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03-12-2014, 02:56 PM
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Verified Member
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Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Donny
All right, fair enough. Somewhat do agree with what you said.
I guess it goes down to the level of understanding each candidate can bring to the job. I don't deny that those Vietnamese programmers you hire can get some jobs yet.
Yet, I feel that a Stanford PhD (since that is what the OP is aiming at) can bring in new knowledge that produces a about a better solution viz-a-viz those done by the programmers you mentioned.
Right of the top of my head and I'm not trying to show off or be verbose here:
1. Parallel programming on a GPU (undergrad would at best take a single course on GPU programming. PhDs develop and understand better the theory)
2. Machine Learning for signal detection (a PhD would throughout the course of his thesis applied machine learning to numerous problems. An undergrad probably just learnt PCM* and did a two week project on it)
3. Use of appropriate algorithms (perhaps here the PhD and undergrad can be on par. Nonetheless, doing and using algorithms for two years compared to two semesters inevitably suggest more familiarity with it for the PhD than the undergrad)
My point is that a bachelors degree equips one with fundamental knowledge, a PhD with specific knowledge in a specific area. Depending on the job, sometimes both the bachelors and PhD survive, sometimes only the PhD survives. I can trust a Vietnamese programmer to write a multithreaded console program to read and display text from a server to a screen. I won't trust a Vietnamese programmer with at most one year of experience, to tear up a Linux kernel and write a customer memory manager taken from some IBM publication written in the 1980s. (I've seen some of those, they scare the freak out of me.)
*Principle Component Analysis
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Most likely you didn't do a phd. If you did you'll know PhD is not about doing things better than undergrad or masters, but about digging very deep in a very narrow area, which usually is of little to no practical value in the near future. When it comes to practical job skills, PhDs are often no better than their peers who joined the workforce early and had earned some experience. In my group, PhD staff design algorithms and build protetype with C, Matlab or even fortran, while the actual development of production code is handled by undergrad staff in java, c++/c# or whatever cutting edge tools there is.
If OP's goal is academia, he can safely bypass c++, java, GPGPU and stuff afer passing the course. he shall instead focus on algorithms, math those theoretical stuff.
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03-12-2014, 03:00 PM
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Verified Member
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Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
Got a friend with fresh phd offered teaching job at a Poly only on a $4K pm salary. isnt it too low?
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4k x (12+1(aws)+3~4(bonus)) roughly 4k x 16.5, I'd say not all that bad, considering the very flexible working hours and stableness.
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03-12-2014, 03:04 PM
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Verified Member
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Join Date: Aug 2014
Posts: 23
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
I don't think just because they teach in business schools, they receive much more remuneration. It must be fair to other professors as well due to similar job scopes.
Based on my estimation, assoc professors should earn somewhere above 6k. Full fledged probably at about 8k +. Unless you are in harvard.. then.. but i think NBS and NUS should be around that range. Not typically quite high flyers on salary. But if you wish to join academia, that's something you should have thought about at the start.
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The major matters a lot actually. becoz business school professors can find consultation jobs in private sectors that pays very decently, how many would want to stay in school if they're not paid competitively? also business schools obviously get more endorsement/donation than some other schools like arts.
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10-01-2015, 06:39 AM
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Does anyone know what could be paid as starting salary for an assistant professor in Chemistry/Physics/Biology at NUS? I got hold a PhD from a European University and have 3 years PostDoc experience from an Ivy League school.
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17-02-2015, 11:11 AM
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Verified Member
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Join Date: Feb 2015
Posts: 12
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
Does anyone know what could be paid as starting salary for an assistant professor in Chemistry/Physics/Biology at NUS? I got hold a PhD from a European University and have 3 years PostDoc experience from an Ivy League school.
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I also want to know.
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18-02-2015, 10:07 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
Does anyone know what could be paid as starting salary for an assistant professor in Chemistry/Physics/Biology at NUS? I got hold a PhD from a European University and have 3 years PostDoc experience from an Ivy League school.
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between $80~120k per annum.
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22-04-2015, 02:24 AM
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salary
Got an offer from NUS this year...215k SGD
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22-04-2015, 02:25 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
Got an offer from NUS this year...215k SGD
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Should also mention that this is an assistant prof position.
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26-04-2015, 10:16 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Unregistered
Got an offer from NUS this year...215k SGD
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that's pretty damn high for a asst prof. how old are you and what discipline are you in?
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