Academic Mentors and Research Advisors
Graduate school is fundamentally different from undergraduate study.
Like college, graduate school begins with taking classes.
Graduate courses are generally more challenging, demanding and rigorous.
They are also smaller and involve more direct student-instructor
interaction, for example in discussing challenging homework problems or
new research directions in the area of study. But beyond taking courses,
graduate study is about taking your knowledge in an area of
mathematics and
using it to produce a new contribution to science and mathematics. This
creative pursuit of novel results directly leads to your doctoral thesis and
your Ph.D.
At every point in your career as a graduate student at Duke, you will
receive guidance for the steps in this process. On entering the program,
the Director of Graduate Studies will assign you a faculty member to
serve as your academic mentor.
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Aademic mentors serve as general advisors, recommending which
courses which might best fit your research goals, and acts as
an advocate on your behalf when needed.
Mentors will help you prepare for the
qualifying exams.
Mentors continues to offer guidance and support to students until
the student has selected a research advisor.
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Research advisors
help students select an area of mathematical study
to focus on and a problem that ultimately serves as the basis of the
student's thesis. The research advisor helps arrange the
preliminary exam and the
final thesis defense.
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