Originally posted by Gruntboy:
<STRONG>I like sexy teachers who wear tight pants/short skirts and keep dropping the dry-wipe marker pens.
![Eek! :eek:](./images/smilies/)
</STRONG>
Tight pants: check
Dropping pens: hm, not as often as I should, obviously
orignally posted by McBane:
<STRONG>PhD students? Do you need filler classes? Or are you just taking classes within your "major"?
I stopped after 2 bachelors, so I am not sure of the curriculum requirements for PhD.
</STRONG>
???
![Confused :confused:](./images/smilies/)
I'm sure I understand you right here.
All universities have plenty of post graduate courses for people who are doing their MSc or PhD. Post graduate courses are often highly specific or they are about general scientific theory and method.
For a PhD you first need an MSc. Then you can apply to a PhD program, that usually lasts about 5 years full time. A Swedish PhD used to require about double the amount of work than a US PhD, but the standards have been changed recently in order to agree better with international standards.
During those 5 years you have to study general scientific theory and method as well as taking some area specific courses. Then you have to produce your own research. How much time that is devoted to courses versus production are depending are depending on your subject. If you are in experimental science you learn more by performing experiments, whereas if you are in a theoretical subject, you will take more courses.
What is a "filler class"?
@all: thanks for the advice. My next question wil be about examination forms. I am
not going to use a standard written exam, at postgraduate level I think mechanical repetion of facts is ridiculous. I'm trying to think of a method that demands creative and independent thinking from the students, and that also offers a challenge to them. Some kind of oral group examination where they get relevant problems to solve, perhaps...
[ 10-02-2001: Message edited by: C Elegans ]