Time Management
- Set some reasonable goals with deadlines
- Identify key tasks that need to be completed
- Set a reasonable date for completing them (on the order of
weeks or months).
- Share this with your advisor or enlist your advisors help
in creating the goals and deadlines.
- Set some deadlines that you must keep (e.g., volunteer to
give a student seminar on your research, work toward a
conference paper submission deadline, etc.)
- Keep a to do list - Checking off things on a to do
list can feel very rewarding when you are working on a long-term
project.
- List the small tasks that can be done in about an hour
- Pick at least one that has to be completed each day
- It's hard to get started working in the morning, easy to
keep going once you've started. Leave something easy or fun
unfinished in the evening that you can start with in the
morning. Start the morning with real work-if you start by reading
your mail, you may never get to something more productive.
- And,
he never went any further. He had his personality defect of
wanting total control and was not willing to recognize that you
need the support of the system. You find this happening again and again; good scientists will
fight the system rather than learn to work with the system and
take advantage of all the system has to offer. It has a lot, if
you learn how to use it. It takes patience, but you can learn
how to use the system pretty well, and you can learn how to get
around it. After all, if you want a decision `No', you just go
to your boss and get a `No' easy. If you want to do something,
don't ask, do it. Present him with an accomplished fact. Don't
give him a chance to tell you `No'. But if you want a `No', it's
easy to get a `No'.
By taking the trouble to tell jokes to the secretaries and
being a little friendly, I got superb secretarial help. For
instance, one time for some idiot reason all the reproducing
services at Murray Hill were tied up. Don't ask me how, but they
were. I wanted something done. My secretary called up somebody
at Holmdel, hopped the company car, made the hour-long trip down
and got it reproduced, and then came back. It was a payoff for
the times I had made an effort to cheer her up, tell her jokes
and be friendly; it was that little extra work that later paid
off for me. By realizing you have to use the system and studying
how to get the system to do your work, you learn how to adapt
the system to your desires. Or you can fight it steadily, as a
small undeclared war, for the whole of your life.
Many a second-rate fellow gets caught up in some little
twitting of the system, and carries it through to warfare. He
expends his energy in a foolish project. Now you are going to
tell me that somebody has to change the system. I agree;
somebody's has to. Which do you want to be? The person who
changes the system or the person who does first-class science?
Which person is it that you want to be? Be clear, when you fight
the system and struggle with it, what you are doing, how far to
go out of amusement, and how much to waste your effort fighting
the system. My advice is to let somebody else do it and you get
on with becoming a first-class scientist. Very few of you have
the ability to both reform the system and become a
first-class scientist.
- One idea I came up with as an undergrad was to try to
maintain balance by making sure I engaged in four different
types of activities every single day. These were:
- something intellectual (not so difficult at school);
- something physical (like running, biking, a team sport);
- something creative (like music, art, or writing); and
- something social (like lunch with a friend).
Actually, this simple rule served me so well in college that
I still try to follow it today. It means, of course, that I
don’t always get as much done as I would like in a day. (It
means too that I have boatloads of email messages I still
haven’t responded to!) But I’m in it for the long haul — as I
hope you all are too — and I strongly believe that living with
balance is what keeps me going day after day, and what keeps me
sane.
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