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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Can children come to academic conferences with a parent attendee/presenter? Can children (in particular I’m thinking of older children, like in the 8-13 age range) attend scientific conferences if they have a parent attending and/or presenting there? Is it usually only a viable option when there is no other place for the child to go during the event, e.g. for single parents unable or unwilling to leave the kid outside of the event or their presentations? If they can come with, are they limited to certain places and parts of the event, such as specific childcare areas on-site? Or can they be part of the audience at panels and such and essentially accompany their parent as an attendee? In short: what would the experience for a child attending a conference with their researcher parent be like? | 96b84b1e0db685dfd5897a7c5eacc8419146a842fee0d762df341a5505b94142 | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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Opportunities after completing physics PhD in your 40s I think I've read nearly every post about starting towards a PhD later in life, but haven't found my particular questions answered. **My questions are**: - What paths are possible to move from a lower ranked school in undergrad to a higher ranked school for a grad program? - If you finish a PhD in your mid-40s, can you expect to be able to work with interesting research organizations, such as NASA, Fermilab, US Antarctic Program, CERN, JAXA, etc? Especially if you complete your PhD in a non-Top-20 university? **Context (to get a jump on the most common questions asked of OP I see in these types of threads)**: - I'm 33, planning to go back to undergrad in about 2 years to finish a BS in physics & math (I'll likely take the full 4 years, just to be thorough) and, ideally, move on to a PhD with a goal of working in public research. - US citizen living in California (but with residency in New York), but have lived abroad long term and happy (eager is more like it, tbh) to do it again. - My wife and I have no children, and will never have children. - My wife and I are comfortable with the lifestyle we can expect with me as a 40-something student. - The tedium/politics/long-hours/etc of academics doesn't faze me. - My current career is virtually non-existent, and has no relation to STEM. - I have no interest in using my current skills to go into a field tangential to research, like science journalism, science policy, etc - I've checked my math skills and they're the same as always—definitely above average, but not brilliant (and I've worked out a 2 year plan to improve these skills). - As for where I'm likely to get accepted for my undergrad, I don't expect to be able to go to a Top-20. Maybe a Top-50? Yes, I have the deep passion to pursue this, but I also don't want to end up >$150k in debt only to discover at the end of things that I won't be able to actually go beyond the degree in a way that's meaningful to me. That said, I have no illusions about working on the next world-changing thing. I just want to at least be some cog in the public science machine. | 834c558fb0cafc6256084538b106327d7bf4fd1cb6889b971aee291cb3071acc | [
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