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STAR Graduate Student Thesis Policy:
Predraft Notes
This is not intended to be a first draft - it's just a numbered list,
in no particular order, of many of the points and suggestions that
have been made concerning student theses in STAR.
Please comment on which points you feel should be changed or omitted,
and on needed points which are currently missing. Then we can proceed
to assemble a first draft.
- The STAR policy on student theses is based on the principle that any
collaborator is free to delve into any aspect of the data. The main
purpose of the policy is to state expectations about communication within
the collaboration.
- PWG convenors maintain lists of analysis topics in their areas of
interest which are not yet covered by anyone (includes students, postdocs,
and other categories of collaborator).
- Students and their advisors are free to choose a project from any PWG
convenor's list, or to choose a project that is not listed.
- The chair of the STAR thesis committee could work with the Analysis
Coordinator to maintain a descriptive list of all ongoing analysis projects,
including names of all students and non-students working on those projects.
The STAR council member from each institution is expected to submit the
necessary information to keep these listings up-to-date.
(I believe that John envisaged that this committee would continue to exist
beyond the stage of coming up with a draft policy on theses.)
- It is anticipated that there will always be many unpursued analysis
projects in STAR. The likelihood of independent analyses with a large
degree of overlap is small. However, STAR policy does not explicitly
discourage duplicate analyses.
- In the event that there is a large degree of overlap between two
independent analyses, it is the task of an ad hoc godparent committee
appointed by the spokesperson to draw on material from the independent
analyses and assemble the manuscript for a journal publication.
It does not appear that there is any natural role for the STAR thesis
committee as a separate entity at this point.
- Each student is expected to contribute "community service" to STAR
before becoming totally absorbed in the physics analysis for his/her
thesis.
- The expected amount of community service by a PhD student using
STAR data for his/her thesis is on the order of fraction X (one-third to
one-half ??) of the total research effort for a typical PhD.
This wording makes allowance for the fact (as noted by Jean-Pierre) that
a PhD project in France is typically much shorter than in the US. I get
the impression that some people want a rather explicit statement, as above,
about the expected amount of community service. However, few if any
experiments that I am aware of are this specific. On balance, I would
favor omitting this item from the policy.
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It was requested that this committee should somehow help in identifying
students for recruitment to community service areas. Perhaps it is
sufficient if we ask Liz to add a flag to the STAR roster:
The STAR roster should include a flag to identify students who intend to
use STAR data for a PhD thesis.
Return to STAR thesis committee page
Last Updated: July 2, 2000
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