Archive for August 2009

“Vacation”

By Kathryn Lindsey

A recent comic on phdcomics.com contains the following fictitious dialogue between Tajel, a grad student, and her advisor (see the comic here):

Advisor: Tajel, it is perfectly ok for you to go on vacation. I mean, you did take work with you, right?

Tajel: Excuse me?

Advisor: You spent the whole time thinking and obsessing about your research project, I assume?

Advisor: In academia, ‘vacations’ just mean you are doing your work somewhere else.

Tajel: I don’t think we’re using the same dictionary.

(phdcomics.com 7/24/09)

More than perhaps any field, math research is portable – probably all you really need is a pencil and paper. While most of the time this is a good thing, it also means that you can never truly leave your work behind.

I know some mathematicians for whom “going on vacation” means spending mornings doing math at the desk in their hotel room, and then going out in the afternoons. But mathematicians at the opposite end of the spectrum – those who are able to leave work behind entirely – seem to be few and far between. Is it possible to be a successful mathematician without defining vacation to “just mean you are doing your work somewhere else?”

Most math grad students I know who have taken a “vacation” this summer have expressed feelings of guilt for not having gotten more math done during that time (myself included), yet all have also agreed that they deserve to take a “vacation” of some duration. Is there a contradiction here?

If you have any comments or interesting/funny stories pertaining to vacations and math, please feel free to share them in the comments section!

Highlights of the Bulletin of the AMS, Volume 46, Number 4

Nescio in Brief: September 2009

Nescio in Brief, September 2009

By Kareem Carr

Professor Nomen Nescio is a sort of ‘Dear Abby’ of the Notices of the AMS, dispensing useful advice to people either in or close to the graduate student stage of their career. I have decided that it might be helpful to summarize some of the advice here for the convenience of readers of the blog. The questions and the answers have been shortened or paraphrased from the originals. There will typically be more information in the original article.
Continue reading ‘Nescio in Brief: September 2009’ »

Highlights of the Notices of the AMS, September 2009 Issue

An Extensive List of Mathematics and Statistics Blogs

By Kareem Carr

There are already a multitude of mathematics and statistics blogs and more are being started all the time.  With such an embarrassment of riches, where ought the intrepid mathematical reader to start?  A recent article at What’s New mentions a very large list of mathematics and statistics blogs. Continue reading ‘An Extensive List of Mathematics and Statistics Blogs’ »