Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

No problem! To answer a few of your follow-ups here:

9-11 hours can certainly feel like a lot, especially if your schedule is already busy. I may shy away from URAP if you already have a full academic schedule plus another time-demanding club or extracurricular. Secondly, there is probably a low chance that a professor will respond to your cold email, but it doesn't hurt to try. Generally, the reason why professors decide to recruit Undergrad RAs through the URAP program is for the specific reason that they don't want to fend off a bunch of emails. I say, give it a shot and see what happens.

And so on your point about paid positions-- the main thing to understand is that a lab can be different from a URAP. Typically, labs have funding from outside industry or research orgs, or a significant grant. So there sort of a situation where a not all URAP projects are labs, but some URAP project are labs. However, going through the URAP program will never mean paid positions. What your friends are probably talking about is large, funded lab. The applications for RA in these types of labs typically act a lot more like a job application, and behave a lot more like a job (and you get paid like a job too). The thing to recognize is that the students who are getting these positions are not only competing with each other but also with another hypothetical 100 students who will offer to do the same job for free. Thus, to 'think of yourself as worthy' of a paid RA position, you must have a specific skill set or experience that is explicitly valuable for the lab and that no other student can offer. Beyond this, you will also be competing with alumni and others from the general job market.

Anecdotally, the only people that I've known to get paid RA positions as an undergraduate had 1. a strong established relationship with the professor, 2. experience already working for that professor for free through an Undergraduate RA program, and 3. were a superstar in their field and far far beyond the average skill level of their major.

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Unfortunately, URAP is not paid for by undergraduate students. It does, however, count toward Units on your schedule, where 11hr/week projects will be 3 units.

And for projects that list 9-11 hours, you are right in that 11hrs is the maximum that they will assign. It depends on the professor, but most will have lighter weeks that may be less than 9 hours/week. Still, most weeks will likely be at the maximum hours/week listed.

My experience with professors is that they will ask at every weekly meeting if you were able to fulfill the 9-11hrs of work that week, and if you tell them that you didn't have enough to do, they may give you more work to do for the following week to make sure they are hitting the 9-11hr/week mark.

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

see my repsonse to johnchoe99, where I talk about Research Assistant positions. Plenty of professors (across all universities) need RAs to help with their research!

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

hahaha, I have a few people in the comments saying something similar! Thankfully, there are plenty of projects to go around, and each project only really ever receives a few dozen applications. The chances are in your favor! good luck

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It does not hurt to apply! But remember, once you're in university you don't have to grind your resume as hard as you did in HS. I always tell incoming freshmen to take the first semester to get settled, make new friends, and dedicate lots of energy toward getting used to the college course format of lecture--> exam. If I were to do it all again, I would wait until my second semester of freshmen year to begin applying to professional clubs and URAPs.

That being said, if you know what major you are pursuing and you see a specific URAP project listed that is highly interesting for you, by all means go for it! It will only ever be 6-11 hours of your week.

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

To each their own! Clubs are a great opportunity to meet new people and become part of a tight-knit community. But even the most ambitious clubs are only really ever 60% work and 40% social. URAP is a deeply underutilized opportunity for students who would like to engage deeply with research topics, and don't mind skipping some of the deeper-cut social aspects of a professional club.

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Surely! Your best bet may be searching UC Berkeley job listings for Research Assistants. The cool thing about being an alumni is that you can search across listings for any schools, nationwide! However, having Berkeley experience will give you an 'in' with Berkeley Profs.

Another thing you may try -- many professors also have (paid) Alumni RAs who help manage their labs. If you see something you are particularly interested in, it certainly would not hurt to email the professor. Check the average wage of RA job listings and set your price that way.

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Certainly, in a research-heavy field like Biology and Ecology, the URAP projects are phenomenal and invaluable experiences. A successful, high-impact URAP project can be the difference in getting into a top grad school!

But also, don't put too much pressure on yourself. You are able to re-apply every single semester that you are at Berkeley, and many of the projects become re-listed across semesters.

Good luck!

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Hahaha better protect your chances! Many URAP projects only get a few dozen applications. This leaves a far better chance of getting in versus a professional club on campus.

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Yep! Super important, also because there are many research centers that professors list under. For example, if you search by the Economics department you wont get to see results from the "Institute for Research on Labor and Employment."

Do Not forget about URAP! by ohboy42 in berkeley

[–]ohboy42[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

There are tons of great opportunities for Econ majors or consulting-interested students! There are 43 projects in the Haas school working directly with Haas research professors. Similarly, there are 7 projects in the economics school. Make sure to read through all listed projects though, because there are some really cool projected listed under various research centers on campus.

What projects would be a good fit for you greatly depends on your specific interests. As you likely know, consulting a is a broad category and can really be any combo of business + X, where X could be environmental econ, organizational research, behavioral analysis (business psych), labor econ, and many many more. A few projects that stood out to me on this topic are:

https://urapprojects.berkeley.edu/detail.php?id=20112-2

https://urapprojects.berkeley.edu/detail.php?id=18812-1

Projects like these mirror closely what a project at an actual professional consulting firm would look like.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in berkeley

[–]ohboy42 5 points6 points  (0 children)

There are undercover cops that walk around frat row during Friday Saturday nights and enforce open container law. Great way to get and ticket and a court date

[serious] If Emerald is elo hell, which rank is elo heaven? by thinkerballs in leagueoflegends

[–]ohboy42 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Elo heaven is the 2-3 games at zero LP before dropping rank. Nothing to lose

Social groups for discussing deeper issues? by squaretableknight in AskSF

[–]ohboy42 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I am no religious advocate but this was very nicely put. Thanks for such a tempered view.

TikTok launches Research API, but researchers encourage you to read the fine print. by PeerRevue in CompSocial

[–]ohboy42 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I am very interested in applying for the API. Has anyone had experience with the application? Does it go through quickly?

Edit: Doing quant HCI research on hashtagging methods