Tuesday, 24 September 2024
Monday, 23 September 2024
To experience a unique learning opportunity!
VISA – Ms. Swapna Sundar | A Report
23rd Sept 2024
Dear All,
Thank you for participating in today’s VISA – Virtual Interaction with Scholars Abroad Episode # 8 with Ms. Swapna Sundar, Alumna, Department of Political Science.
Minutes of the Meeting
Speaker: Ms. Swapna Sundar
(Studies: BA Political
Science in MCC
Pursued Law at Dr.
Ambedkar Govt. Law College, Chennai
Masters in Law, Brussels
School of International Studies
Teaching Assistant, Kent
Law School, University of Canterbury)
College Prayer given by Global Student Ambassador Sabarinathan
Welcome Address given by Dean of International Programs, Dr. Samuel Rufus
Introduction of speaker by Professor Diviyan from the Department of Political Science
Ms. Swapna Sundar’s Talk
Slide 1 - Why Study Abroad?
* As a student looking to pursue higher education overseas, ask yourself why you want to study abroad.
* May be to experience a
unique learning opportunity or to settle abroad or for experience and exposure.
Make choices for universities based on your decisions.
Slide 2 - What to Study? Academic Choices
* Professional Degrees - be mindful of pursuing professional degrees abroad with the intention of returning to home country, as equalisation exams are necessary before one can practice.
* Regulation and Laws - be
mindful of the laws regarding return to home country.
* Future Career Path -
Sketch out a suitable path for yourself to help with making academic choices.
Slide 3 - Funding Your Education
* Scholarships - Research and apply early for scholarships that suit your profile. As India is no longer classified as an underdeveloped or developing country, scholarship opportunities have come down, but there are still good ones.
* Student Loans - Be
mindful of your ability to pay back.
Slide 4 - Living Options
* Guest Homes and Hostels - diverse living space with opportunities to interact with people from various cultures
* College campus and
Student Residence - spaces sanctioned by the university with opportunities to
interact with students from the same university
* Shared Housing - spaces
that enable camaraderie on the basis of sharing a living space.
Slide 5 - Travel on a
Budget
* Travelling by Parental
Support
* Explore the city - take
time to explore travel facilities offered to students, especially in Europe and
utilise wisely.
* Travel Safe - look for
trustable group tours and solo travel with caution.
Slide 6 - Cost Management
* Live like Students -
Embrace a simple lifestyle - choose valuable experiences over comfort
* Budget wisely -
especially in a shared living space (and even otherwise), manage finances
wisely.
* Odd jobs - working part
time helps the budget.
Slide 7 - Relationships and Social Life
* Personal Relationships -
Be mindful of the kind of company you make
* Social life - do not do
anything that would land you in trouble. Be mindful of the fact that you are in
another country.
* Legal Awareness - be
mindful of the law when it comes to international students in that country as
opposed to locals. Don’t jeopardise your visa status or future plans.
Q&A session with the students
Vote of Thanks by Lakshmi
MC & Minutes: Ms. Lakshmi Ramaswami, II MA English
Report of the Meeting: Mr. T. Abraham
We shall meet again next week on yet another Episode of ‘VISA’.
Best wishes,
Office the Dean of International Programmes
MCC
Thursday, 19 September 2024
Invite for VISA Episode # 8 | Ms. Swapna Sundar
Invite for VISA Episode # 8 | Ms. Swapna Sundar
Dear All,
We cordially invite you to join us for a lively time of interaction with Ms. Swapna Sundar at 6 pm, Monday, 23rd September 2024 on Zoom Meet, as part of our Virtual Interaction with Scholars Abroad Series, Episode # 8.
Ms. Swapna Sundar has a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science from Madras Christian College, and she is a proud member of the alumni association.
Ms. Swapna Sundar is an accomplished scholar, with four renowned publications to her credit. She is also an excellent communicator, with a vibrant zest for life, and a quest for achieving excellence. She will talk about her experience abroad, and with her immense global exposure, she would also give valuable suggestions on opportunities for higher studies in various destinations abroad.
Do join in at 6 pm, Monday, 23rd September 2024 on Zoom Meet using the link below.
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/3186192180?pwd=M2l6N2F0aFJpcGhtMDBEQXUyL0gyUT09
Meeting ID: 318 619 2180
Passcode: chemistry
Please also find attached the flyer for the event.
Kind regards,
Dr. Rufus
Monday, 16 September 2024
Madras Christian College Introduces a Smart Duck to track water quality of its Campus Lake
In Today's Times of India |
Madras Christian College has introduced a smart duck to track water quality of a lake inside its sprawling 300-acre campus in Tambaram.
The IoT-enabled, remote-controlled duck will move across the lake and gather real time data on seven key parameters, including water temperature, dissolved oxygen, turbidity and pH, among others.
The lake, one of the key water sources inside the campus, was desilted by
Bisleri International Limited as part of their CSR project. They also handed
over funds for developing a prototype for checking water quality.
A team from MCC-MRF Innovation Park developed the 3D-printed duck with sensors
and created an app to receive and analyse data.
“We can make informed decisions on conserving the lake based on the data. It
will help us to protect the ecology and wildlife inside the campus,” says Paul
Wilson, principal of Madras Christian College.
The idea of deploying the smart duck was his.
He said any change in the water quality, including an increase in acidity
levels, could reveal contamination and help them take proactive measures to
control the damage.
“The inbuilt solar panels can power the duck. It can be operated without
sunlight for two days, and if needed, it can also be manually charged,” said
Kousik, founder of the startup KOLOZEN, which built the duck. The startup has
now been fetching and transferring this data for the last two weeks.
Researchers say they could deploy similar ducks on other water bodies outside
the campus to monitor water quality and collect data for local bodies.
“This data could tell us about what is happening to a water body during the
rain, seasonal change, its environmental health, and diseases. We can also
build a hydro informatics platform of a water body with this data. It has huge
potential,” said professor T Pradeep, department of chemistry, IIT Madras.
The scrub jungle inside the MCC campus is home to roughly about 90 spotted deer, porcupines, toddy cats, and bats. The duck has two cameras in its eyes to help the college track movements of wild animals within the campus.
Thursday, 12 September 2024
VISA Meet with Dr. Ramesh Raja, Alumnus
VISA Meet | 12th September 2024 | A Report
Mr. Ramesh Raja | Singapore
[BA & MA Tamil in MCC]
Dear All,
Thank you for participating in today’s VISA – ‘Virtual Interaction with Scholars Abroad’ Episode # 7.
Mr. Ramesh Raja who did his BA and MA in Tamil with us in MCC, spoke on his teaching experience in Singapore.
‘Singapore is a land of safety and security, and it’s a jewel from heaven come down, said Mr. Ramesh Raja’, elaborating on life in Singapore.
‘There are no recommendations for any postings in Singapore. According to your talent, you will be absorbed in any sector’, said Ramesh.
‘There’s a lot of demand for teachers in Singapore, but a B.Ed Degree is mandatory to get into school teaching’, he said.
On Higher Education in Singapore, he said that, ‘Singapore gives the provision for students to work part-time while doing their degree programme. Five Singapore Universities are among the top #100 in World Rankings, he observed, and added that, there is a great demand for good Professors in Universities there. No kind of recommendation works in Singapore, as merit is valued there’, he said.
‘As regards applying for your PhD programme, the only criteria they expect from you is to clearly outline the objectives of your research. This can get you even scholarships and stipends’, he added.
‘After your Degree, doing a technical course / Value-added course / Diploma Course helps in enhancing job prospects in Singapore’, he said.
Ramesh also said that he would help students of MCC to contact the right person, as regards their higher studies or placements, if they get in touch with him. (He has also given his email id and contact no).
Mr. Sabarinathan did the MC, and Mr. Abraham read out the College Prayer. Dr. Paul Prabhu Santharaj, Head, Dept of Tamil, welcomed the gathering. Dr. Sebulon Prabu Durai introduced the speaker of the day and coordinated the Q & A.
We shall meet again next week, on Wednesday, 18th September 2024, on our next edition of VISA.
Thank you.
Office of the Dean of International Programmes
MCC
Wednesday, 11 September 2024
Study Abroad Seminar on Higher Education in Japan: A Report
Study Abroad Seminar | Higher Education in Japan
11th September 2024 | A REPORT
Dear All,
Thank you for participating in today’s lively and highly engaging Study Abroad Seminar on Opportunities for Higher Studies, Internships and Scholarships in Japan.
Dr. Robinson, Head, Department of Mathematics was the Resource Person. He kept the students engaged right from start to finish.
Interestingly he spoke to a few in the audience in good Japanese, and they responded with equal enthusiasm.
Dr. Robinson started off by giving an overview of the Structure of the Education System in Japan, and then proceeded to elaborate on Higher Education in Japan.
He outlined all the famous Universities in Japan, right from
Hiroshima University,
Akita International University,
Hokkaido University,
Chiba University,
Keio University,
Kyoto University,
International Christian University,
Kyushu University,
International University of Japan,
Nagoya University,
Kanazawa University,
Osaka University,
Kumamoto University,
Tohoku University,
Kwansei Gakuin University,
Tokyo Institute of Technology,
Kyoto Institute of Technology,
Waseda University,
Osaka University,
University of Tokyo,
University of Tsukuba,
Rikkyo University,
Risumeikan Asia Pacific University,
Soka University,
Sophia University,
Tokyo University of Foreign Studies,
Tokyo University of the Arts,
Global Toyo University,
University of Aizu
Which includes the top Universities preferred for MEXT Scholarships.
Dr. Robinson then elaborated on the Japan Society for Promotion of Science and the
1. Ronpaku PhD Programme
2. Post-doctoral fellowships (Short term/Long term)
3. Invitational Fellowships (Short term/Long term)
4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (KAKENHI)
Then Dr. Robinson proceeded to outline the seven steps to study in Japan, and highlighted the EJU – Examination for Japanese University of Admission for International Students.
He also gave a few insightful guidebooks on -
Scholarship for International Students in Japan, 2024
International Students Guidebook
The Japanese Language Proficiency Test (JLPT)
List of Scholarships for Privately-financed International Students, etc.
Many students asked their genuine queries and had them addressed by Dr. T. Robinson.
It was a memorable session that took us all into a beautiful educational and cultural tour of Japan.
On behalf of the Office of the Dean of International Programmes, we sincerely thank Dr. T. Robinson for spending his valuable time and for sharing the valuable information on Higher Education in Japan.
Ms. Ganga did the MC and introduced the speaker.
Mr. Sabarinathan did the opening prayer and the Q&A coordination.
Ms. Smrithi presented the memento to the Resource Person and also proposed the Vote of Thanks.
Tuesday, 10 September 2024
Language and Sexual Difference by Susan Sellers
Language and Sexual Difference by Susan Sellers [from the Introduction to the book]
Introduction
How can women analyze their own
exploitation, inscribe their own demands, within an order prescribed by the
masculine? - Luce Irigaray
In this introductory section, Susan Sellers outlines the recent linguistic debates, as these have developed in and influenced the French-speaking world, by presenting the work of the Swiss linguist Ferdinand de Saussure and the theories of three French cultural interpreters, Claude Levi-Strauss, Michel Foucault and Roland Barthes, so as to provide a context for the very different interpretations of French feminism.
In the second half of this section, she introduces the writings of Helene Cixous, Luce Irigaray and Julia Kristeva to show how their work both draws on and challenges these theories.
The Problem in Women’s ‘Expression of their Experience’
Language has been
a major area of intellectual inquiry in the twentieth century. The impetus for
this new interest has come from the realisation of the crucial role language
plays in our lives.
Language is intrinsic to the way we think, to the way we construct our group and self-identities, to the way we perceive the world and organise our social relationships and political systems. Language encodes our experience, and because of the particular vision on which our language system depends, the problem for women is that we can only express ourselves in the language that symbolises the way man has perceived the world to be, says Susan Sellers.
DIFFERENCE IN LANGUAGE | Saussure
Saussure split
language into two basic categories: the word - or signifier - and the
concept - or signified - for which it stands. The letters c-a-t, for
instance, or the sound of these letters as they are pronounced, constitute the
signifier of the animal 'cat'. It is the consensus of agreement amongst
English speakers that c-a-t should designate a feline quadruped.
An illustration of Saussure's theory can be found in the way different languages distinguish colours. Colours are not distinct, separate bands, but part of a continuous spectrum of light which we divide for the sake of convenience into red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet.
The Construction of the Other: Michel Foucault
The French
philosopher and historian Michel Foucault has similarly developed Saussure’s
theory that meaning is a product of differences, and these differences help in
the creation of group identities!
So in order for a group to form, I, as a potential member, must perceive a resemblance between myself and the other group members. He argued that one of the ways in which a group's identity is forged (and mine as part of it) is through its recognition of its differences from other groups.
He believed these distinctions underlie all social hierarchy, as well as the structure of language and logic of thought. They operate as the fundamental organising principle in the way we think, speak and define ourselves in relation to others.
Georg Hegel’s Model of the ‘Master and his Slave’ Metaphor
The nineteenth
century German philosopher Georg Hegel provided a metaphor for the way in which
identity is created through the opposition and hierarchical ordering of
differences in his model of a master and his slave.
The model refers to the way in which masters define themselves in relation to their slaves, good in the context of evil, black in terms of white. Simone de Beauvoir, in her study The Second Sex, develops the metaphor to show how the identity of the individual subject is created in relation to an object or 'other'; and she extends the argument to demonstrate how men have made use of women in order to guarantee their position as masters.
The written text: Roland Barthes
Like Michel Foucault, the French critic Roland Barthes has explored the ways in which the prevailing ideology of the dominant power group works to conceal the processes by which it has attained power through an appeal to 'truths' presented in such a way that they appear natural, logical or inevitable.
Like Foucault, Barthes argued that these processes are nevertheless revealed in the discourse and other cultural activities of the ruling group.
In Mythologies he shows how the prevailing ideology infuses even such apparently neutral texts as photographs. Citing the example of a photograph of a black soldier in uniform saluting the French flag on a front cover of the magazine Paris-Match, Barthes demonstrated how the picture means more than a French soldier's loyal salute.
Appearing as it did at the time of the Algerian war for independence, the photograph implies the justice of the French cause. Its signified, Barthes suggests, is also French Imperialism, and an appeal for the continuation of French colonial rule.
In his work on literature, this insistence prompted Barthes to focus not on what texts mean, but on the processes by which meaning is achieved.
His belief that a signifier can have several signifieds led him to develop a mode of criticism that would take into account the plurality of meanings in texts. He challenged those critics who attempt to fix a single, 'correct' meaning on a text, arguing instead for a practice of reading that would explore how meanings are created.
He distinguished two different types of writers - the ecrivant - or writer who believes they have something to say and uses language to say this as unequivocally as possible - and the ecrivain - or writer who explores the potential of language to generate (multiple) meanings. He condemned the first type of writer, who like the old-style critic holds on to an illusory belief in intrinsic meaning and whose attempt to dictate how a work should be interpreted reveals his own ideological bias and desire for power, concentrating increasingly on the second type of writer or ecrivain.
Continuing this distinction, Barthes also distinguished between two types of text. He described the text of the ecrivant as lisible - or readable - since the role of the reader is reduced to passively following the words on the page. An ecrivain's text, by contrast, he referred to as scriptable - or writable - since the participation of its reader is actively sought to co-produce meanings. Barthes suggested that the scriptable text frees the reader from the tyranny of imposed definition, offering instead the possibility of 'other' meanings.
Drawing on the psychoanalytic theories of Freud, Barthes argued that the pleasure a reader experiences in reading a scriptable text is linked to the primary pleasures of infancy. The word Barthes uses to describe this pleasure is jouissance, a word which it is difficult to translate into English since it means sexual as well as other forms of pleasure, but which may be thought of as the pleasure a reader feels in embracing the multiple, richly-textured and exploding layers of meanings in a scriptable text.
For Barthes, the relationship between reader and text is an erotic one, and he suggested that what is offered in a scriptable text is the intimate body of the writer 'in process' - as it moves from a concern with meaning and nomination to the creative, merging pleasures and possibilities of language - an inter-play which is in turn offered to the participating (body of the) reader.
WRITERS OF THE FEMININE
The theories of the structural linguist Ferdinand de Saussure and those of their French interpreters Claude Levi-Strauss, Michel Foucault and Roland Barthes offer a context for the works of the French feminist theorists Helene Cixous, Luce Irigaray and Julia Kristeva. Drawing on post-structural accounts of the vital role of difference in language, subjectivity and the way we organise the world, their writings reflect, extend and radically challenge these accounts.
The
philosophical ploy: Luce
Irigaray
In her study Speculum of the Other Woman, the philosopher, linguist and psychoanalyst Luce Irigaray examines the way in which our concept of difference depends on a single, male viewpoint. She suggests our entire system of thinking in the West has been determined by men for their own benefit.
She explores the premises that underlie the theories of the 'great' philosophers from Plato on, revealing both their masculine bias, and how this bias has become encoded in our language and culture to reduce women to silence.
Irigaray devotes almost a third of Speculum of the Other Woman to the work of the third century BC Greek philosopher Plato. The following account of Irigaray's work on Plato is taken from the essay in Speculum of the Other Woman entitled 'Plato's Hysteria.'
Irigaray suggests that the purpose of Plato's philosophy is to create a system of differences, determined in relation to a single idea, capable of leading 'man out of the cave' of his origin to a state of order.
Confronted by the male gaze, woman's sex apparently presents 'nothing to see’. Anything which cannot be defined by man's law, she stresses, has been branded as alien, and subjected to prohibition and denial.
Irigaray believes Plato's philosophy has had devastating consequences for women and men. 'By excluding the gaze of the other', she writes, his system has organised the world into 'a paralyzed empire', with disastrous effects on both sexes. Plato's insistence on the primacy of the father - that it is the father alone who is responsible for procreation ('will alone sow the good seed and be able to give it a proper name') - has, she argues, relegated the mother's function to that of 'mere receptacle'. From Plato on, she stresses, it is the father who has held all rights to property, whilst women have been reduced to a position of muteness or mimicry.
To this day Irigaray believes women's problem remains one of achieving definition within a male-demarcated schema. Woman, Irigaray continues, has no gaze or discourse of her own that can render her own image, and thus no means of breaking the chain of identification that continues to hold women prisoner. Her role as 'male Other' ensures that woman's desire remains without expression. Irigaray suggests that it will be by exploring our desire that women may begin to undermine the power of the masculine state.
The linguist, psychoanalyst and critic Julia Kristeva has been an important figure on the French intellectual scene since her arrival in Paris from Bulgaria in 1966. She spent her first years in Paris working with such influential thinkers as Roland Barthes, until the publication of two books, and then her doctoral thesis Revolution in Poetic Language in 1974. Like Luce Irigaray, Kristeva has developed accounts of how Western society is founded on the recognition and appropriation, repression or destruction of difference from a feminist viewpoint.
Like Luce Irigaray, she believes the monotheism of Western society is sustained by a radical split between the sexes. In About Chinese Women for example, she highlights the role of sexual difference in the creation of linguistic and social order.
As an example of the patriarchal process, Kristeva rereads the biblical account of Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden. She illustrates how, within this scene, the serpent is made to symbolise not only evil, but everything that is outside the paternal code. She suggests that Eve is made to stand as the polar opposite to God-the-Father's Ward as 'the other race' - embodying transgression and jouissance, as well as their punishment in death.
Only by listening to what is unspoken, she writes, by attending to what is repressed, new, eccentric, incomprehensible and therefore threatening to the paternal code, can women hope to disrupt its order and acquire our own voice. It is in this sense that Kristeva sees language as potentially revolutionary. Only through language, she insists, in an essay entitled 'A New Type of Intellectual: The Dissident', can we hope to bring about the multiple and necessary 'sublations of the unnameable, the unrepresentable, the void'; only by dismantling the very bases of patriarchy, beginning with its language, and working from language to its culture and institutions, can we hope to initiate social and political change.
Woman's abasement: Helen Cixous
Like Luce Irigaray and Julia Kristeva, Helene Cixous, novelist, playwright, critic, professor of literature at the University of Paris and Director of the Centre for Feminine Studies, which she founded in 1974, sees women's relegation to the role of other as a result of the binary structure of masculine thought.
Like Julia Kristeva, Cixous believes that the established pattern of perception and classification in the West is organised 'through dual, hierarchical oppositions'.
Like
Luce Irigaray, she believes man's 'desire to be (at) the origin' has initiated
a process of separation in which the 'Selfsame' - 'the ownself (- what is mine,
hence what is good)' - is differentiated from whatever 'menaces my own-good':
'is "other'" - a pattern to which 'all concepts, codes and values'
have subsequently been subjected.
She describes how at the age of three or four, she was confronted by the knowledge that 'the world is divided in half and that 'the great, noble, "advanced" countries' had constructed their position by enslaving whatever they had deemed to be 'strange'.
Just as the 'master-slave dialectic' requires 'what is strange' to be 'conquered and returned to the master', so, she writes, the oppressed peoples of the world are employed by those in power to create and perpetuate their dominion.
Like Irigaray, she argues that our system of thinking in the West has been constructed 'on the premise of woman's abasement', on the 'subordination of the feminine to the masculine order'.
She sees man's will for power as the mainstay of Western ideology, founding and perpetuating our social, political and cultural status quo. Even knowledge, she suggests, is caught in this system of binary logic, rendering it inaccessible and sacred, and thus preventing those it subjects from questioning its authority. She concludes that the only way forward is to tear down this 'vast membrane' fabricated by the masculine, overcoming its repressions through the inventive possibilities of language.
Unlike the current '(Hegelian) scheme of recognition', she stresses, in which there is 'no place for the other': 'for a whole and living woman', she sees the new 'feminine economy' as engendering a love relation in which 'each one would keep the other alive and different'.
***
Wednesday, 4 September 2024
Before I joined MCC, I was told that, “The Campus Experience in MCC is worth dying for!” ❤️
Today's VISA | With our alumna Ms.
Priya Darshini, Ireland
7 pm | A Report
Ms. Priya Dharshini, currently doing her PhD in Ireland, gave a very highly engaging talk in such a clear and lucid manner with such enthusiasm and energy, on Google Meet, at 7 pm IST, today. Her talk appealed much to all our students who listened with rapt attention to Ms. Priya.
Excerpts from her Talk -
Before I joined MCC, I was told that, “The Campus Experience in MCC is worth dying for!”
This was the real impetus that made me join MCC. I went on to do my BSc & MSc in Chemistry in MCC.
In my five years in MCC I had attended 11 conferences, and participated in various other events like Speak for India programmes, a host of culturals and other competitions!
My participation in events pertaining to other disciplines, helped me realise the breadth of knowledge in Chemistry and in other related disciplines, since I got to interact with people with niche in their particular fields of study. This interaction helped me realise the value of how much the world had to offer.
Volunteering experience helped me a lot! We used to teach tribal kids, as part of our Service Learning Programme, which gave me a great love for teaching.
I was interested in Chemistry, and I was more interested in the process of Chemistry. A different method of teaching Chemistry would be helpful to teach these tribal kids, I thought.
Most of my time, I did volunteering services, like scribing! etc.
By Masters, you would have definitely done a Research Internship.
But then, I also did an Industrial Internship.
Then I had a Micro Project.
I loved learning, and during my tenure in MCC I had the exposure to show my love for learning.
Like Astronomical Chemistry – wherein we learn about all the spectroscopic instruments through astronomy.
Seeing my syllabus in a different angle, and communicating it from a different angle, helped me showcase my talent in the Dept of Chemistry.
I have got ten certificate courses, from NPTEL, Course Era, etc.
Having a lot of certificates helps a lot in your academic life.
Even though I might have a skill, when I want to showcase it to someone abroad, I need certificates to authenticate my credentials.
When you apply, your professors will ask you if you have proof!
If you’re half good in a subject, go and get a certificate in it.
Whenever I come across a new term, or a new review, I used to read about it. There was a lot of time for me to read! And when I read deeply, I find out the patterns. That made me realise that, there was more to publications and research articles, than mere data. There’s a pattern to it. If you’re able to organize your ideas in a pattern, then you’ll be able to publish articles easily.
DO research in a field you’re passionate about, and quoting a highly inspiring Scripture passage, she said,
“Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might; for there is no work or device or knowledge or wisdom in the grave where you are going”,
signed off Priya Dharshini.
In his concluding remarks, Dr. Vijay Solomon, her Professor, complimenting her, had this to say –
“If you have a research publication at your UG or PG level, it speaks volumes about your character and gives you all the more weightage, which makes us so proud of Priya Dharshini”, said Dr. Vijay.
Minutes of the VISA Meet Today
[by Ms. Lakshmi Ramaswami, Global Student Ambassador]
Minutes of the Meeting
Virtual Interaction with Students Abroad (VISA) Episode 6
Speaker: Ms. Priya Darshini Augusthian
(BSc and MSc in Chemistry,
Madras Christian College
Currently working on PhD
in Dublin City University, Ireland)
College Prayer given by Sabarinathan
1. Introduction of speaker given by Dr. Vijay Solomon from the Department of Chemistry
2. Ms. Priya Darshini Augusthian’s talk
* Huge shift from BSc and
MSc in MCC to being sponsored by the Irish Research Council’s Enterprise
Partnership Scheme
* Most of the parts of an
application are things one must have done prior to applying (work experience,
previous research achievements, etc)
* Create a strong CV ->
Find a Mentor -> Apply for scholarships - Gaining a lot of experiences
result in a particular set of skills than further translate into an organised
Resume.
* Ms. Priya’s most
important parts of college experience (in MCC) includes attending conferences
and intercollegiate events (11 certified), Volunteering and Internships (Ms.
Priya worked through the service learning program at the Chemistry department
and was able to teach Tribal children)
* Emphasis on the fact
that she enjoys the process of learning chemistry than she enjoys Chemistry
itself.
* Suggested having an
internship (not only research oriented, but also industrial) by PG level
* Authorised and validated
certificates from any internship or courses help in the application’s
shortlisting process.
* Personally encouraged
getting a certificate if you’re already “half good” in a subject. This way you
become fully good in it, all the while procuring a certificate, which is a
win-win
* To find a mentor - read,
read and read different works, find one that you like. Mail them personally.
Personalise the mail with details from their paper that you enjoyed. This makes
it clear that you know what you are talking about.
* Apart from scientific
writing skills, communication skills are also important when it comes to
publishing papers. Laymen must understand your work at least a little before it
goes to the professionals of your field
* While in college, do
these things - Gather Experiences, Grow Skills, and Expand Abilities
* College is a great place
you can afford to make mistakes in, get back up, and learn from them.
* “Hindsight is easy,
looking forward is not”
* “Whatever your hand
finds to do, do it with your might; for there is no work nor device or
knowledge or wisdom in the grave where you are going” - Ecclesiastes 9:10
(NKJV)
3. Question and Answer session
To clear further doubts
please contact Ms. Priya Darshini through her email: revathipriya001@gmail.com
4. Vote of Thanks by Dr. Samuel Rufus
For the Past Episodes of VISA, you may CLICK HERE.