Friday, 3 January 2014

Huge Demand For Research Fellow, Research Associates and Project Assistants

Dear Friends,

        Hardly 48 hrs are passed and I am compelled to post another article on the huge demand on  Research Fellow, Research Associates and Project Assistants. The vacancies and demand are so huge and secondly it is from renowned institutions that I can not prevent myself from informing you the vacancies with the name of the Institutions. As I am publishing
articles on  Research Fellow, Research Associates and Project Assistants, my inbox is filled with the mails asking information about the concept of Research Assistants or Project Assistants. You will find the list of vacancies at the end of this article. So, let me focus on the benefits of it.
         An assistant ship is a form of funding in which a student works as an "assistant" in exchange for partial or full tuition and/or a stipend. Students who are awarded research assistant ship become research assistants and are assigned to work in a faculty member's lab. The supervising faculty member may or may not be the student's main adviser. Duties of research assistants vary by discipline and lab but include all tasks needed to pursue research in a given area, such as:
  • data collection, entry, and analysis
  • reviewing the literature and other library work
  • writing reports
  • copying, filing, and collating
  • organizing and/or cleaning the lab or office
     Some students may find some of these items menial but these are the tasks that are required to run a lab and conduct research. Most research assistants do a little bit of everything.
     Research assistants have a great deal of responsibility. They are trusted with faculty members' research -- and research is critical to academic careers. The benefits of a research assistant ship lie beyond tuition emission or other monetary compensation. As a research assistant you will learn how to conduct research first hand. Your research experiences as a research assistant can be good preparation for your first major solo research project. 



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