If you are in 1st and 2nd year, I would say go for it. You are 5th year, should you be ready to graduate and move on. If you are going to apply, it should be the post-doctoral one. Btw, I don't agree that the P.I. goal is in opposite of student's. I already started trying to find a good job for my student who will graduate next year.
If you are in 1st and 2nd year, I would say go for it. You are 5th year, should you be ready to graduate and move on. If you are going to apply, it should be the post-doctoral one. Btw, I don't agree that the P.I. goal is in opposite of student's. I already started trying to find a good job for my student who will graduate next year.
not yet now until you can show you are unusually strong in order to be selected by two or three States mentors for your PD fellowship application, if you are still not at least U.S. residents (F1 or OPT Visa) or green card or US citizen. pls refer below Cc mail (n.b. i removed some key words from privacy protection) >Thanks for your letter of inquiry. Due to my workload as center director, I would not be able to serve as one of your ++--+ mentors. So, in order to apply ++--+ felowship, you'd need to find two other faculty members who were interested in working with you. Also, it may be more difficult for you to receive positive consideration because you are not a U.S. permanent resident, since our sponsoring organization, the National Science Foundation, is most concerned about its centers training graduate students and postdocs who are U.S. residents. Thus, while we don't bar an international applicant, the research would need to be unusually strong in order to be selected for support. ps:
here 'unusually strong' term it means that PD felloship applicant should had cns or N sister hight IF only first author at least co- first author publication which already be accepted for publication, especially in mouse conditional knock in/out field ----just one cent from matrix >