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- Nov 15, 2011
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- Pre-Medical
Hi,
I've been working in my lab for almost two years. I started off by helping another person with their project, from which I got a poster and publication. After wanting more independence, my PI agreed to let me design (with her guidance) and carry out my own project, for which I won a small university grant. The problem is the project she wanted me to do is essentially a fishing expedition project, and I haven't been able to get a single tidbit of useful data after working full-time over the summer and 30 hours/week during the fall semester. What makes it harder is that my PI is (understandably) extremely frugal about purchasing reagents or assay kits, so I am often stuck for weeks trying to troubleshoot a single antibody that most likely does not work in our species (we don't work with the commonly used models). Because she won't let me buy multiple reagents to try at once, I am left doing the same thing over and over again and often can't work a full day since there is nothing else to do except read papers. This has made research painstakingly slow, and the things I have gotten working have all come up with negative results.
That being said, I did extensive literature reviews to plan out this project, decide what things I should be testing, protocols, etc, and feel like this project was a good experience in conducting independent research. I loved these aspects of research and am/was excited about the prospect of discovering new knowledge.The problem is the experimental part of the research completely fell flat, and I am worrying about how this will be viewed by MSTP committees. My PI will probably write me a great LOR regardless, and I'm pretty sure I can describe my research intelligently and enthusiastically. Despite these setbacks, I really enjoy the field I'm working in and plan to continue it in my next lab and in grad school.
Any advice on how to present this experience in the best possible light when I actually apply?
(I still have a year before I apply, so I'm planning on switching labs this summer and hopefully starting another independent project)
I've been working in my lab for almost two years. I started off by helping another person with their project, from which I got a poster and publication. After wanting more independence, my PI agreed to let me design (with her guidance) and carry out my own project, for which I won a small university grant. The problem is the project she wanted me to do is essentially a fishing expedition project, and I haven't been able to get a single tidbit of useful data after working full-time over the summer and 30 hours/week during the fall semester. What makes it harder is that my PI is (understandably) extremely frugal about purchasing reagents or assay kits, so I am often stuck for weeks trying to troubleshoot a single antibody that most likely does not work in our species (we don't work with the commonly used models). Because she won't let me buy multiple reagents to try at once, I am left doing the same thing over and over again and often can't work a full day since there is nothing else to do except read papers. This has made research painstakingly slow, and the things I have gotten working have all come up with negative results.
That being said, I did extensive literature reviews to plan out this project, decide what things I should be testing, protocols, etc, and feel like this project was a good experience in conducting independent research. I loved these aspects of research and am/was excited about the prospect of discovering new knowledge.The problem is the experimental part of the research completely fell flat, and I am worrying about how this will be viewed by MSTP committees. My PI will probably write me a great LOR regardless, and I'm pretty sure I can describe my research intelligently and enthusiastically. Despite these setbacks, I really enjoy the field I'm working in and plan to continue it in my next lab and in grad school.
Any advice on how to present this experience in the best possible light when I actually apply?
(I still have a year before I apply, so I'm planning on switching labs this summer and hopefully starting another independent project)