Can Graduate School be Funny?

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If you find this funny and can relate, you are definitely a PhD student.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jD3Gzqb8-xs

It is what you chose to make out of it just make sure to keep the humor alive.

How to flourish in graduate school

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"Why the hell am I doing this?"

 

WhatAmDoingHere.JPGUndertaking the PhD is a long haul journey to a very exciting destination. There is no direct flight and several unexpected stops can on the way. While your nice car is sitting in the garage and brand name clothes on your closet, you may be driving a used vehicle and wearing ragged clothes.

This metaphor may applies to several students giving up high paying jobs with the all the prestige that come with it to embrace a future in academia. Challenges during the PhD are expected, however if one keep questioning their belonging, there might be some truth to it. Academia is a lifestyle choice. If you hate that life in graduate school, you're probably going to hate it long term.

"Let me tell you the secret that has led me to my goal. My strength lies solely in my tenacity."
- Louis Pasteur

tenacity.JPGGraduate school does not mean being genius or succeeding in taking courses. Tenacity is a key word in PhD program and involves "sticking with things even when you get depressed or when things aren't going well". Don't laze around! Keeping a level of discipline will ensure completion of your dissertation.

"Generally speaking, people provide better maintenance for their cars than for their own bodies."
- Scott Adams, The Dilbert Future

How many times I hear and see PhD student "living in their labs". Will they be successful? most likely. Will they happy? Very less likely. Creating a balance by Balance-.JPGrecharging one's battery allow success in the long haul journey. Whether it is a yoga class, hiking, biking, time with family or attending social events, when used in moderation, can only benefit your overall experience.

Minority & Diversity Organizations

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Since I joined IST, I attended a couple of events organized by two clubs under the umbrella of minority and diversity. The first event was organized by the office of graduate educational equity programs where minority students from several colleges at Penn State attended.  This group plays a critical role in assisting graduate student through their journey by providing resources, support and guidance. Mentoring is provided by senior students as well as minority faculties.

 

The second event I was invited to, was organized by the Black Graduate Student Association that meets the first Friday of every month to offer opportunities to its members in order to unwind from a tough academic week. Cultural, Educational and professional development services are offered.

 

Since Our presentation on Monday, I had the opportunities to research several other clubs that I may consider joining such as the Graduate Women in Science, Ballroom Dance Club (Salsa or Tango) and the adult learners of Penn State.

Eminent Scholar in Information Systems

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Dr. Jim Courtney received his Ph.D. in Business Administration (Management Science) from the University of Texas at Austin in 1974. Currently, he is a McCallister/Humana Eminent Scholar Chair in Information Systems and Professor of Computer Information Systems at the Department of Management and Information Systems at Louisiana Tech University.

His research interests are knowledge-based decision support systems, knowledge management, inquiring (learning) organizations and sustainable economic systems and most recently Information  Assurance.

Dr.Courtney.jpgHis academic experience includes faculty positions the University of Central Florida in Orlando, Texas A&M University.  Georgia Tech, Texas Tech, Lincoln University in New Zealand and the State University of New York at Buffalo. Other experiences include positions as Database Analyst at MRI Systems Corporation and Visiting Research Scientist at the NASA Johnson Space Center.

Dr Courtney is the co-developer of the Systems Laboratory for Information Management (Business Publications, 1981), a software package to support research and education in decision support systems, co-author of Database Systems for Management (Second Edition, Irwin Publishing Company, 1992), and Decision Support Models and Expert Systems (MacMillan Publishing, 1992). 

 

His papers have appeared in several journals, including Management Science, MIS Quarterly, Communications of the ACM, IEEE Transactions on Systems, Man and Cybernetics, Decision Sciences, Decision Support Systems, the Journal of Management Information Systems, Database, Interfaces, the Journal of Applied Systems Analysis, and the Journal of Experiential Learning and Simulation.  

 

Dr. Courtney was my mentor at the University of Central Florida throughout my master's program and has been a great supporter while I was embracing the thought of the PhD venture.  My research interests have been impacted by Dr. Courtney's.

Academic Communities

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Last week I introduced some venues that I hope to have my work accepted in. Today I will blog about three academic communities that I might be part of someday. (I should have reversed the order of these 2 blogs!)

The Association for Information Systems

Since I talked about AMCIS and ICIS in last blog, it just makes sense to introduce Association for Information Systems (AIS) community that I am already a member of. AIS is a professional organization founded in 1994;  its purpose is to serve as the premier global organization for academics specializing in Information Systems. The need for such an organization was first spelled out in an editorial authored by five past Editor's-in-Chief of the Management Information Systems Quarterly in March of 1993. Bill King, of the University of Pittsburgh, was first among many to play key leadership roles in bringing the association into existence. He served as the first president.

Association for computing Machinery

ACM.jpgACM is widely recognized as the premier membership organization for computing professionals, delivering resources that advance computing as a science and a profession; enable professional development; and promote policies and research that benefit society.
ACM hosts the computing industry's leading
Digital Library and Guide to Computing Literature, and serves its global members and the computing profession with journals and magazines, conferences, workshops, electronic forums, and Online Books and Courses.

I am considering this community because I have been reading many articles that are relevant to my research area.

IEEE

_The_Trojan_Horse.jpg   Finally, I will introduce one more community which is IEEE and more specifically IEEE Computer Society Technical Committee on Security and Privacy.  

 IEEE, an association dedicated to the fostering of technological innovation and excellence for the benefit of humanity, is the world's largest technical professional society. It is designed to serve professionals involved in all aspects of the electrical, electronic and computing fields and related areas of science and technology that underlie modern civilization.

 

 

Regardless of your track, The IS/IT community is so small. While attending the AMCIS conference in Toronto last August, I met and shared dinner/lunch tables with some of the famous people whose research papers I am reading this semester. Being a member of the Association for Information Systems http://home.aisnet.org  and also member of The PhD Project Information System Doctoral Students Association I had the pleasure of networking with several members whose words of wisdom are still echoing in my ears.

 

AMCIS    

I will start my academic communities by the Americas' conference on Information Systems (AMCIS) for the simple reason that I attended the 2008 conference before the start of my PhD. The conference was held in beautiful Toronto, Canada.

The annual Americas' Conference on Information Systems (AMCIS) is a conference of the Association for Information Systems (AIS), and is managed by an ever changing group of volunteers. It is associated with the Society for Information Management (SIM) and the International Academy for Information Managment (IAIM).

AMCIS 2009 will be held in San Francisco, CA.

 

ICIS   

International Conference on Information Systems (ICIS) is also a conference of AIS with much lower acceptance rate. ICIS was founded in 1980 at UCLA and the first conference was held at the University of Pennsylvania as the " Conference on Information Systems". Next ICIS conference in Held in Paris, France this coming December and my advisor Dr. Chu will be attending.

 

 

From Conferences to Journals:

During pre- AMCIS conference in August 08, I had the great pleasure to meet in person the MIS Quarterly Editor-In-Chief  Dr Detmar W. Straub and ISR Editor-In-Chief  Dr. Vallabh Sambamurthy.  They may "butcher" our submission but they are actually pretty nice.

 

MIS Quarterly

The Management Information Systems Quarterly (MIS Quarterly) is a journal aiming the enhancement and communication of knowledge concerning the development of IT-based services, the management of IT resources, and the use, impact, and economics of IT with managerial, organizational, and societal implications.  Professional issues affecting the IS field as a whole are also in the purview of the journal.

 

ISR     http://www.informs.org/site/ISR/

Information system research (ISR) publishes research topics from a wide range of theories including, but not limited to, cognitive psychology, economics, computer science, operations research, design science, organization theory, organization behavior, sociology, and strategic management. 

 

I do not see these conferences/journal as different professional associations but as one IS/IT large community with different levels. As I may be able to publish in AMCIS and hopefully with ICIS during my PhD journey, attaining the level of MIS Q and ISR will realistically require a much longer breath.

 

Data from this blog is extracted from conferences/journals websites

RFID LAB GURUs

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MITHU BHATTACHARYA is a 4th year IST student at the RFID lab directed by Dr. Chao-Hsien. She is also co-advised by Dr. Tracy Mullen. Mithu's dissertation topic is titled RFID Implementation Issues in Consumer Packaged Goods (CPG) and Pharmaceutical Value Chain. She claims it is only a tentative title at this time but she was very gracious in providing a brief description of her research. " I am using mixed method for my research work. My primary method is Content Analysis where I convert qualitative textual information into quantitative information and perform different statistical tests on the frequency data for drawing inference. For my data I use trade articles (industry press releases and white papers that are published) along with academic (published conference, journals, and academic magazines). So basically I am analyzing RFID Implementation issues for CPG retailers, CPG manufacturers, and Pharmaceutical manufacturers and then comparing across these sectors statistically for different issues"

 

Mithu has attended and presented in 2 conferences and managed already to publish three conference papers and one journal paper. She has two more journal papers under preparation. "Out of this 1 conference paper and 1 journal paper are not from my dissertation area. Those two papers came out as an outcome from my independent study".

Mithu is planning her  proposal defense by the end of the Fall 08 semester or by early spring 2009 at the latest. "IST has given me a very wide perspective about academia and it has been a good journey."

 

Mithu research interest are very similar to mine as she is embracing a "business"  versus a computer science approach to her research. However, I am more interested at the privacy and security aspects of RFID within the healthcare domain.

 

Mithu's publications based on Wen's blog:

Mary Beth Rosson, Hansa Sinha, Mithu Bhattacharya, Dejin Zhao: Design Planning in End-User Web Development. VL/HCC 2007: 189-196.

 

Mithu Bhattacharya, Chao-Hsien Chu, Tracy Mullen. RFID Implementation in Retail Industry: Current Status, Issues, and Challenges, Decision Science Institute (DSI) Conference, Phoenix AZ, 2007.

 

Mithu Bhattacharya, Chao-Hsien Chu, Tracy Mullen. A Comparative Analysis of RFID Adoption in Retail and Manufacturing Sectors. 2008 IEEE International Conference on RFID, Volume 16, Issue 17, April 2008 Page(s):241 - 249.

 

Dr. Chu is a full Professor of Information Sciences and Technology, Affiliate Professor of Management Science and Information Systems at Smeal College of Business as well as the Director of Professional Masters Degrees.

 

Chu has published more than 100 refereed articles in top-ranking journals and in proceedings such as IEEE Transactions on Evolutionary Computation, Decision Sciences, Decision Support Systems, Electronic Commerce Research, Journal of Operations Management, IIE Transactions, International Journal of Production Research, European Journal of Operational Research, International Industrial Engineering Conference, IEEE International Conference on Fuzzy Systems, IEEE Congress on Evolutionary Computation, IEEE World Congress on Computational Intelligence, GLOBECOM, ACM Conference on Electronic Commerce, and many other high-quality of outlets. He is coauthor of the book PROSIM: A Production Management Simulation by Harper Collins (second edition) and Irwin/McGraw-Hill (third edition).

 

Dr. Chu has received more than $ 2 Million In research grants (as PI or co-PI) from various funding sources, including NSF, DoD/NSA, Japan Society for the Promotion of Sciences, National Science Council of Hebei Province (China), Marine Corps Research University (MCRU, Penn State), Hewlett-Packard (HP) Co., Lockheed Martin Corp., Cisco Systems, and others.

 

Classes taught or developed more than 25 by Dr. Chu  between  Penn State University , Iowa State University, Hebei University of Technology, and Singapore Management University.

Here is a sample of these classes:

SRA 221 - Overview of Information Security (Committee)

IST 220 - Networking and Telecommunications. URL: http://net1.ist.psu.edu/ist220/

IST 302 - IT Project Management (Committee)

IST 321 - Information Technology and Systems Integration I.

IST 420 - Fundamentals of Systems and Enterprise Integration (Chair).

IST 402 - Wireless Network Design and Security. URL: http://net1.ist.psu.edu/ist402A/

IST 421 - Information Technology and Systems Integration II (Chair).

IST 450 - Information Systems Security. (Committee).

IST 451 - Network Security. (Committee).

IST 454 - Computer and Cyber Forensics. (Committee Chair).

IST 456 - Security and Risk Management. (Committee).

 

Dr. Chu has been attending several conferences such as ICIS, the International Conference on Information Warfare and Security, Conference on Information Sciences and others.

Dr. Chu's most up-to-date CV

 

Who is Dr. Chao-Hsien Chu ?

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Who is Dr. Chao-Hsien Chu ?

 

Born and raised in Taiwan, my advisor Dr. Chu obtained his bachelor degree in Industrial Engineering with Distinction from Chung Yuan University and an MBA from the Graduate School of Management. Taiwan, not to confuse with China, is country on its own and technologically more advanced than China.

 

 

Taiwan.JPG

 

 

In 1980, Dr Chu moved to the United State to pursue a PhD degree from the Smeal College at the Pennsylvania State University with specialization in Operation Management and Management Information System. When I asked Dr. Chu Why this shift in major, he replied it is not so much a shift but a continuation of his background. By specializing in Operation Management, he felt a stronger foundation due to his background in Industrial Engineering and thus contributed more. Dr. Chu Academic journey in academia demonstrates his everlasting curiosity and hunger for more knowledge. He believed in the vision of the i-schools by joining IST at its inception in 1999 and by being the founding executive director of the center for Information Assurance.

 

Dr. Chu is happily married with two college children. His daughter is pursuing her degree in Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT while his son is pursuing a degree at John Hopkins in Piano.

 What surprised me to learn is that Dr. Chu costumed built his house to accommodate the two pianos he have. Humm, I always thought of him as having nothing to do with arts much less 2 pianos!!!

 

Dr. Chu claims he has no hobbies though I believe he enjoys walking because he walks 20-25 minutes to IST everyday. He confesses that is the best time of his days because he keeps talking about his scenarios/cases/theories and I suspect that is when there inception take place. Despite the fact that he claims that his wife "makes" him take care of the lawn, I again suspect that he enjoys it very much. Oh Boy, I have been reading too much lately that I started to apply everything I read to others' behaviors so I think when it comes to hobbies, Dr Chu says one thing and does another thing: isn't there some analogy to one of the theories covered last week in 531 about individuals' intentions and actual behaviors!!!

 

Until next blog..... ZaiJian (goodbye)

 

Centerof Assurance.JPG

What is IST?

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I never thought of the existence of a college, with more than 30 faculties and several hundred students, not having departments. The first thing that would come to one's mind is luck of structure. Is that a good or a bad thing?  But I concur with Heidi' position about human's being used to organization and taxonomies.  Within IST there is a subtle structure based on tracks that allows student to "specialize" in certain research area without being "locked" in a particular one. however, just like Miao, I agree that there should be a little more guidance for undergraduate students who are still trying to define where they belong and may get lost in the variety of choices and flexibility.

 

You can tell that I spend some time reading other's blog and I actually found Nick's blog about the flavor and history of IST very informative. I knew that IST, unlike some other i-school, started from scratch with no influence from the library of science or computer science but I definitely enjoy the background and history surrounding its formation through Nick's Blog. A quick look at the IST website through the matrix research area of our faculty give a comprehensive overview of the interdisciplinary flavor  in this school.

 

With an MIS background, IST seemed to me like to the logical continuation and a step up to more technical need while still keeping my ties to people and organization. I am a member of the security lab where our focus is on e-healthcare issues and RFID. What draws me to this area is my industry experience in healthcare within the department of Defense. My interest is not purely a technical but also with a business and a social aspect that I the center seem embracing.

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