Please help me out - MathOverflow [closed] most recent 30 from http://mathoverflow.net 2013-05-22T09:31:21Z http://mathoverflow.net/feeds/question/93988 http://www.creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/rdf http://mathoverflow.net/questions/93988/please-help-me-out Please help me out tomhaw 2012-04-13T20:58:37Z 2012-04-13T22:13:06Z <blockquote> <p><strong>Possible Duplicate:</strong><br> <a href="http://mathoverflow.net/questions/93978/please-help-me-out-of-the-dilema" rel="nofollow">Please help me out of the dilema</a> </p> </blockquote> <p>Hi all,</p> <p>One and a half years ago, I got a PhD fellow in Math in a European country. I've worked hard to learn background toward the project which my supervisor gave me, although I'm not interesting much in the field. After one year passed, I've got enough backgroud to deal with the project. But I quickly discovered that the problem my supervisor gave me was too bad to work out, in fact it is dead end. My supervisor admitted this fact and gave me another problem to do, but three months ago I discovered this problem was solved by other mathematicians six years before. Until now, my supervisor seems not able to have any nice problem for me to do, his research is focused on another direction which is far away from what I'm studying with him. I'm disappointing now.</p> <p>I made several applications to other places. Some of those informed that I was selected and they are waiting my answer. I'm very confusing now, I don't know should I stick in my current PhD or leave? Am I guilty if I leave? Will my supervisor angry at me if I leave? I've been told some excellent students can find out the good problem themself but I'm afraid that I'm not at that level. Thank you for any advices!</p> http://mathoverflow.net/questions/93988/please-help-me-out/93990#93990 Answer by Pace Nielsen for Please help me out Pace Nielsen 2012-04-13T21:09:47Z 2012-04-13T22:13:06Z <p>That sounds like a personal decision you will have to answer on your own, but here are just a few things to consider as you make your decision.</p> <ol> <li><p>Have you already obtained a Master's degree? If not, you could finish that and leave for the PhD program elsewhere with fewer problems.</p></li> <li><p>It is okay to change advisers if one is not working out. You don't necessarily need to leave the school you are at to do that.</p></li> <li><p>If you are comfortable with it, talk with your department chair. Explain what is happening, and get his/her advice. Another alternative would be the graduate committee chair. They want you to succeed, and can offer advice on ways to change advisers.</p></li> <li><p>It is a normal part of research to find out others have done the work before you. Some options include: generalizing what was done, researching similar but different questions, communicating with the authors of those other papers about other research avenues, etc...</p></li> </ol> <p>Whether or not your adviser will be angry with you depends a lot on how you deal with this situation, and what your adviser is like. My advice: be honest and talk with your adviser.</p>