- Joined
- Nov 5, 2013
- Messages
- 6
- Reaction score
- 2
Hi fellow SDNers,
I've been a member on SDN for several years, so I just made this extra account for the sake of anonymity regarding this topic. My questions are bolded below.
I'm currently a senior and have been/had been doing research at my undergrad lab since freshman year, and today I received from my PI an e-mail 1 hour before I usually go to lab stating that he was unsatisfied with my work this semester and couldn't foresee me continuing to work there in a productive manner. Therefore, I didn't go to lab today. The reason I've been released from working there is because I was making more mistakes (tolerable ones, due to slight negligence) this particular semester than usual, and my last mistake was kind of bad. I knew after that mistake that my chances of staying in my lab would not be very great.
I am applying this cycle (as a traditional student), so last semester my PI wrote one of my LORs, which he had said would be strong (and I'm not worried about that). Also, I contributed to a poster he presented at a national conference and am listed as an author (in AMCAS activities). I don't have my name listed on any publications, but we were planning to create and submit a manuscript for publication, of which I was going to be a secondary author, later this semester. I stated that in my AMCAS descriptions for research, so I'm wondering whether my name will still appear on that publication despite being released from the lab? I was definitely a contributor, but I'm not what will happen and if I should ask in some subtle way.
I'm going to respond to the e-mail later today, and these are the types of things I'm thinking of saying: I completely understand his decision and appreciate having been given the opportunity to do research with his lab during my undergraduate years; my data (and cursive handwriting) from previous experiments (in my notebook) is somewhat disorganized, so I'd be willing to help with any questions he would have in the future. Is this all right, and what other things should I mention? Is there anyway to mention the future publication?
I was planning on submitting an update to schools around January once the manuscript had been submitted for publication, but I don't know if this is still a viable option? Also what do I tell schools at future interviews about this situations? Would I mention this at all? I'm not sure if this is relevant, but I've received a few interviews already (one top 20 so far), 2 rejections, and I'm still waiting to hear back from 15+ schools, at least a few at which I hope to get interviews.
If you guys have any other suggestions, please let me know. I really appreciate and thank you guys in advance for your answers/suggestions!
I've been a member on SDN for several years, so I just made this extra account for the sake of anonymity regarding this topic. My questions are bolded below.
I'm currently a senior and have been/had been doing research at my undergrad lab since freshman year, and today I received from my PI an e-mail 1 hour before I usually go to lab stating that he was unsatisfied with my work this semester and couldn't foresee me continuing to work there in a productive manner. Therefore, I didn't go to lab today. The reason I've been released from working there is because I was making more mistakes (tolerable ones, due to slight negligence) this particular semester than usual, and my last mistake was kind of bad. I knew after that mistake that my chances of staying in my lab would not be very great.
I am applying this cycle (as a traditional student), so last semester my PI wrote one of my LORs, which he had said would be strong (and I'm not worried about that). Also, I contributed to a poster he presented at a national conference and am listed as an author (in AMCAS activities). I don't have my name listed on any publications, but we were planning to create and submit a manuscript for publication, of which I was going to be a secondary author, later this semester. I stated that in my AMCAS descriptions for research, so I'm wondering whether my name will still appear on that publication despite being released from the lab? I was definitely a contributor, but I'm not what will happen and if I should ask in some subtle way.
I'm going to respond to the e-mail later today, and these are the types of things I'm thinking of saying: I completely understand his decision and appreciate having been given the opportunity to do research with his lab during my undergraduate years; my data (and cursive handwriting) from previous experiments (in my notebook) is somewhat disorganized, so I'd be willing to help with any questions he would have in the future. Is this all right, and what other things should I mention? Is there anyway to mention the future publication?
I was planning on submitting an update to schools around January once the manuscript had been submitted for publication, but I don't know if this is still a viable option? Also what do I tell schools at future interviews about this situations? Would I mention this at all? I'm not sure if this is relevant, but I've received a few interviews already (one top 20 so far), 2 rejections, and I'm still waiting to hear back from 15+ schools, at least a few at which I hope to get interviews.
If you guys have any other suggestions, please let me know. I really appreciate and thank you guys in advance for your answers/suggestions!