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Today, a recommendation from my supervisor, surprise for me.
热度 3 xintan1984 2013-3-13 06:27
今天我的教授看见我在整理简历,马上主动给我写了一份评价推荐,看到这段文字,是新年以来最令我开心的事儿了。 就冲着教授这肯定,今后也得努力奋斗啊~~~! Recommendation Mr. Tan Xin, Chinese citizen, born ----- , is working as PhD-student in my institute since October 2009. Within the next few months he will finish his PhD-thesis on the hydro-thermal coupled behavior of low permeable rocks. His PhD-studies have focused on both, sophisticated triaxial hydro-mechanical lab testing and corresponding numerical simulation. Based on the lab test results he has developed a new hydro-mechanical constitutive law for low permeable rocks, which pays special attention to the post-failure range and includes such complex characteristics like degradation, dilation and permeability change. Besides that, he has done some fundamental numerical studies on poro-elasticity and has deduced some fundamental relation between Biot coefficient and micro-structure. He has already published two conference papers. Further three papers for international journals with ISI-reference are in preparation. Mr. Tan Xin is very well integrated into our research group. He has participated in all our activities and is well accepted by the other scientists. During his stay in Germany he has further improved his English, but has also learned some German. Mr. Tan Xin is a highly motivated and engaged scientist and engineer. He is always interested to combine scientific research and practical application. Especially during the last year he has developed his own research ideas and has shown, that he would be able to head and guide a research group or to act as a lecturer at universities. I can strongly recommend him for high-level academic work, wish him all the best for the future and hope, that we can continue joint research also in the future, when he got a new position in China. Prof. Dr.-Ing. habil. Heinz Konietzky 12.03.2013
2538 次阅读|5 个评论
brains and beauty never go together.
liuli66 2013-3-8 07:42
NATURE 科学妇女专辑 从女科学家传记看 Biographies of female scientists perpetuate stereotypes, laments Patricia Fara http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v495/n7439/full/495043a.html Even sympathetic authors perpetuate the prejudice that brains and beauty never go together. Describing the film star Hedy Lamarr as The Most Beautiful Woman in the World , Richard Rhodes deliberately provokes a shiver of surprise by reporting that she also made breakthrough inventions. With composer George Antheil, she devised spread-spectrum radio, a technology now used in many applications, including cordless phones. “Any girl can be glamorous,” Lamarr is reported to have said. “All you have to do is stand still and look stupid.” Despite her intelligence, Lamarr's remarkable looks and glamorous career occluded her innovations for decades. Y 同学的讨论 象限论
个人分类: 杂感|4 次阅读|0 个评论
小白鼠成长日记4月——祝组内童鞋生日快乐
summerice9 2012-4-29 15:18
组内童鞋CYM过生日.作为CYM两年来鼎力合作的战友,怎么能不整出点big surprise呢。于是小白鼠1号给全组群发邮件。标题为: 号外,号外,3月28日组里将发生重大事件 内容如下: 各位童鞋: 本月28日组里将发生一件重大事件。这件重大事情是什么呢? 这个事件要细说起来,话可就长了。话说,M年前。 天气呢:要么刮风,要么下雨,要么天晴,好像不会下雪。在江苏徐州某家诞生了一个健康的、活蹦乱跳的、生下来就会哭的男婴。.........中间省略N个字。....... 那么本月28日发生的事件,聪明的孩纸一定可以猜出啥事了,就是这个成人版男婴的生日啦。 这个成人版男婴是谁呢?大家一起来猜猜 他的工位在七层; 他的研究方向是分布式检索; 传说中,他的外号叫葫芦娃,某人说他和葫芦娃很像。 最近,他又多了个称呼“佛祖” 他每天都很早到实验室,周末也经常来实验室。 总是体贴周到通知大家充网费; 维护着大家使用的服务器,每次服务器出问题,他就背负重任坐几个小时的车去昌平修服务器。 每当去找他帮忙,不管小忙大忙,总是毫无怨言帮大家把问题解决了; 如果有问题去问他,总是非常有耐心解答问题,一直说道他确认你懂了为止,否则他是不放心你走的; 他答应的事情一定会尽他的全力做到。 他是我们某些人在实验室一起刷夜的战友 ............ 我相信聪明的孩纸们一定又猜出他是谁了吧。 今年夏天,成人版男婴告别实验室,永远告别他的学校生活了,最最重要的是他要离开我们组了,和大家说再见了。为了让他能够更加清晰的记住我们,借着他生日的机会,我们一起回忆下他的组里的“光辉事迹”还有祝福他的未来生活吧。(PS,某长今年也毕业,但是他的生日是过年,我们失去让他祝福我们的一次机会,他毕业的时候我们再积极准备吧) 我抛砖引玉,大家跟上哈~ 佛祖大人: 生日快乐~ 祝越来越帅气,出去逛街时,美女回头率百分之百! 去百度工作后,升级越来越快,升成大大的manager! 能力越来强,成为无所不能的“金刚葫芦娃”! 经常有掉馅饼的好事光临你! 宽容,厚道是你大大的优点,一定要好好保持啊! 还有,一定要相信自己! PS.明年这个时候,我为代码发愁的那几个小时,我会想起你的。 小白鼠1号
个人分类: 生活点滴|3102 次阅读|0 个评论
[转载]Struggling to keep the promise of Berkeley
whyhoo 2012-1-3 10:46
The normally docile faculty and well-behaved students who gathered at Sproul Plaza to observe a general strike in November were taken by surprise by the thwack of police clubs on flesh and bone. So was our former poet laureate, Robert Hass, whose soulful response to having been bludgeoned in the belly with a University of California policeman’s truncheon tells part of the tragic story. But why were faculty and students being knocked around and dragged by the hair by the campus police? The crisis at the University of California is not about faculty and staff pay cuts (which we have had to swallow), faculty bonuses (they don’t exist), or academic perks (if they ever existed). Faculty at large public institutions like the University of California at Berkeley buy their own notebooks, pencils, and pens. Those who still use chalk steal it from their toddlers’ cubbies and bring it to class in their pockets. We use our own cellphones for business calls. Faculty under pressure University professors (unless they have a large research grant) have no secretaries to prepare their manuscripts for publication or the hundreds of letters of recommendation, the purgatorial price professors pay for the opportunity to teach and shape the next generation of scholars. We no longer write those letters on embossed university letterhead, also a thing of the past. Despite what you might think, professors at public universities grade most of their undergraduate student papers and all of their graduate student theses and dissertations without assistance. University professors are dedicated, hard-working people, with largely old-time values. Most are not on the make or “on the market” for higher salaries and better perks. We’re there for the long haul, seeing graduate students through seven or eight years of specialized training. The crisis at Berkeley is about the failed promise of reasonably attainable higher education. It is about the escalating costs of college that are turning a younger generation into debt-peons, and about the difficulty of obtaining jobs after graduation. The current crisis is fundamentally about privatization and the dismantling of a national public treasure. The students and professors who were whacked by billy clubs want to preserve a grand public university that took a century to build to its present pre-eminence and is taking just a few years to destroy. Held hostage to attacks on public institutions Although public universities are under attack throughout the United States, the University of California is taking a particularly hard beating, metaphorically and literally. In California, the public university (the 10 campuses of UC, the state-college system, and the community colleges)—like public libraries and day-care centers—is being held hostage to citizens who have waged tax rebellions since 1978 and whose heirs still refuse to support any civic institution that doesn’t directly affect their private lives or needs. (“Who needs a public library?”; “Our children attend private schools”; “Public housing is a nuisance.”) Consequently, our children are less literate, and our streets are filling up with homeless warriors returned from the battlefields of the Middle East. Meanwhile, state support for the University of California is steadily shrinking, undergraduate tuition has almost doubled since 2007 , and classroom spaces once reserved for California residents are being sold to affluent students from out of state and abroad. Diversity is good for any institution, but a diversity limited to those who can buy it is not diversity at all. Cut to the bone Outsourcing is another survival strategy. The much-heralded agreement to open a Berkeley-Shanghai campus is one solution to bankruptcy, but will it help our struggling undergraduates—most of whom work double shifts, carrying a full plate of demanding courses and working at outside jobs more than 20 hours a week—defray the expenses of room and board and Wi-Fi? Digital, long-distance learning is another vaunted solution, but what might work for basic language, math, and science classes won’t work for the give and take of face-to-face undergraduate classes, not to mention the hyperinteractiveness of science labs or the intellectually combative graduate seminars that teach students to think on their feet. Public higher education is dying. As senior faculty retire, their positions and programs are going with them, not to be replaced. There is always talk about closing “expensive” departments: the humanities, the arts, and the social sciences in particular. Gov. Rick Scott of Florida recently declared that anthropologists were not needed in his state: “It’s a great degree if people want to get it, but we don’t need them here.” On another occasion he said, “Do you want to use your tax money to educate more people who can’t get jobs in anthropology? I don’t.” And there are other signs of institutional decline, at least in California. Custodial staff, cut to the bone, do their best, but university hallways, stairwells, and bathrooms are unsanitary, elevators are out of order for six months at a time, and “smart” classrooms (those with PowerPoint and video capacity) are scarcer than hen’s teeth. Against the backdrop of a deep recession, a failing war in Afghanistan, stalled efforts to overhaul American health care, the sudden appearance of the “new” working-class poor in shelters and food kitchens, why should anyone give a hoot about a crisis in public higher education? Conflicting views on the role of a university There are two views of the university. One is the university as a critical institution engaged in the political and social transformation of the society of which it is a part. The second sees the university as a cloister, a secular monastery of reclusive scribes and writers, safely removed from the influence of the larger society and the world. That view has been advanced most forcefully by President John Sexton of New York University, who has referred to the university as a “sacred space,” drawing on Cardinal Newman’s essay “The Idea of the University,” published in 1852. Newman described the university as a place for preserving and teaching “universal knowledge.” But in truth the university has never been isolated. It always responds to external interests—sometimes for patronage and gain, sometimes for power and political clout. Higher education also has the responsibility to support and drive economic growth, as it did so forcefully in California throughout most of the 20th century. During World War II, for example, UC served the war effort in ways that today would make many progressive professors cringe. After the war, the U.S. Department of State and the California legislature considered the public university a weapon—hence the tense and often faculty-contested incorporation of federally financed nuclear research at UC—as well as an engine for fueling economic and political prowess, through advancing technological dominance. Area-studies programs focusing on Latin America, Europe, the Middle East, Asia, and Africa were developed to protect American interests and to keep our educated citizens informed of foreign affairs. But the public university is hamstrung if state government and its citizens won’t support it. Its once proud and powerful influence is shrinking partly through lack of financial support and partly through threats to academic freedom. For example, the legal Catch-22s within “homeland security” expose visiting professors and scholars from other countries to invasive screening and background checks. Many are denied entry without just cause. Others receive their visas so late that they cannot attend the conferences at which they were scheduled to speak or accept the postdoctoral research fellowships offered to them. Thus we lose the contributions of some of the world’s most gifted students and scholars, diminishing our capacity to understand other societies and cultures and to see ourselves in relation to the rest of the world. Global intellectual exchange on our campuses is in grave danger. Meanwhile, the infiltration of corporate business models into every aspect of academic life has led to the devaluation of the arts, humanities, and social sciences, which are seen either as luxuries or intellectual enemies of the global economy. Harvard University President Drew Gilpin Faust noted in 2009 the growing dominance of economic justifications for the existence of universities, to the exclusion of its other missions, such as fostering a broad, liberal education, disinterested scholarship, and social citizenship. Higher education, she wrote, is not about delivering a commodity—a university degree—but about fostering public good. Universities are meant to produce skepticism as well as knowledge. They should afflict the comfortable but unexamined notions that often undermine democratic societies. Universities, said Faust, should be “creative and unruly places, safe spaces for dissent, allowing for a polyphony of disparate voices.” Struggling to keep the promise of Berkeley The prospects are grim, but Berkeley faculty and students are struggling to keep their promise—of an open, free, independent, and diverse public institution—to the people of California, even while the public has not kept its promises to them. It took a faculty rebellion in 1919-20 to force the California legislature and UC regents to recognize the Academic Senate and its role in shared governance of the university. Clark Kerr, Berkeley’s chancellor from 1952 to 1958, fought against the firing of faculty who refused to sign the anti-communist loyalty oath the regents required employees to sign during the McCarthy era. And Chancellor Chang-Lin Tien fought against the regents’ 1995 ban on affirmative action in undergraduate admissions by raising more than a billion dollars, part of which was used to recruit and prepare disadvantaged minorities for admission to the Berkeley campus. Berkeley students started the free-speech movement in 1964, and students and faculty fought against military recruitment on campus during the Vietnam War, held anti-apartheid divestment strikes, and fought for affirmative action. Not all these struggles were successful, but all of them were worthy fights. Today faculty and students are trying to prevent tuition increases that would erode a public university and change it into a public-private enterprise. They are also committed to preventing further police brutality against demonstrators and protecting their constitutional right of nonviolent civil disobedience. Nonviolent resistance has lost some of its luster in recent decades, overshadowed by the “war against terror” and a resurgence of what used to be called authoritarianism. Faculty members tend to embrace a decorous civility. Civil disobedience doesn’t come easily to most people of good conscience. We are raised to be accommodating. But now is not the time for accommodation. 原文见 http://blogs.berkeley.edu/2011/12/20/promise-of-berkeley/
个人分类: 教育|1303 次阅读|0 个评论

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