holyhush
turtle-rific
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Posts: 144
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« on: February 11, 2008, 01:00:46 AM » |
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A remarkably inane question for a nice, chilly night. I have reading to do, of course, but I'd so much rather ponder email etiquette with the lot of you:
I'm a first-year student in a humanities PhD program. Came in with a BA, will get an MA along the way in a year or so. I'm not a PhD candidate yet, clearly. So, then, what should my automatic email signature look like?
Wallace Stevens Ph.D. Student Department of Sunday Morning Studies University of the Green Cockatoo Address Here
--OR--
Wallace Stevens M.A. Student Department of Sunday Morning Studies University of the Green Cockatoo Address Here
--OR--
Wallace Stevens Graduate Student Department of Sunday Morning Studies University of the Green Cockatoo Address Here
--OR--
Wallace Stevens Department of Sunday Morning Studies University of the Green Cockatoo Address Here
--OR--
Something else?
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"All the thoughts of a turtle are turtle." -Ralph Waldo Emerson, 1862
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katherineparr
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« Reply #1 on: February 11, 2008, 09:51:37 AM » |
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Wallace Stevens Department of Sunday Morning Studies University of the Green Cockatoo Address Here
I'd use this, and be careful to specify in your emails that you're a grad student (when necessary). Another option would be to insert a job title, if you have one: Wallace Stevens, Teaching Fellow, etc. However, this is my opinion, and backed only by my comfort level. If you get wildly different advice, I guess this is one of those cases where you should take the most extreme advice in order to avoid offense.
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gayle
Boring
Senior member
   
Posts: 583
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« Reply #2 on: February 11, 2008, 10:13:29 AM » |
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I would tend to lean towards 'grad student'. It identifies your role without getting into the details of exactly what your degree status is.
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dr_prephd
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« Reply #3 on: February 11, 2008, 10:46:36 AM » |
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Sign it name and contact info. only, unless you're writing in some professional capacity, in which case you can add your title: a) Wallace Stevens stevensw@ugc.edu(222) 555-9090 789 Supreme Fiction Lane Hartford, CT 12356 or b) Wallace Stevens Teaching Assistant Department of Sunday Morning Studies University of the Green Cockatoo stevensw@ugc.edu(222) 555-9090 789 Supreme Fiction Lane Hartford, CT 12356
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Prephd, in all that black, you are like the anti-pink-me. Freewill is a beeyaaatch
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helpful
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« Reply #4 on: February 11, 2008, 10:48:19 AM » |
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Wallace Stevens
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miss_m
I can't believe I'm a
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Posts: 132
"Sit your ass down and write."--larryc
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« Reply #5 on: February 11, 2008, 10:48:59 AM » |
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I tend to agree with katherine parr, though that is about my comfort level, too. I have to say that--especially dealing with undergrads in a supervisory position--that labeling thing can be tricky. If you don't have to do that and you are comfortable in your grad student roll in all aspects of your official university life, than go with the generic "grad student" rather than putting a time-table and category to yourself.
Maybe I just don't like fitting in someone's narrow definition of category--or that of everyone I send an email to from my university email account. That said, Prephd was typing while I was typing, and I like his idea, but it doesn't make affliation clear when you need it to be--and makes the purpose and function of a built-in signature useless. Not a bad "anti-box" practice, though.
MM
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"In academia, there's always someone who is brighter, more charismatic, more connected, more insightful, and more well-paid than you."
--Untenured
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locutus
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« Reply #6 on: February 11, 2008, 10:50:21 AM » |
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Ha. I just updated my email signature. Right now it's basicly this:
Jean-Luc Picard Starfleet Academy webpage address
I would put graduate student instead of MA or PhD.
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Render unto Geedorah what is Geedorah's.
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katherineparr
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« Reply #7 on: February 11, 2008, 10:51:28 AM » |
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Oh, and get this: I once had a conversation with a man who had an MA in English and was preparing to begin a PhD program (somewhere else).
He insisted that MA students were "grad students" but PhD students were not. Insisted!
So I realize that perhaps I shy away from adding Graduate Student because there are apparently people who don't understand what that can mean.
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august_leo
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« Reply #8 on: February 11, 2008, 10:54:17 AM » |
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Pre-comps I used: August Leo augustleo@school.eduDept of X Y University address, ya da ya da tel: (lab phone) Post-comps I used: August Leo Ph.D. Candidate Dept of X Y University address, ya da ya da tel: (lab phone) email: .... website: .... I've seen "graduate student" and "teaching assistant" too. I wouldn't use "research assistant" because that can be a job without the grad school part. Look through your email. What have advanced grad students in your program that you admire done?
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Your environment sounds vaguely toxic. Or maybe just characteristically British.
I heart august_leo.
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hypnotoad
New member

Posts: 34
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« Reply #9 on: February 11, 2008, 12:19:02 PM » |
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I use "Graduate Student" "Department of Toad Studies". I'm now thinking about whether or not to list my website.
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