ED11E-0877
Graduate Education in a Small Business Environment
Monday, 14 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Edgar A Bering III1, Benjamin Longmier2 and Matthew Giambusso1, (1)University of Houston, Houston, TX, United States, (2)University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI, United States
Abstract:
This paper reports on the issues that confront a professor when supervising graduate students and postdocs whose research work is done on site at a small business. The advantages include relative freedom from having to write proposals; the excitement of working on topics that have clear, direct uses; more extensive engineering support than many students get; and hands on day to day mentoring from the rest of the team. Students get direct instruction in technology transfer and small business processes. The disadvantages include isolation from the rest of the students in your Department and campus life, physical isolation from resources such as the seminar program, library, health center, and other student services. In addition, students who need “introduction to research” practicum instruction in electronics and computer skills will not do well. Finally, care must be taken to avoid including proprietary data in the core argument of the work.