Ti amo

I will remember you
Will you remember me?
Don’t let your life pass you by
Weep not for the memories

I’m so tired but I can’t sleep
Standing on the edge of something much too deep
It’s funny how I feel so much but I cannot say a word
I am screaming inside, but I can’t be heard

未分类 Comments(6) Sun, 20 Mar 2011 21:04:08 -0600

ZZ给北美硕士同学的找工作建议

刚刚看到很多人抱怨硕士只有一年/一年半,找不到工作,还有一些论坛上的帖子散布HR不招美国学校的硕士。 其实这些都不用理,不管你的学校是不是所谓的AD 狂,还是course-track的硕士program, 只要你用心去找一定没问题

先 讲两个例子激励一下大家:我一个朋友没有任何工作经验,没有internship exp,英语讲的不算好,国内也非top10的学校,但就是学习刻苦,来了一个美国学校(而且学校地理位置及其恶劣,机场一共就5个航班,三个目的地), 拿个master也就9个月时间,而且专业是被论坛上众多牛人鄙视的统计学。然而在这种垃圾经济状况下一样好几个offer。我自己的大学GPA也不过 3.14 (一个D+和众多的C),一样拿到了70个一面,20个二面/onsite invitation(时间原因只去了10个) 以及 5个offer。说明只要你刻意去找工作,而且用对方法,就肯定能找到。

我同时认识不少另外的中国学生,学习什么的也都不错,但 是不够active。一年甚至9个月的master时间很短,但是很多人直到第二个学期才开始慌起来,却不知道每年只有秋季是找工作的黄金季节。春季想找 fulltime的就很难了,大多数都只是internship.要注意有些公司的简历截至时间甚至在八月底就结束,而很多学校可能连开学都没有,学生估 计有的甚至还在国内,这个时候就要知道你四月/五月被录取后拿到学校给你的student ID, 密码,PIN以及email 地址后,第一件事情不是上 facebook 或者校内 上去认证学校email (惭愧一下,我当年就是这么做的),而是应该马上联系你们学校的 career service 获得访问权限,在来美国之前的等待过程中就应该起草好几份 resume (针对不同industry, 咨询/银行/软件/工程/能源/法律 等等)和 cover letter (不会写去google一下cover letter sample,然后针对自己的情况作出几个template,以后申请的时候就直接往里套). 这样在8月中旬的时候就可以开始投简历。不要担心你投简历的时候还没去学校报到,一般面试最早也要9月中才开始,所以即使你八月人在国内,也尽量多投。

投 简历要多多益善,我的建议是一星期投一次(个人倾向于周日晚上),花上两个小时时间把截至日期到下周日的所有jop opening都投一遍。这里注意要重点使用学校提供的career service 网站,这些大多都是面向学生的entry level position. 一会儿再提一下别的网站怎么用。投简历的最高峰是在秋季学校招聘会 (通常9月份到10月份的某一天)之后一个星期内,这一个星期非常重要,最好花出非常多的时间去把所有能申请的都在学校投掉。 还有不要怕招聘会和上课有时间冲突,我个人甚至建议可以为了招聘会而旷课一节,你很有可能整个学年里面就这么一次机会而已,要好好利用。

接下来是除了学校提供career service 以外的寻找工作信息,这里是2008年十大找工作的网站排名 (Comscore提供的08年数据):

1. CareerBuilder.com
2. Yahoo! HotJobs
3. Indeed.com
4. Monster.com
5. Simply Hired, Inc.
6. Job.com
7. MSN Careers (由CareerBuilder.com支持)
8. AOL Find a Job (由CareerBuilder.com支持)
9. Jobs.net
10. Jobster.com

另 外还有 craigslist, dice.com 以及各大casual/professional SNS比如facebook/myspace/linkedin 上也有很多不错的招聘信息,但是给国际学生的工作会少一些。还有就是某些地处农村的学校工作机会比较少,但是周边local地区工作机会要多得多,可以通 过学校各种学术社团接触到周边合作公司(例如Engineering里的INCOSE, IEEE等学生社团每年都会举办一个小型招聘会)。这里强烈推荐 dice.com (工程类工作)和 indeed.com (类似google一样的搜索引擎,归纳了众多careerbuilder/monster等网站)


关于工作类 型,和自己专业相关的不相关的只要你自己觉得适合都可以投,石油,保险,金融,咨询,软件都可以看看,resume和cover letter最好来上几份完全不同的,比如我秋季投简历的时候就有五种不同template, 分别争对咨询,金融,软件,军工,以及“其他/general“这五个行业,第一次写费些时间要花上一天时间,但是以后申请只要改个名字,换上一点点不同 的有针对性的内容就可以发给各行各业了。 比如咨询的coverletter提到了我做的一个ORIE consulting project,软件的提到过去project经验,金融的谈到上过的数学课和多学科背景等. 重点就是每一份resume/coverletter都做到看起来你读书实习经验只是为了你要申请工作的那个行业。 resume和cover letter自己改好后可以让你们学校的career service去critique看看. 这些辛苦的事情一次性做完以后每周只要点几下鼠标就可以海发resume了。先说这么多,等10月份面试的高峰期的时候你就要重点培养一个经常被忽视的能 力:忽悠, 我以后再发一些面试经验帮助同学。

 

未分类 Comments(1) Thu, 17 Mar 2011 21:46:01 -0600

如何做文献综述

http://blog.renren.com/share/228173510/5009073036/

如何做文献综述:克雷斯威尔五步文献综述法 来源: 游苗的日志

 

文献综述抽取某一个学科领域中的现有文献,总结这个领域研究的现状,从现有文献及过去的工作中,发现需要进一步研究的问题和角度。

文献综述是对某一领域某一方面的课题、问题或研究专题搜集大量情报资料,分析综合当前该课题、问题或研究专题的最新进展、学术见解和建议,从而揭示有关问题的新动态、新趋势、新水平、新原理和新技术等等,为后续研究寻找出发点、立足点和突破口。

文 献综述看似简单.其实是一项高难度的工作。在国外,宏观的或者是比较系统的文献综述通常都是由一个领域里的顶级“大牛”来做的。在现有研究方法的著作中, 都有有关文献综述的指导,然而无论是教授文献综述课的教师还是学习该课程的学生,大多实际上没有对其给予足够的重视。而到了真正自己来做研究,便发现综述 实在是困难。

约翰 W.克雷斯威尔(John W. Creswell)曾提出过一个文献综述必须具备的因素的模型。他的这个五步文献综述法倒还真的值得学习和借鉴。他认为,文献综述应由五部分组成:即序言、主题1(关于自变量的)、主题2(关于因变量的)、主题3(关于自变量和因变量两方面阐述的研究)、总结。

1. 序言告诉读者文献综述所涉及的几个部分,这一段是关于章节构成的陈述。在我看也就相当于文献综述的总述。

2. 综述主题1提出关于“自变量或多个自变量”的学术文献。在几个自变量中,只考虑几个小部分或只关注几个重要的单一变量。记住仅论述关于自变量的文献。这种模式可以使关于自便量的文献和因变量的文献分开分别综述,读者读起来清晰分明。

3. 综述主题2融合了与“因变量或多个因变量”的学术文献,虽然有多种因变量,但是只写每一个变量的小部分或仅关注单一的、重要的因变量。

4. 综述主题3包含了自变量与因变量的关系的学术文献。这是我们研究方案中最棘手的部分。这部分应该相当短小,并且包括了与计划研究的主题最为接近的研究。或 许没有关于研究主题的文献,那就要尽可能找到与主题相近的部分,或者综述在更广泛的层面上提及的与主题相关的研究。

5. 在综述的最后提出一个总结,强调最重要的研究,抓住综述中重要的主题,指出为什么我们要对这个主题做更多的研究。其实这里不仅是要对文献综述进行总结,更重要的是找到你要从事的这个研究的基石(前人的肩膀),也就是你的研究的出发点。

在 我看来,约翰.W.克雷斯威尔所提的五步文献综述法,第1、2、3步其实在研究实践中都不难,因为这些主题的研究综述毕竟与你的研究的核心问题有距离。难 的是第4步,主题3的综述。难在哪里呢?一是阅读量不够,找不到最相关的文献;二是分析不深入,找不到自己研究的“前人的肩膀”、出发点、研究的立足点、 自己可能的突破等等。这才是真正的难点。所以,对于第4步主题3的综述,我个人的看法是“不能短”,而应当长。因为这个才是你需要精心分析综合比较的东 西。

不管怎么说,约翰.W.克雷斯威尔所提的五步文献综述法,在没有更好的方法之前,这也算是一种相对可以仿效的文献综述方法。





文献综述的写法



一、 文献综述的含义

文 献阅读报告,即“文献综述”,英文称之为“survey”、“overview”、“review”。是在对某研究领域的文献进行广泛阅读和理解的基础 上,对该领域研究成果的综合和思考。一般认为,学术论文没有综述是不可思议的。需要将“文献综述( Literature Review)”与“背景描述 (Backupground Description)”区分开来。

我们在选择研究问题的时候,需要了解该问题产生的背景和来 龙去脉,如“中国半导体产业的发展历程”、“国外政府发展半导体产业的政策和问题”等等,这些内容属于“背景描述”,关注的是现实层面的问题,严格讲不是 “文献综述”,关注的是现实层面问题,严格讲不是“文献综述”。“文献综述”是对学术观点和理论方法的整理。其次,文献综述是评论性的( Review 就是“评论”的意思),因此要带着作者本人批判的眼光 (critical thinking) 来归纳和评论文献,而不仅仅是相关领域学术研究的“堆砌”。评论的主线,要按照问题展开,也就是说,别的学者是如何看待和解决你提出的问题的,他们的方法和理论是否有什么缺陷?要是别的学者已经很完美地解决了你提出的问题,那就没有重复研究的必要了。



二、 意义和目的

总结和综合该方向前人已经做了的工作,了解当前的研究水平,分析存在问题,指出可能的研究问题和发展方向等,并且列出了该方向众多的参考文献,这对后人是一笔相当大的财富,可以指导开题报告和论文的写作。



三、主要内容

(1) 该领域的研究意义。

(2) 该领域的研究背景和发展脉络。

(3) 目前的研究水平、存在问题及可能的原因。

(4) 进一步的研究课题、发展方向概况。

(5) 自己的见解和感想。



四、分类

综 述分成两类。一类是较为宏观的,涉及的范围为整个领域、专业或某一大的研究方向;一类是较为微观的,这类综述可以涉及到相当小的研究方向甚至某个算法,谈 的问题更为具体与深入。 前者立意高,范围广,面宽,故也不易深入,比较好读好懂。这对初入道者、欲对全局有所了解的读者而言很有参考价值。然而,欲深入课题的研究,则希望能有后 一类的综述为自己鸣锣开道,这会节约很多的时间与精力,但往往不能遂人意,于是只好旁证博引,由自己来完成该课题的综述。当写学位论文时,我们要写的也就 是这类结合自己研究课题而写就的综述。



五、难点

一篇好的文献综述既高屋建瓴,又脚踏实地;既探頣索隐,又如醍醐灌顶。文献综述顾名思义由“综”和“述”组成。前 半部分的“综”不算太难,根据所查阅大量的文献进行综合的归类、提炼、概括即可做到的话。后半部分的评“述”与分析则是一篇“综述”质量高下的分界线,这 需要融入作者自己理论水平、专业基础、分析问题、解决问题的能力,在对问题进行合情合理的剖析基础上,提出自己独特的见解。



六、如何收集资料

虽说,尽可能广泛地收集资料是负责任的研究态度,但如果缺乏标准,就极易将人引入文献的泥沼。

技巧一:瞄准主流。主 流文献,如该领域的核心期刊、经典著作、专职部门的研究报告、重要化合物的观点和论述等,是做文献综述的“必修课”。而多数大众媒体上的相关报道或言论, 虽然多少有点价值,但时间精力所限,可以从简。怎样摸清该领域的主流呢?建议从以下几条途径入手:一是图书馆的中外学术期刊,找到一两篇“经典”的文章后 “顺藤摸瓜”,留意它们的参考文献。质量较高的学术文章,通常是不会忽略该领域的主流、经典文献的。二是利用学校图书馆的“中国期刊网”、“外文期刊数据 库检索”和外文过刊阅览室,能够查到一些较为早期的经典文献。三是国家图书馆,有些上世纪七八十年代甚至更早出版的社科图书,学校图书馆往往没有收藏,但 是国图却是一本不少(国内出版的所有图书都要送缴国家图书馆),不仅如此,国图还收藏了很多研究中国政治和政府的外文书籍,从互联网上可以轻松查询到。



技巧二:随时整理,如 对文献进行分类,记录文献信息和藏书地点。做博士论文的时间很长,有的文献看过了当时不一定有用,事后想起来却找不着了,所以有时记录是很有必要的。罗仆 人就积累有一份研究中国政策过程的书单,还特别记录了图书分类号码和藏书地点。同时,对于特别重要的文献,不妨做一个读书笔记,摘录其中的重要观点和论 述。这样一步一个脚印,到真正开始写论文时就积累了大量“干货”,可以随时享用。



技巧三:要按照问题来组织文献综述。 看过一些文献以后,我们有很强烈的愿望要把自己看到的东西都陈述出来,像"竹筒倒豆子"一样,洋洋洒洒,蔚为壮观。仿佛一定要向读者证明自己劳苦功高。我 写过十多万字的文献综述,后来发觉真正有意义的不过数千字。文献综述就像是在文献的丛林中开辟道路,这条道路本来就是要指向我们所要解决的问题,当然是直 线距离最短、最省事,但是一路上风景颇多,迷恋风景的人便往往绕行于迤逦的丛林中,反面“乱花渐欲迷人眼”,“曲径通幽”不知所终了。因此,在做文献综述 时,头脑时刻要清醒:我要解决什么问题,人家是怎么解决问题的,说的有没有道理,就行了。



综 述是你查阅相关文献的成果。任何研究都要建立在前人的基础上,并且遵守学术传统,而不是空穴来风。你需要告诉读者,关于这个问题前人研究到了何种地步,有 什么缺陷,应该在哪些方面进行拓展。这一方面是对前人研究的尊重,另一方面也表明了你的文章价值何在。任何与本文相关的重要成果都应当在综述中得到体现, 并且在参考文献中列出。综述不是概述,不能泛泛地引用和概括,要有扬弃,特别是有批评。否则,如果别人都做好了,要你写文章干嘛。综述比较容易看出作者对 该领域所下的工夫,因为作者需要广泛阅读,理解不同论文在关键假设和模型上的主要分歧。好的综述本身就是一篇独立的文章。


香港大学建议的论文撰写模式

导论
开头段落
Δ简介主题;Δ主题的重要性;Δ理清首要问题;
Δ简介各篇(例如A.B.)文章与作者,及不同或互补之处。

主文部分
(3个示范) 
1.1 分析A的观点
1.2 分析B的理论/观点
1.3 比较A与B的理论/观点

2.1 找出A与B的共性
2.2 找出A与B的差异性
2.3 探讨出一个中心议题

议题1: 探讨A&B
议题2:探讨A&B
议题3:探讨A&B

结论
提出一个比其他更好的理念与立场
提出一个优于每一个理论与立场的部分的摘要

未分类 Comments(2) Thu, 17 Mar 2011 21:41:02 -0600

不要在不断的优秀里走向平庸

不要在不断的优秀里走向平庸 来源: 赛扶-的日志

                                   

作者简介:

   William Deresiewicz is a contributing writer for The Nation and a contributing editor at The New Republic. His next book, A Jane Austen Education, will be published next year by Penguin Press.

  威廉·德莱塞维茨(William Deresiewicz)是《国家》杂志撰稿人和《新共和》杂志编辑。他的新书《简•奥斯汀教育》明年将由企鹅出版社出版。”

     本文是威廉•德莱塞维茨(William Deresiewicz)在斯坦福大学的演讲,标题也叫:勇气挣脱身上的网。

  正文:

  The question my title poses, of course, is the one that is classically aimed at humanities majors. What practical value could there possibly be in studying literature or art or philosophy? So you must be wondering why I'm bothering to raise it here, at Stanford, this renowned citadel of science and technology. What doubt can there be that the world will offer you many opportunities to use your degree?

  (学习文学、艺术或哲学能有什么用呢?所以你肯定纳闷,我为什么在在以科技堡垒而闻名的斯坦福提出这个问题呢?在大学学位给人带来众多机会的问题上还有什么可怀疑的吗?)

  But that's not the question I'm asking. By "do" I don't mean a job, and by "that" I don't mean your major. We are more than our jobs, and education is more than a major. Education is more than college, more even than the totality of your formal schooling, from kindergarten through graduate school. By "What are you going to do," I mean, what kind of life are you going to lead? And by "that," I mean everything in your training, formal and informal, that has brought you to be sitting here today, and everything you're going to be doing for the rest of the time that you're in school.

  (但那不是我提出的问题。这里 的“做”并不是指工作,“那”并不是指你的专业。我们不仅仅是要个工作,教育不仅仅是学一门专业。教育也不仅仅是上大学,甚至也不仅是从幼儿园到研究生院 的正规学校教育。我说的“你要做什么”的意思是你要过什么样的生活?我所说的“那”指的是你得到的正规或非正规的任何训练,那些把你送到这里来的东西,你 在学校的剩余时间里将要做的任何事。)

  We should start by talking about how you did, in fact, get here. You got here by getting very good at a certain set of skills. Your parents pushed you to excel from the time you were very young. They sent you to good schools, where the encouragement of your teachers and the example of your peers helped push you even harder. Your natural aptitudes were nurtured so that, in addition to excelling in all your subjects, you developed a number of specific interests that you cultivated with particular vigor. You did extracurricular activities, went to afterschool programs, took private lessons. You spent summers doing advanced courses at a local college or attending skill-specific camps and workshops. You worked hard, you paid attention, and you tried your very best. And so you got very good at math, or piano, or lacrosse, or, indeed, several things at once.

  (我们不妨先来讨论你是如何考入斯坦福的吧。你能进入 这所大学说明你在某些技能上非常出色。你的父母在你很小的时候就鼓励你追求卓越。他们送你到好学校,老师的鼓励和同伴的榜样激励你更努力地学习。除了在所 有课程上都出类拔萃之外,你还注重修养的提高,充满热情地培养了一 些特殊兴趣。你用几个暑假在本地大学里预习大学课程,或参加专门技能的夏令营或训练营。你学习刻苦、精力集中、全力以赴。所以,你在数学、钢琴、曲棍球等 众多方面都很出色。)

  Now there's nothing wrong with mastering skills, with wanting to do your best and to be the best. What's wrong is what the system leaves out: which is to say, everything else. I don't mean that by choosing to excel in math, say, you are failing to develop your verbal abilities to their fullest extent, or that in addition to focusing on geology, you should also focus on political science, or that while you're learning the piano, you should also be working on the flute. It is the nature of specialization, after all, to be specialized. No, the problem with specialization is that it narrows your attention to the point where all you know about and all you want to know about, and, indeed, all you can know about, is your specialty.

  (掌握这些技能当然没有错,全力以赴成为最优秀的人也没 有错。错误之处在于这个体系遗漏的地方:即任何别的东西。我并不是说因为选择钻研数学,你在充分发展话语表达能力的潜力方面就失败了;也不是说除了集中精 力学习地质学之外,你还应该研究政治学;也不是说你在学习钢琴时还应该学吹笛子。 毕竟,专业化的本质就是要专业性。可是,专业化的问题在于它把你的注意力限制在一个点上,即你已经知道和想知道的东西。其实,你能知道的一切就是你的专 业。)

  The problem with specialization is that it makes you into a specialist. It cuts you off, not only from everything else in the world, but also from everything else in yourself. And of course, as college freshmen, your specialization is only just beginning. In the journey toward the success that you all hope to achieve, you have completed, by getting into Stanford, only the first of many legs. Three more years of college, three or four or five years of law school or medical school or a Ph.D. program, then residencies or postdocs or years as a junior associate. In short, an ever-narrowing funnel of specialization. You go from being a political-science major to being a lawyer to being a corporate attorney focusing on taxation issues in the consumer-products industry. You go from being a biochemistry major to being a doctor to being a cardiologist to being a cardiac surgeon who performs heart-valve replacements.

  (专业化 的问题是它让你成为专家,切断你与世界上其他任何东西的联系,不仅如此,还切断你与自身其他潜能的联系。当 然,作为大一新生,你的专业才刚刚开始。在你走 向所渴望的成功之路的过程中,进入斯坦福是你踏上的众多阶梯中的一个。再读三年大学,三五年法学院或医学院或博士,然后再干若干年住院实习生或博士后或助 理教授。总而言之,进入越来越狭窄的专业化轨道。你可能从政治学专业的学生变成了律师或者公司代理人,再变成专门研究消费品领域的税收问题的公司代理人。 你从生物化学专业的学生变成了博士,再变成心脏病学家,再变成专门做心脏瓣膜移植的心脏病医生。)

  Again, there's nothing wrong with being those things. It's just that, as you get deeper and deeper into the funnel, into the tunnel, it becomes increasingly difficult to remember who you once were. You start to wonder what happened to that person who played piano and lacrosse and sat around with her friends having intense conversations about life and politics and all the things she was learning in her classes. The 19-year-old who could do so many things, and was interested in so many things, has become a 40-year-old who thinks about only one thing. That's why older people are so boring. "Hey, my dad's a smart guy, but all he talks about is money and livers."

  (再次,做这些事没有任何错。只不过,在你越来越 深入地进入 这个轨道后,再记得你最初的样子就变得越来越困难了。你开始怀念那个曾经谈钢琴和打曲棍球的人,思考那个曾经和朋友热烈讨论人生和政治以及在课堂内容的人 在做什么。那个活泼能干的19岁年轻人已经变成了只想一件事的40岁中年人。难怪年长的人这么乏味无趣。“哎,我爸爸曾经是非常聪明的人,但他现在除了谈 论钱和肝脏外再无其他。”)

  And there's another problem. Maybe you never really wanted to be a cardiac surgeon in the first place. It just kind of happened. It's easy, the way the system works, to simply go with the flow. I don't mean the work is easy, but the choices are easy. Or rather, the choices sort of make themselves. You go to a place like Stanford because that's what smart kids do. You go to medical school because it's prestigious. You specialize in cardiology because it's lucrative. You do the things that reap the rewards, that make your parents proud, and your teachers pleased, and your friends impressed. From the time you started high school and maybe even junior high, your whole goal was to get into the best college you could, and so now you naturally think about your life in terms of "getting into" whatever's next. "Getting into" is validation; "getting into" is victory. Stanford, then Johns Hopkins medical school, then a residency at the University of San Francisco, and so forth. Or Michigan Law School, or Goldman Sachs, or Mc Kinsey, or whatever. You take it one step at a time, and the next step always seems to be inevitable.

  ( 还有另外一个问题。或许你从来没有想过当心脏病医生,只是碰巧发生了而已。随大流最容易,这就是体制的力量。我不是说这个工作容易,而是说做出这种选择很 容易。或者,这些根本就不是自己做出的选择。你来到斯坦福这样的名牌大学是因为聪明的孩子都这样。你考入医学院是因为它的地位高,人人都羡慕。你选择心脏 病学是因为当心脏病医生的待遇很好。你做那些事能给你带来好处,让你的父母感到骄傲,令你的老师感到高兴,也让朋友们羡慕。从你上高中开始,甚至初中开 始,你的唯一目标就是进入最好的大学,所以现在你会很自然地从“进入下个阶段”的角度看待人生。“进入”就是能力的证明,“进入”就是胜利。先进入斯坦 福,然后是约翰霍普金斯医学院,再进入旧金山大学做实习医生等。或者进入密歇根法学院,或高盛集团(Goldman Sachs)或麦肯锡公司(McKinsey)或别的什么地方。你迈出了这一步,下一步似乎就必然在等着你。)

   Or maybe you did always want to be a cardiac surgeon. You dreamed about it from the time you were 10 years old, even though you had no idea what it really meant, and you stayed on course for the entire time you were in school. You refused to be enticed from your path by that great experience you had in AP history, or that trip you took to Costa Rica the summer after your junior year in college, or that terrific feeling you got taking care of kids when you did your rotation in pediatrics during your fourth year in medical school.

  (也许你确实想当心脏病学家。十岁时就梦想成 为医生,即使你根本不知道医生意味着什么。你在上学期间全身心都在朝着这个目标前进。你拒绝了上大学预修历史课时的美妙体验的诱惑,也无视你在医学院第四 年的儿科学轮流值班时照看孩子的可怕感受。)

      But either way, either because you went with the flow or because you set your course very early, you wake up one day, maybe 20 years later, and you wonder what happened: how you got there, what it all means. Not what it means in the "big picture," whatever that is, but what it means to you. Why you're doing it, what it's all for. It sounds like a cliché, this "waking up one day," but it's called having a midlife crisis, and it happens to people all the time.

  (但不管是什么,要么因为你随大流要么因为你 早就选定了道路,20年后某天醒来,你或许会纳闷到底发生了什么:你 怎么变成现在这个样子,这一切意味着什么。不是它是什么,不在于它是否“大画面”而是它对你意味着什么。你为什么做它,到底为了什么。这听起来像老 生常谈,但这个被称为中年危机的“有一天醒来”一直就发生在每个人身上。)

  There is an alternative, however, and it may be one that hasn't occurred to you. Let me try to explain it by telling you a story about one of your peers, and the alternative that hadn't occurred to her. A couple of years ago, I participated in a panel discussion at Harvard that dealt with some of these same matters, and afterward I was contacted by one of the students who had come to the event, a young woman who was writing her senior thesis about Harvard itself, how it instills in its students what she called self-efficacy, the sense that you can do anything you want. Self-efficacy, or, in more familiar terms, self-esteem. There are some kids, she said, who get an A on a test and say, "I got it because it was easy." And there are other kids, the kind with self-efficacy or self-esteem, who get an A on a test and say, "I got it because I'm smart."

  (不过,还有另外一种情况,或许中年危机并不会发生在你身上。让我通过告诉你们一个 同伴的故事来解释我的意思吧,即她没有遭遇的情况。几年前,我在哈佛参加了一次小组讨论会,谈到这些问题。后来参加这次讨论的一个学生给我联系,这个哈佛 学生正在写有关哈佛的毕业论文,讨论哈佛是如何给学生灌输她所说的“自我效能”(self-efficacy),一种相信自己能做一切的意识。自我效能或 更熟悉的说法‘自我尊重’。她说在考试中得了优秀的有些学生会说“我得优秀是因为试题很简单。”)

  Again, there's nothing wrong with thinking that you got an A because you're smart. But what that Harvard student didn't realize—and it was really quite a shock to her when I suggested it—is that there is a third alternative. True self-esteem, I proposed, means not caring whether you get an A in the first place. True self-esteem means recognizing, despite everything that your upbringing has trained you to believe about yourself, that the grades you get—and the awards, and the test scores, and the trophies, and the acceptance letters—are not what defines who you are.

  (但另外一些学生,那种具有自我效能感或自我尊重的学生在考 试中得了优秀后会说“我得优秀是因为我聪明。” 再次,认为得了优秀是因为自己聪明的想法并没有任何错,不过,哈佛学生没有认识到的是他们没有第三种选择。当我指出这一点时,她十分震惊。我指出,真正的 自尊意味着最初根本就不在乎成绩是否优秀。真正的自尊意味着承认你取得的成绩,虽然你在成长过程中的一切都在训练你相信自己,但奖励、成绩、奖品、录取通 知书等所有这一切都不能来定义你是谁。)

  She also claimed, this young woman, that Harvard students take their sense of self-efficacy out into the world and become, as she put it, "innovative." But when I asked her what she meant by innovative, the only example she could come up with was "being CEO of a Fortune 500." That's not innovative, I told her, that's just successful, and successful according to a very narrow definition of success. True innovation means using your imagination, exercising the capacity to envision new possibilities.

  (她还说,这个年轻的女孩子说哈佛学生把他们的自我效能带到了 世界上,如她所说的“创新”(innovative)。 但当我问她“创新”意味着什么时,她能够想到的唯一例子不过是“世界大公司五百强的首席执行官。”我告诉她这不是创新,这只是成功,而且是根据非常狭隘的 成功定义而认定的成功而已。真正的创新意味着使用你的想象力,发挥你的潜力,创造新的可能性。)

  But I'm not here to talk about technological innovation, I'm here to talk about a different kind. It's not about inventing a new machine or a new drug. It's about inventing your own life. Not following a path, but making your own path. The kind of imagination I'm talking about is moral imagination. "Moral" meaning not right or wrong, but having to do with making choices. Moral imagination means the capacity to envision new ways to live your life.

  (但这里我并不是在谈论技术创新,不是发明新机器或者制造一种 新药,我谈论的是另外一种创新,是创造你自己的生活。不是走现成的道路而是创造一条属于自己的道路。我谈论的想象力是道德想象力。“道德”在这里不是对与 错,而是与选择有关。道德想象力意味着创造自己新生的能力。)

  It means not just going with the flow. It means not just "getting into" whatever school or program comes next. It means figuring out what you want for yourself, not what your parents want, or your peers want, or your school wants, or your society wants. Originating your own values. Thinking your way toward your own definition of success. Not simply accepting the life that you've been handed. Not simply accepting the choices you've been handed. When you walk into Starbucks, you're offered a choice among a latte and a macchiato and an espresso and a few other things, but you can also make another choice. You can turn around and walk out. When you walk into college, you are offered a choice among law and medicine and investment banking and consulting and a few other things, but again, you can also do something else, something that no one has thought of before.

  (它意味着不随波逐流,不是下一步要“进入”什么名牌大学或研究生院。 而是要弄清楚自己到底想要 什么,而不是父母、同伴、学校、或社会想要什么。即确认你自己的价值观,思考迈向自己所定义的成功的道路,而不仅仅是接受别人给你的生活,不仅仅是接受别 人给你的选择。当今走进星巴克咖啡馆,服务员可能让你在牛奶咖啡(latte)、加糖咖啡(macchiato)、特制咖啡(espresso)等几样东 西之间做出选择。但你可以做出另外的选择,你可以转身走出去。当你进入大学,人家给你众多选择,或法律或医学或投资银行和咨询以及其他,但你同样也可以做 其他事,做从前根本没有人想过的事。)

  Let me give you another counterexample. I wrote an essay a couple of years ago that touched on some of these same points. I said, among other things, that kids at places like Yale or Stanford tend to play it safe and go for the conventional rewards. And one of the most common criticisms I got went like this: What about Teach for America? Lots of kids from elite colleges go and do TFA after they graduate, so therefore I was wrong. TFA, TFA—I heard that over and over again. And Teach for America is undoubtedly a very good thing. But to cite TFA in response to my argument is precisely to miss the point, and to miss it in a way that actually confirms what I'm saying. The problem with TFA—or rather, the problem with the way that TFA has become incorporated into the system—is that it's just become another thing to get into.

  (让 我再举一个反面的例子。几年前我写过一篇涉及同类问题的文章。我说,那些在耶鲁和斯坦福这类名校的孩子往往比较谨 慎,去追求一些稳妥的奖励。我得到的最常见的批评是:教育项目“为美国而教”(Teach for America)如何?从名校出来的很多学生毕业后很多参与这个教育项目,因此我的观点是错误的。我一再听到TFA这个术语。“为美国而教”当然是好东 西,但引用这个项目来反驳我的观点恰恰是不得要领,实际上正好证明了我想说的东西。“为美国而教”的问题或者“为美国而教”已 经成为体系一部分的问题是它已经成为另外一个需要“进入”的门槛。)

  In terms of its content, Teach for America is completely different from Goldman Sachs or McKinsey or Harvard Medical School or Berkeley Law, but in terms of its place within the structure of elite expectations, of elite choices, it is exactly the same. It's prestigious, it's hard to get into, it's something that you and your parents can brag about, it looks good on your résumé, and most important, it represents a clearly marked path. You don't have to make it up yourself, you don't have to do anything but apply and do the work —just like college or law school or McKinsey or whatever. It's the Stanford or Harvard of social engagement. It's another hurdle, another badge. It requires aptitude and diligence, but it does not require a single ounce of moral imagination.

   (从其内容来看,“为美国而教”完全不同于高盛或者麦肯锡公司或哈佛医学院或者伯克利法学 院,但从它在精英期待的体系中的地位来说,完全是一样的。它享有盛名,很难进入,是值得你和父母夸耀的东西,如果写在简历上会很光彩,最重要的是,它代表 了清晰标记的道路。你根本不用自己创造,什么都不用做,只需申请然后按要求做就行了,就像上大学或法学院或麦肯锡公司或别的什么。它是社会参与方面的斯坦 福或哈佛,是另一个栅栏,另一枚奖章。该项目需要能力和勤奋,但不需要一丁点儿的道德想象力。)

  Moral imagination is hard, and it's hard in a completely different way than the hard things you're used to doing. And not only that, it's not enough. If you're going to invent your own life, if you're going to be truly autonomous, you also need courage: moral courage. The courage to act on your values in the face of what everyone's going to say and do to try to make you change your mind. Because they're not going to like it. Morally courageous individuals tend to make the people around them very uncomfortable. They don't fit in with everybody else's ideas about the way the world is supposed to work, and still worse, they make them feel insecure about the choices that they themselves have made—or failed to make. People don't mind being in prison as long as no one else is free. But stage a jailbreak, and everybody else freaks out.

  (道德 想象力是困难的,这种困难与你已经习惯的困难完全不同。 不仅如此,光有道德想象力还不够。如果你要创造自己的生活,如果你想成为真正的独立思想者,你还需要勇气:道德勇气。不管别人说什么,有按自己的价值观行 动的勇气,不会因为别人不喜欢而试图改变自己的想法。具有道德勇气的个人往往让周围的人感到不舒服。他们和其他人对世界的看法格格不入,更糟糕的是,让别 人对自己已经做出的选择感到不安全或无法做出选择。只要别人也不享受自由,人们就不在乎自己被关进监狱。可一旦有人越狱,其他人都会跟着跑出去。)

  In A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, James Joyce has Stephen Dedalus famously say, about growing up in Ireland in the late 19th century, "When the soul of a man is born in this country there are nets flung at it to hold it back from flight. You talk to me of nationality, language, religion. I shall try to fly by those nets."

  (在 《青年 艺术家的肖像》中,詹姆斯•乔伊斯(James Joyce)让主人公斯蒂芬•迪达勒斯(Stephen Dedalus)就19世纪末期的爱尔兰的成长环境说出了如下名言“当一个人的灵魂诞生在这个国家时,有一张大网把它罩住,防止它飞翔。你会给我谈论民族 性、语言和宗教。我想冲出这些牢笼。”)

  Today there are other nets. One of those nets is a term that I've heard again and again as I've talked with students about these things. That term is "self-indulgent." "Isn't it self-indulgent to try to live the life of the mind when there are so many other things I could be doing with my degree?" "Wouldn't it be self-indulgent to pursue painting after I graduate instead of getting a real job?"

  (今天,我们面临的是其他的网。其中之一是我在就这些问题与学生交流时经常听到的一个术语“自我放任”。“在攻读学位过程中有这么多事要做的时候,试图按照 自己的感觉生活难道不是自我放任吗?”“毕业后不去找个真正的工作而去画画难道不是自我放任吗?”)

  These are the kinds of questions that young people find themselves being asked today if they even think about doing something a little bit different. Even worse, the kinds of questions they are made to feel compelled to ask themselves. Many students have spoken to me, as they navigated their senior years, about the pressure they felt from their peers—from their peers—to justify a creative or intellectual life. You're made to feel like you're crazy: crazy to forsake the sure thing, crazy to think it could work, crazy to imagine that you even have a right to try.

  (这些是年轻人只要思考一下稍稍出格的事就不由自主地质问自己的问题。更糟糕的是,他们觉得 提出这些问题是理所应当的。许多学生在毕业前夕的未来探索中跟我 说,他们感受到来自同伴那里的压力,需要为创造性的生活或思想生活辩护。好像自己已经走火入魔了似的:抛弃确定无疑的东西是疯了,认为思想生活可行是疯 了,想象你有权尝试是疯了。)

  Think of what we've come to. It is one of the great testaments to the intellectual—and moral, and spiritual—poverty of American society that it makes its most intelligent young people feel like they're being self-indulgent if they pursue their curiosity. You are all told that you're supposed to go to college, but you're also told that you're being "self-indulgent" if you actually want to get an education. Or even worse, give yourself one. As opposed to what? Going into consulting isn't self-indulgent? Going into finance isn't self-indulgent? Going into law, like most of the people who do, in order to make yourself rich, isn't self-indulgent? It's not OK to play music, or write essays, because what good does that really do anyone, but it is OK to work for a hedge fund. It's selfish to pursue your passion, unless it's also going to make you a lot of money, in which case it's not selfish at all.

   (想象我们现在面临的局面。这是美国社会的贫困---思想、道德和精神贫困的最明显症状,美 国最聪明的年轻人竟然认为听从自己的 好奇心行动就是自我放任。你们得到的教导是应该上大学,但你们同时也被告知如果真的想得到教育,那就是“自我放任”。如果你自我教育的话,更糟糕。这是什 么道理?进入证券咨询业是不是自我放任?进入金融业是不是自我放任?像许多人那样进入律师界发财是不是自我放任?搞音乐,写文章就不行,因为它不能给人带 来利益。但为风险投资公司工作就可以。追求自己的理想和激情是自私的,除非它能让你赚很多钱。那样的话,就一点儿也不自私了。)

  Do you see how absurd this is? But these are the nets that are flung at you, and this is what I mean by the need for courage. And it's a never-ending proc ess. At that Harvard event two years ago, one person said, about my assertion that college students needed to keep rethinking the decisions they've made about their lives, "We already made our decisions, back in middle school, when we decided to be the kind of high achievers who get into Harvard." And I thought, who wants to live with the decisions that they made when they were 12? Let me put that another way. Who wants to let a 12-year-old decide what they're going to do for the rest of their lives? Or a 19-year-old, for that matter?

   (你看到这些观点是多么荒谬了 吗?这就是罩在你们身上的网,就是我说的需要勇气的意思。这是永不停息的过程。在两年前的哈佛事件中,有个学生谈到我说的大学生需要重新思考人生决定的观 点,他说“我们已经做出了决定,我们早在中学时就已经决定成为能够进入哈佛的高材生。”我在想,谁会打算按照他在12岁时做出的决定生活呢?

让我换一种说法,谁愿意让一个12岁的孩子 决定他们未来一辈子要做什么呢?在此问题上,谁又愿意让19岁的孩子做决定呢?)

  All you can decide is what you think now, and you need to be prepared to keep making revisions. Because let me be clear. I'm not trying to persuade you all to become writers or musicians. Being a doctor or a lawyer, a scientist or an engineer or an economist—these are all valid and admirable choices. All I'm saying is that you need to think about it, and think about it hard. All I'm asking is that you make your choices for the right reasons. All I'm urging is that you recognize and embrace your moral freedom.

  (你能做出的决定是你现在想什么,你需要准备好不断修改自己的 决定。让我说得 更明白一些。我不是在试图说服你们都成为音乐家或者作家。成为医生、律师、科学家、工程师或者经济学家没有什么不好,这些都是可靠的、可敬的选择。我想说 的是你需要思考它,认真地思考。我请求你们做的是根据正确的原因做出你的选择。我在敦促你们的是认识到你的道德自由并热情拥抱它。)

   And most of all, don't play it safe. Resist the seductions of the cowardly values our society has come to prize so highly: comfort, convenience, security, predictability, control. These, too, are nets. Above all, resist the fear of failure. Yes, you will make mistakes. But they will be your mistakes, not someone else's. And you will survive them, and you will know yourself better for having made them, and you will be a fuller and a stronger person.

  (最重要的是,不要过分谨 慎。抗拒我们社会给予最高奖励的那些懦弱的价值观的诱惑:舒服、方便、安全、可预测性、可控制性。这些也都是网。最重要的是,抗拒失败的恐惧。是的,你可 能犯错误,但它们是你的错误,不是别人的。你将从错误中幸存下来,将会因为这些错误对自己有更好的认识。你将因此成为更完整和更强大的人。)

  It's been said—and I'm not sure I agree with this, but it's an idea that's worth taking seriously—that you guys belong to a "postemotional" generation. That you prefer to avoid messy and turbulent and powerful feelings. But I say, don't shy away from the challenging parts of yourself. Don't deny the desires and curiosities, the doubts and dissatisfactions, the joy and the darkness, that might knock you off the path that you have set for yourself. College is just beginning for you, adulthood is just beginning. Open yourself to the possibilities they represent. The world is much larger than you can imagine right now. Which means, you are much larger than you can imagine.

  (人 们常说你们年 轻人属于“后情感”一代,我不敢肯定我赞同这个说法,但这是值得认真考虑的一个观点。你们更愿意避免混乱、动荡和强烈的感情,但我想说,不要回避挑战自 我,不要否认欲望和好奇心、怀疑和不满、快乐和郁闷,它们可能把你从事先设定的人生道路上打倒。大学不过是人生的开始,成年时代才刚刚开始。张开双臂去迎 接成年生活的各种可能性吧。这个世界比你现在能够想象的情况广大得多。这意味着你比你能想象的情况大得多。)

未分类 Comments(0) Thu, 10 Mar 2011 00:21:37 -0700

do not know how to choose between two projects for my Master thesis

Project No.1 Micro Solar Cell

New stuff, not a lot of people doing it. The idea is new. The structure of the cell is interesting and exciting.
What I'll do about it: Fabrication, Characterization and optimization.
May not include much creative work, a lot of labor work.

The project's goal is very clear and straightforward.

You got an advisor and a friend!

Project No.2 Solar Battery System

Old stuff, a lot of people have done it before. Struggled to find a new idea for research and publication.
What I'll do about it: Find an idea first!!
Simulation, programming.
may struggle with control algorithm
Hardware test: PV panel installation, maybe shading effect
completely build a solar battery model

and what i can do with the model still remains.......a mystery

You got a good friend but no advisor!

未分类 Comments(2) Sat, 05 Mar 2011 03:02:23 -0700

for job hunting

1. 太傻网:taisha.org
国内不错的留学讨论社区,在出国筹备期真的很有用,大量的经验分享、技巧总结,会对申请以及出国后的生活有很大帮助。
2. 有途网:www.youtowork.com
国内求职服务的第一品牌,通过职业规划、面试培训、猎头、简历写作等一对一的专业服务,帮助海归们找到自己的职业方向,获得满意的面试机会,找到理想的工作。
3. 蚂蜂窝mafengwo.cn
一个旅游分享社区,在此你可以交换资讯、分享旅行、交流功略、美食、音乐、摄影日记,避免花冤枉钱。
4. 高端职业网www.highendcareers.com
同样一天工作8小时,但起薪常常是一般职业的好几倍,另外分红奖金等令人垂涎三尺,这就是高端职业的第一特征。学历好并不一定代表就会成功,找工作也同样要早计划早动手。
5. 职场玻璃门: www.glassdoor.com
一个查找公司内部消息和薪水水平的好去处,面试之前上来看看,肯定获益颇多。
6. 维基百科 http://zh.wikipedia.org
了解世界、了解真理、了解真相的高工具,别只是浏览新闻了,多学学真正的知识吧~
7. 普特英语:putclub
一流的英语学习网站,立志进500强企业的同学,抽时间多自己学学英语,别为了考一个托福抱佛脚了。
8. 救救时间吧rescuetime.com
时间才是年轻人最宝贵的财富,正所谓一寸光阴一寸金,管理好了自己的时间,也就等于抓住了无尽的财富。
9. 应届生求职网 yingjiesheng.com
找工作是迟早的事情,多做求职准备才是王道~
10. 至尊简历网:www.grandresume.cn
极为专业的简历代写网站,美国Grandresume.com在中国的分公司,在此你可以系统地学习简历写作的技巧,查看最科学的简历模板,甚至是邀请一位专业简历专家为你优化简历,有了专业的简历,你才算在激烈的竞争中占得一席之地。
11. Careerbuilder:careerbuilder.com
美国老牌求职网站,留学美国并打算在美国找工作的童鞋不可不知了。
12. 彭博社:www.bloomberg.com
做金融行业的每天必上的网站,要想在金融圈混好,这东东必须玩得烂熟才行。
13. 沃尔特:www.vault.com
由斯坦福和哈佛的高材生创立的人力资源网站,提供权威的企业排名、职场研究等信息。
14. 挺进华尔街:www.breakintowallstreet.com
想要在华尔街混下去,经验很重要。在这个网站童鞋们可以学到很实用的技巧和信息。
15. www.linkedin.com
玩SNS,除了消磨时光,更别忘了为自己的职业积累人脉,同时关注各种好的工作机会。
16. 澳洲求职网www.seek.com
澳洲第一求职网站,留学澳洲并打算拿PR在澳洲长期待下去的,这个很网站肯定是迟早要用的了。
17. 巨兽求职网www.monster.com
全球第一招聘集团,在美国、英国等都有强大的招聘网络,信息很丰富,很好用。
18. 金石网www.iamresume.com
很好用的简历网站,大量的国际化简历模板、简历写作技巧等信息,对求职收益非浅。

未分类 Comments(2) Mon, 24 Jan 2011 22:06:35 -0700

如何在美国找工作

http://blog.renren.com/share/228173510/4810239771

如何在美国找工作

TIP1:最好的找工作的办法是熟人推荐(无数前辈的证明)

TIP2:简历中可以有一些放大的地方,不然太实事求是。

TIP3:其实美国MASTER毕业后,想找工作还是很容易的,关键看你的要求。如果你擅长销售,那么任何保险公司基本都会要你。这只是你找不到工作又想留在美国的选择。

TIP4:不要误以为你自己的简历非常强大,找师兄或者师姐改一改。强调,不要误以为你写的非常好。

TIP5: 如果你在某个行业内你觉得自己还是挺了解的,去linkedin.com上面找这个行业内的人添加他为好友,熟悉之后很容易或者推荐。如果你自己有 BUSINESS,这上面绝对是找客户和客户的绝对机会!我就是在这上面找工作和business partner的。这家网站如果你去给对方发消息或者发简历,其回复率之高相对于别的求职网站简直没有办法比。这就是美国所谓的networking.另 外我建议大家在自己的职位等描述上写得夸大一点点,这样你的回复率会更加高。

 TIP将继续添加。。。欢迎关注与提意见,争取把本帖打造成强帖!


Professional Resume

简历可以说是找工作中相当重要的一环,因为你的简历首先必须过了HR这一关,你才有可能面试,你才有可能找到工作。下面我会给出一些我个人认为非常好的网站来帮助你完成你的简历。同时我也会给出一部分付费帮你改简历的网站(个人觉得还是值得的)

http://www.howtowritearesume.net/login.aspx? 在线帮你写简历的。

http://www.bestsampleresume.com/  要是在线帮你写简历还是帮不了你,那么你就先到这里看看样本吧,几乎你想得到的样本全部都有。

付费修改简历的几家比较有名的网站如下(这个重要性希望大家意识到,如果你要找的工作是那咱比较专业的,比如finance, 500强之类的,强烈建议请专业的人帮忙):

e-resume.net

 Job & Career Sites 

 

第一步,登陆学校的job link, 那上面的企业一般是对你的学校比较友好的。往往在那里你可以找到不少面试或者电话面试的机会。有可能你就在那里找到工作了。

第二步,登陆全美一些最大的招聘网站,让你的简历被更多的招聘者看到,同时你也有机会看到更加多的工作。美国有几个相当有名的求职网站,下面都列出来了。

job.com:也是全美国十大求职公司排名前几的了。

Beyond.com(强烈推荐)

Government Jobs:有一些比如说的交通啊建筑啊等一些跟政府有关的专业,那么这个网站就是专门为你设计的了。专门提供政府工作的网站。

 Job online: 也量个非常好的网站,建议注册一下,时常关注。

local jobs: 专门针对想在当地找工作的人群。

snagajob.com: USA #1 source for hourly and part-time jobs,注意注意,有特长的同学的好去处,平时除了RA和TA还可以兼职一下:) 其实PHD同学们一般是有特长的,呵呵!这个网站专门为兼职而弄,如 果有同学是FELLOWSHIP没有SSN,可以去这里随便搞个工作,然后就有SSN了。

 

 

比较大众的monster, careerbuilder就不多说了。

Resume Distribution Services

展示你自己也是相当重要的一环,网络上有许多网站可以将你的简历免费展示展示在众多的招聘人眼中。下面几个相当不错,强烈推荐。这里说明一下,下面基本是要收费的。但 是大家找工作的误区往往在于舍不得花个几十美元,硬是自己一封封投,这样是不明智的。一是浪费时间,一是你投得实在有限。你必须跟别人不太一样。以下这些 网站他们的收费不贵,但都将你的简历极大的提高了展示率,有时候可能一下子就是几万几十万的招骋者看到你的简历,总会有人欣赏你的。希望大家多想想。

climberBuild and Broadcast a Professional Resume to 70K Recruiters, Today! (注意,有30天免费的试用,所以说其实是免费的,强烈推荐!!!)

ResumeZapper.com: email your resumes to over 1000 headhunters。这 个比较强大了,如果你肯花几十美元,我觉得还是值得的。这家可以选择你所求职的领域,然后将你的简历发到这些招聘者的手里。比较适合牛人和学习不好的 人:)牛人这样发的话好公司找你的机会大一些。平时GPA不好的,可以将自己EXPOSE TO更多的招聘者。而且价格也还可以接受,50美元就帮你简历全新设计,并将他们发送给你所指定的众多的招聘者.

e-Resume.net:非常便宜,性价比非常高。

Doostang.com: 在美国叫做elite求职网站,也就是研究生以上学位的人基本在这里。他们官方的统计是超过30%的美国研究生在这里求职。可以说更加高端一些吧。

WorkTree.com

HotResumes.com:免费可以发布你的简历,也是非常大的一个网站。还是相当不错的。

 

ResumeRabbit.com:最后推荐的一家

看看他家都提供啥服务:

 

 

 

  • Resume Posting: on up to 84 top job sites.
  • Massive Exposure: to over 1.5 million employers & recruiters.
  • Posting Report: of all job sites your resume was posted to.
  • Jobs by Email: Receive matching jobs from lots of job sites.
  • Spam Protection: keeps your personal email box safe.
  • Identity Protection: posts your resume information confidentially.
  • Centralized Log in: to all job site accounts we created for you.

未分类 Comments(2) Mon, 24 Jan 2011 22:02:39 -0700

我的心曾悲伤七次

我的心曾悲伤七次  

     ——卡里·纪伯伦(Kahlil Gibran)

第一次,当它本可进取时,却故作谦卑;

第二次,当它在空虚时,用爱欲来填充;

第三次,在困难和容易之间,它选择了容易;

第四次,它犯了错,却借由别人也会犯错来宽慰自己;

第五次,它自由软弱,却把它认为是生命的坚韧; 

第六次,当它鄙夷一张丑恶的嘴脸时,却不知那正是自己面具中的一副;

第七次,它侧身于生活的污泥中,虽不甘心,却又畏首畏尾。

未分类 Comments(1) Wed, 22 Dec 2010 07:21:00 -0700

《再见, 懒惰》书摘

如果你想拖延时间,只需要把无关紧要的小事和重要的事情换个位置。

判断懒惰时,关键要看“人生是否有方向”。 今天和明天的生活是延续的、具有指向性的,还是只是单纯的重复。“是在原地踏步甚至倒退,还是一步一步的向前迈进”。

 

“伪装的懒惰”通常表现为“不着手做重要的事,而被琐事烦扰”。

没有任何想法或质疑,每天重复忙碌的生活,这也是对人生的偷懒。

 

“你的人生有方向吗?” 通过主动的选择你的人生就有了方向性;有了方向性,你就能做出更多主动的选择。懒惰不是选择而是回避选择的结果。

懒惰的人有一个共同点: 回避选择,讨厌变化。他们可以会做好被分派的工作,但不会主动去做什么事情。可以说这些人无欲无求,对任何事都缺乏干劲。确切地说,他们其实不知道自己喜欢什么。他们从不选择也不挑战,他们不知道自己能做好什么。在这个意义上,懒惰就是 “Choice difficulty or Choice Avoidance Syndrome".

“只有‘做’或者‘不做’,‘想做’的状态是不可能存在的。”

 

 

 

我希望尝试:

每天只睡8小时。

每天6小时用于科研(这个对现阶段的我来说几乎是不可能的)。

未分类 Comments(4) Sun, 31 Oct 2010 21:46:06 -0600

在sina围脖上看到的

成功者良好的习惯:1.微笑。2.气质纯朴。3.不向朋友借钱。4.背后说别人好话。5.听到某人说别人坏话时,只微笑。6.过去的事不让人全知道。7.尊敬不喜欢你的人。9.对事无情,对人有情。10.多做自我批评。11.为别人喝彩。12.知道感恩。13.学会聆听。14.说话时常用“我们”开头。15.少说话。16.喜欢自己。

未分类 Comments(0) Sat, 23 Oct 2010 12:45:16 -0600