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Reflections

As I begin the home stretch for my MSc in oceanography I have been looking very hard at the job markets and the world of research science out there. It is not pretty right now, but then, with the help of a loving and supportive family we’ve weathered this type of climate before. I know we’ll find our way through this and come out the other side, happy. Because that is just what we do Tammy and Johann and me. We cling tight to what matters most – each other and our closest family and friends.

One of the things I have to keep coming back to is “What do I want to be when I grow up”

But that has never been a simple question. When I was young I wanted to be a scientist and an explorer. I was excited and my imagination ignited by archeology, marine biology and the space program. I devoured national geographic magazines, Wild Kingdom and Jaques Cousteau’s specials. I remember reading and re-reading the articles by Dr. Eugenie Scott on the amazing fish of the Red Sea and sharks in general. I remember reading about Dr. Sylvia Earle’s descent to 1250m in a hard suit and her Tektite mission. I know it may sound crazy, but one of the highlights of my brief science career so far was to dive on the Aquarius site as a science diver… the descendant of Tektite, it was, part way to an old dream come true – to live and work in an underwater habitat studying the seas for hours and hours at a time. One day I still hope to make that dream come true.

Neemo9 aquarius

Science diver approaching the NOAA/UNCW Aquarius Habitat off Key Largo, Florida

But my path took a strange turn and instead of going to Woods Hole or Scripts or Harbor Branch, I ended up in the Army working as an advanced communications specialist using, trouble shooting and fixing just about every type of communication technology in the Army, but specializing in satellite systems. It could be a challenging job, especially in remote combat deployments, but it really didn’t make me stretch. I spent my spare time reading and improving my animation skills as a form of entertainment. In Central America I learned to scuba dive and spent as much time on Roatan Island as I could, doing 3-4 dives a day. The more I dove, the more I needed to learn about the fish and invertebrates I was seeing. I subscribed to several diving magazines and bought every marine biology book my scuba instructor could get from the States. I invited my future wife to meet me in Roatan, unfortunately she declined.

IZE Sunset

Sunset on the Meso-American Reef. Copyright E. Heupel

After the army I worked in the computer industry in engineering and eventually web development until the bubble burst. When that happened I returned to school, studying computer systems and graphic design. Unfortunately returning to school also revealed that I had a memory issue. Tammy knew before, but I denied it of course. Unfortunately the tricks I had learned to use on the job, didn’t translate well to the academic environment. I struggled to find a new way of learning and studying, while my grades sank, eventually forcing me to admit defeat temporarily as I withdrew from school.

Fast forward to five years ago when I took advantage of an opportunity to again return to school. This time in Oceanography. I had since learned to deal with my memory issues with new strategies. I started slow, with only two classes, but soon took on a full course load completing the four year degree in three and a half years with a job, a family and still managed a 3.5 GPA. My old skills in electronics, optics, video production and web design all served me well working in labs and earning me opportunities to work with Remotely Operated Vehicles. At the end of undergraduate I knew I needed to take this further, I needed to revisit my old dream of being a scientist working in, on and under the ocean.

Motley Crew

The motley crew of the SHRMP 2010 habitat monitoring program mission. Copyright E. Heupel

I was accepted to the graduate program and began learning more about sustainable fisheries and GIS than I thought was possible to learn (and yet I have still only learned a spall portion) . It has been a good run, but now it is almost over. I want to go on further, but I know I need a change in direction. My interests lay more with larval and juvenile marine organisms and their ecosystem roles (besides the stock answer I get from many: “as food” – too damn easy), or in the ecology of deep sea and mangroves and with invasive species in connection to any of the previous. I have at least a hundred questions banging around in my head, and I am loathe to even try to pick only one and say -> This is it.

Juvenile Sergeant Major

One of my favorite fish of the mangroves is the juvenile sergeant major. Very cute, shy and nervous - darting constantly around the patch of mangrove they call home. Copyright E. Heupel

More than that there is the question of what good is a PhD, and is the cost too high to justify. I have put my family through a lot already. It has been financially very hard, and we have done without a lot. I have been fortunate that this program knows me, and knows the type of contribution I can make, and also understands that my family is the most important thing in my life. I will never be one of those scientists (or PhD students) so driven by the research that I sacrifice my family (which I have seem too much of in the past 5 years). Driven yes. If I had a spare $10,000 right now I would be on a plane to Belize to chase down one of my burning questions on invasive species and My Seascape of Fear (actually budgeted with no salary it a hair over 10,000). But I’m not going to throw my family under the bus to get there.

Which brings it once again back to what I want to do with the degree. I would like to be able to design and conduct my own research, which I would need a PhD for. I enjoy teaching small to medium size classes, as long as there is at least one or two kids turned on to learning. At a University or college a PhD is generally the ticket for admission to that. At community colleges, a PhD can be required, or a hinderance.

As for the most singlehandedly enjoyable thing I have done in the past 5 years – it would be the outreach efforts at Aquarius. Doing the science, putting on a live show, broadcasting it to kids in their classrooms and online – both doing science and helping to communicate it to a larger audience. That was for me a real rush. Many of the people involved in that team effort did not have PhD’s, but then again many did. I enjoyed the fact that we were communicating conservation, physics and biology directly and passionately to an audience eager to learn.

A Magnificently Motley Crew

The marvelous crew of the Aquarius 2010 If Reefs Could Talk mission. Copyright E. Heupel

If I stopped right now, my ideal job, would be either as a freelance science communicator specializing in video and online production or it would be with one of the NURC centers or a similar scientific research organization or NGO where I can put my myriad skills to work – oceanography, diver, science outreach, video, animation, web, database, photography (normal and U/W) and ROV pilot (in training right now). But… likely I would not be able to do my own research, which is important to me.

If I were 23 and single, the answer for me would be easy – go for the PhD and study larval and juvenile ecology issues, especially in the mangroves and deep sea. But I’m not 23, or single. And I wouldn’t trade my family for anything, but it does mean I need to figure the 4-6 years of making (if I’m lucky) $30,000/yr while working very long hours into the equation.

Hurry Up, Daddy and Graduate!

Johann is checking into the various blogs and websites we allow him on right now. He’s standing in front of the computer singing. Of course, he just finished reading this Ph.D. comic….

phd070204s

So this is the soundtrack to my work right now (yes, I’m going crazy!!):

Hurry Up, Daddy and Graduate!
(To the tune of Joshua fit the Battle of Jericho, Mahalia Jackson style)

Hurry up, Daddy and graduate, graduate, graduate.
Hurry up, Daddy and graduate and get into graduate school.

Got to get into grad school.
Got to get in there soon.
Got to get into grad school,
Before all the money’s gone. Sooooooo…

Hurry up, Daddy and graduate, graduate, graduate.
Hurry up, Daddy and get into graduate school soon.

You want to study inverts.
You want to study the deep sea.
Got to study the thermal vents,
So get into grad school now, you know ya got to go.

Hurry up, Daddy and graduate, graduate graduate.
Hurry up, Daddy and graduate, ’cause you know you got to go.

Go to go get your masters.
Two years, then we’re gone.
Got to get your masters real soon,
then move on somewhere else.

Hurry up, Daddy and graduate, graduate, graduate.
Hurry up, Daddy and graduate, so we can all go to the next stage.

You always talk about Richard.
Always talkin’ ’bout Cindy.
You always talk about Lauren
and Alvin toooooo. Ohhh…

Hurry up, Daddy and graduate, graduate, graduate.
Hurry up, Daddy and graduate.

Hurry up, Daddy and graduate, graduate, graduate.
Hurry up, Daddy and graduate so we can study more.

We gotta go! Gotta go!
Gotta go to get your Ph.D.!

Economic Crisis

As I apply for grad schools the big issue seems to be the money…
This comic strip hits way too close to home!

phd011609s

10% cuts came already and now the painful ones are coming… not that the 10% cuts weren’t already painful. Hopefully I can find my way into grad school despite the cuts…

Applications are in to UConn, Rutgers and URI for masters programs. Feelers went to Duke and WHOI but both of those are very long shots since the deadlines for this year have already past and they are Ph.D. only programs.

Catching Up

My writings here and at The Other 95% have been a bit sparer and less in depth this last month, as I have been dealing with both medical issues and the impact of those medical issues on my schedule. In the end I missed almost three weeks of classes total. I finally feel like I am catching up with everything since the surgeries. Fortunately at this point I can report that I have caught up with all classes except that I have one rewrite and one writing assignment to turn in.

It has been a long run but thanks to my family (Tammy,Johann, Mom, Dad, and Grandpa were all totally helpful and supportive, each in their own way!) and friends support, and my professors’ understanding, it has been doable! Some classes have been easier than others to catch up in because of differences in the subject, my affinity for the subject and the work load involved. Easiest has been an anthropology course, though it meets only once a week, it is focused on archeology of primarily of Paleoindian through Mesoindian sites. While I missed three classes, I made it out to the field trip and was able to catch right up since I have long had an interest in the subject.

The economics class was a bit of a different story. This class is a fast moving class in a subject I am not terribly interested in and only passingly familiar with. It has enough jargon and technical details that I had to work at catching up since the second class I was able to attend was a review for the first exam! There were also three quizzes to make up. Fortunately this class has no homework or projects assigned. The professor was very kind and allowed me to schedule a different exam date if I needed to. While it was quite generous, I decided to go for it and take the exam, based on the review session, and get all three quizzes in as well. I figured if I spent most of the weekend cramming for it, I would be studying for the exam and all three quizzes simultaneously. More important that would have me caught up in at least one class. Fortunately it worked out well, I made a couple of stupid mistakes on the quizes, but I got an A on the exam.

Missing classes in a math course is never a great idea. Missing almost the first third of the semester is crazy. Of all my classes this was the one I was most worried about. Fortunately when I talked to the Professor before the second surgery and explained the situation he was extremely understanding. The exam I missed could be made up any time within reason. He expressed that my recovery and good health should be the focus, but he did not feel I needed to drop the course. Of course he did submit an F for the mid-term progress report which freaked me the hell out. I have since made up the exam and did relatively well on it. (His is one of those classes that getting a 39 on the exam is a C, I managed a B+)

The main class this semester from within my major is a writing course on Marine Geology and Geochemistry. This one involves five major writing projects and a professor who gives very hard exams. (I passed his class last semester with the second highest grade of the class… raw it was a 70! Talk about stressful!!) He and I worked out a modified schedule for the writing assignments which allowed me to write the first one without the effects of mind altering drugs (I think he realized it would be less painful for him too.) I am finishing the re-write on that and the second paper this weekend.

My Ethical Issues in Science course is a seminar course and the professor is one I have had for many classes and have worked for as a student researcher. He knows my abilities and allowed me to make up the writing assignments as long as I kept up in the readings and participated actively when I was able to be in class. Fortunately in that class I am completely caught up. (Of course I do have to catch up on some of the work I am doing for him)

A second seminar class (issues in Marine Protected Area I had to drop, there was just no way I could maintain a 17 credit load under the circumstances. It would have been an awesome class but it was only 2 credits and did not meet any degree requirements. I may take this class later as an independent study as MPA’s are a serious interest and this class covers them in great detail.

The only reason I have made it through is that I was painfully up front with each of my professors and worked out a reasonable schedule that would allow me to catch up without melting down. I also prioritized the classes, looking at the ones I felt I could let slip if I needed to (Anthro, Econ and Ethics) and the ones I really needed to spend the greatest effort. The marine geology is in my major so good performance there is more important. The math class I knew would take the most effort to catch up, so it too was a focus.

The timing of everything was pretty bad, and it has left me behind in the grad school application process, and seriously behind on a project I am working on with two of the professors. They understand and have been totally supportive, but it needs to get done in a a fairly tight time frame now because of typical funding availability issues.

Again I have to thank my family, friends and professors for being so supportive and understanding. I have had almost no time for anything except studying and classes. It has been crazy, but after doing that, Tammy and I figure grad school will not be quite so bad, except it’s for a solid two to six years.

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