Ooh, now I'm really nervous. XD; No, I'm sure everything will be fine. (Well, as long as I manage to stay away from the revisionists. ;)) For graduate studies it will probably make more sense for me to try to study at the IHRF if possible, but I suppose I'll cross that bridge when I come to it. And I would definitely never choose a revisionist to supervise my thesis. I'm not that masochistic. XD;;
I am sure you'll do very well (and choose a suitable person to supervise you). I'd be great if you could do the Ph.D. at the IHRF, I did not know it was officially possible.
Yes, that was what I thought. That the PhD is in the framework of another, broader institution. Great. Moreover, as you said CUPA does not include that university, it will benefit you not to have the licence and the Ph.D at the same university. It will give you points for scholarships.
It's the so-called "mobility". It means that in order to prevent academic endogamy, students are encouraged to move and are given points for it in the application for some scholarships and for jobs, later. There are even some scholarships tham require it as a condition sine qua non.
I think so. And what really matters is the place you get your PhD from, not the licence. There you'll establish closest contacts and useful networks. So it's better to save the best for that time.
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For graduate studies it will probably make more sense for me to try to study at the IHRF if possible, but I suppose I'll cross that bridge when I come to it. And I would definitely never choose a revisionist to supervise my thesis. I'm not that masochistic. XD;;
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