper email signature look like for graduate...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/8984

    I like to see some basic information in signatures, so I'll explain why point by point: 1. “the part of my email after the @ sign” — gives some basic information, but not always as clear… if I read, for example uts.edu.au it's not immediately clear to me what the institution is (apart that it's in Sidney).

  9. How to figure out whether a Masters degree is a "Professional" or...

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/11933/how-to-figure...

    Professional/taught MS programs are cash cows; their enrollments are generally higher, their admissions criteria are generally lower, they almost never offer financial support, and students are generally treated like cattle.

  10. In the USA An undergraduate student is one who's working towards a bachelors degree; typically a graduate student is one who has a bachelors degree and is either working on a Masters are higher level degree; a postgraduate degree level refers to someone who has earned a masters degree and is in route to a higher level degree; a postdoctoral ...

  11. Business card for Ph.D. student - what should be included?

    academia.stackexchange.com/questions/54434

    I'm a Ph.D. student considering getting business cards printed to facilitate follow-ups after conferences, etc. I am barely in touch with industry but I'm in a field where business cards are common. My university has a set layout, but we have quite some freedom on what to include.