Bill Freeman
Associate Department Head
Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
March 1, 2013
Monday, March 4, 13
Time
Polaroid 1981-1987 China 1987-1988
PhD 1988-1992
MERL 1992-2001 MIT 2001-present
Pictorial display of my own background.
Monday, March 4, 13
Elements of a successful
graduate career
Could each of you please send me
what you think is the most important
quality for success in graduate
school?
I crowd-sourced the rest of this talk. I sent this e-mail
to the MIT Computer Science faculty and other CSAIL
researchers:
Following are the answers I got back.
Monday, March 4, 13
Desired qualities
Monday, March 4, 13
The most important qualities:
curiosity and creativity
Tommi Jaakkola
Monday, March 4, 13
Here are my desired
qualities:
Determination, curiosity and
flexibility, willingness to
work hard,
try not to be ruled by fear...
Shafi Goldwasser
Monday, March 4, 13
You want to be a marathon
runner, not a sprinter.
(Not necessarily just the good, quick answers, as in a
class. Want to be able to come up with the more
thoughtful answers, too).
Brian Williams
Monday, March 4, 13
Purposefulness.
You are in grad school for a purpose (whatever your purpose is)
and it is up to you see that purpose accomplished. Now, when
nobody's telling you what to do, you have to tell yourself.
David Karger
Monday, March 4, 13
Total fascination with an area of science coupled with
drive and imagination!
Dave Gifford
My first thoughts are: persistence, courage, flexibility
My choice for most important: persistence.
Jack Dennis
Enthusiasm, curiosity, lots of energy, and scholarship. Being smart also
helps, but admissions has already taken care of that.
Pete Szolovits
Monday, March 4, 13
Advice
Monday, March 4, 13
Enjoy the freedom you have in graduate
school to be creative
Frans Kaashoek
Monday, March 4, 13
Figure out what you love, and do it (since
you are going to be doing it for a while).
If you cannot figure out that there is something that you actually want to do,
you will drift, lose your way and fail.
Dave Clark
Monday, March 4, 13
The most important
criterion is to "explore
(and embrace) things you
don't understand, as
opposed to avoiding
things you don't
understand."
Srini Devadas
Monday, March 4, 13
Take what you are good at and grow it.
Aude Oliva
“They didn’t know it was impossible, so they
did it.” Too many students think it isn’t
possible to do something, so what stops them
is themselves. Once they unlock what was
stopping them, nothing is impossible.
Monday, March 4, 13
I think the most important thing in
research is a story -- not a theorem or an
algorithm -- but the story that makes the
theorem or algorithm interesting and
exciting. It’s important to have an "ear"
for a good story... when do the stories
make sense, when are they bogus?
Tomas Lozano-Perez
Monday, March 4, 13
The advisor
Monday, March 4, 13
The best students are possessed by a
problem. They're independent. They
teach their advisors. They don't do what
they're told...they do something more
interesting.
(But maybe that's a scary thing to tell new students....but it's
true).
Leslie Kaelbling
Monday, March 4, 13
Be more stubborn than
your advisor
Polina Golland
Monday, March 4, 13
Don't tell your advisor you're doing what
they advised against until you’ve solved the
problem.
Manolis Kellis
Monday, March 4, 13
Charles Leiserson
Bill,
I'll tell you a joke instead.
A rabbit is caught by a wolf. The wolf is about to eat the rabbit, but the rabbit protests, "I'm only a few weeks away from
defending my Ph.D. dissertation. I have worked so hard, and everyone tells me I have so much promise. It would be a shame
to kill me when I have such a bright future of research contributions ahead of me that will benefit the world." The wolf says,
"You're writing a Ph.D. dissertation? What is it on?" The rabbit replies, "It's entitled, The Superiority of Rabbits over Foxes
and Wolves." The wolf says, "That's about the stupidest thing you could have said. I'll eat you right now." The rabbit says,
"Wait, wait! Come to my den and read my thesis draft. If you don't agree with my conclusions, I will willingly give myself
up to you." So, the wolf goes off with the rabbit to the rabbit's den ... and the wolf never comes out.
A few weeks later, the rabbit is caught by a fox. The fox is about to eat the rabbit, but the rabbit protests, "I'm only a few days
away from defending my Ph.D. dissertation. I have worked so hard, and everyone tells me I have so much promise. It would
be a shame to kill me when I have such a bright future of research contributions ahead of me that will benefit the world." The
fox says, "You're writing a Ph.D. dissertation? What is it on?" The rabbit replies, "It's entitled, The Superiority of Rabbits
over Foxes and Wolves." The fox says, "That's about the stupidest thing you could have said. I'll eat you right now." The
rabbit says, "Wait, wait! Come to my den and read my thesis draft. If you don't agree with my conclusions, I will willingly
give myself up to you." So, the fox goes off with the rabbit to the rabbit's den ... and the fox never comes out.
Monday, March 4, 13
Charles Leiserson
A few weeks later, the rabbit is out and meets up with his old friend the muskrat. The muskrat says, "I hear you finally earned
your Ph.D. Congratulations!" The rabbit says, "Yes, I just defended my Ph.D. thesis a few days ago." The muskrat asks,
"What was your thesis topic?" The rabbit answers, The Superiority of Rabbits over Foxes and Wolves." The muskrat says,
"That's quite interesting. Can I read it?" The rabbit says, "Sure. Come to my den." They enter the den, and the muskrat sees
the bones of foxes and wolves all over the floor. In the corner is a large lion.
Which brings us to the moral of the story: More important than your thesis topic is who your advisor is.
Monday, March 4, 13
Maybe instead of "quality
for success" (which sounds
like it's just about the
student), might be better
to call them "ingredients"
of success?
So here's an ingredient: a
supportive advisor. Image
attached [next slide].
Rob Miller
Monday, March 4, 13
title
Monday, March 4, 13
Rules of thumb
Monday, March 4, 13
Una-May O’Reilly
Bill, I can offer a couple of rules:
#1: Listen to everything your advisor tells you
#2: Don’t listen to anything your advisor tells
you.
there may be a time-dependent alpha in front of rule 1 and (1-alpha) in front of rule 2.
As t -> infinity, alpha -> 0...
#3: (Truly) the most important: believe in
yourself and never stop persevering.
Monday, March 4, 13
* Communicating with your advisor when things are
not going well.
* Good grad students need to be Renaissance men/
women: program, experiment, come up with ideas,
write, speak well.
* Sometimes you have to cut your losses and work
on something else. But otherwise, finish what you
start. Persistence, but good judgment.
Ruth Rosenholtz
Monday, March 4, 13
--Be open: take lots of courses, talk to
lots of people, attend seminars.
--Be focused: pick a small project first
and get it done.
--Refine your message: at frequent
intervals, rework your elevator pitch
(and try it out on people who are _not_
in your research area)
Daniel Jackson
Monday, March 4, 13
Seth Teller
Eat, sleep, and breathe a problem until you
crack it.
Put everything you have into your problem.
Become the world’s foremost expert on your
thesis topic.
Surpass your advisor.
Monday, March 4, 13
Josh Tenenbaum
(1) Don’t waste time doing research you don’t love.
(2) Don't waste time doing research that other people can do better than you can.
(3) Don't waste time doing research that other people in your field won't care about. (It's okay, and
probably a good sign, if some people won't appreciate it, as long as enough people will.)
It's relatively common to find projects that satisfy two out of three of these criteria. But don't settle for
your PhD: aim for all three!
Monday, March 4, 13
Short
Monday, March 4, 13
Writing and communication.
Taste
Fredo Durand
Monday, March 4, 13
Being fearless
Regina Barzilay
Monday, March 4, 13
Passion! A passionate interest in the thesis
topic.
Stephanie Seneff
Monday, March 4, 13
The passion to pursue an idea
despite uncertainties.
Daniela Rus
Monday, March 4, 13
Guts!
Silvio Micali
Monday, March 4, 13
Welcome. Welcome to MIT,
welcome to Cambridge.
and, at a higher level, welcome
to research; welcome to a
community of people who are
passionate about what they do!
MIT graduation,
1992
waiting for bus,
first day of school,
1996
leaving for semester abroad in India, 2011
“human clock” showing how my time in graduate school relates
to yours. (My daughter at my PhD graduation, embarking for
school, and embarking for semester abroad last year).
Monday, March 4, 13