An overview of resources and practices of doctoral research in International Affairs, Science, and Technology. Meetings will consist of faculty guest lectures and talks from
Library personnel and others.
- Students will become meet and become familiar with a wide range of faculty research and interests within the Nunn School.
- Students will have a better understanding of the PhD process, including selecting an advisor and the advising relationship, and will be prompted to reflect on your professional goals and develop tools to meet them.
- Students will be introduced to resources across campus that may be of use or important as part of their doctorate.
- Students will develop a community of fellow graduate students.
None to be purchased
This course is graded Pass/Fail. If you are absent or are late by more than 15 minutes for 5 or more class sessions, that will result in a failing grade.
You are expected to make reasonable efforts to attend all classes and to participate substantively.
Students are expected to maintain the highest standards of academic integrity. All work submitted must be original and properly cited. Plagiarism, cheating, or any form of academic dishonesty will result in immediate consequences as outlined in the university's academic integrity policy. Using AI LLM’s or other AI/ML assistants must be identified and cited, otherwise it is plagiarism.