Hello, I am a Chinese bioinformatics engineer currently working on oncological genomics in China. I have ~2 years of work experience, and my undergraduate was in the US. My personal interests include AI and military robotics, and I would love to work in these fields in the future.
Currently, I am planning on getting a Master’s degree in the US and/or working in AI development there. I am open to any and all recommendations and job/academic offers. My expertise lies in genomic analysis with R, writing papers, and finding/summarizing research, and am open to part-time and remote working opportunities.
Something specific I have questions about is the possibility of starting off as a non-degree remote graduate student and then transitioning to a degree program. Is this a good idea?
Welcome! When I see your username I think of a noodle dish (捞面) - intentional?
Something specific I have questions about is the possibility of starting off as a non-degree remote graduate student and then transitioning to a degree program. Is this a good idea?
You’d be better off asking the administrators at the university in question, but it sounds possible to me, just harder than only getting into the degree program. I don’t think it sounds like a great idea, though I think doing a Master’s in AI is a reasonable idea in general.
Hello, I am a Chinese bioinformatics engineer currently working on oncological genomics in China. I have ~2 years of work experience, and my undergraduate was in the US. My personal interests include AI and military robotics, and I would love to work in these fields in the future.
Currently, I am planning on getting a Master’s degree in the US and/or working in AI development there. I am open to any and all recommendations and job/academic offers. My expertise lies in genomic analysis with R, writing papers, and finding/summarizing research, and am open to part-time and remote working opportunities.
Something specific I have questions about is the possibility of starting off as a non-degree remote graduate student and then transitioning to a degree program. Is this a good idea?
I would expect that given US-China relations, planning to be employed in military robotics in the US is a bad career plan as a Chinese citizen.
Welcome! When I see your username I think of a noodle dish (捞面) - intentional?
You’d be better off asking the administrators at the university in question, but it sounds possible to me, just harder than only getting into the degree program. I don’t think it sounds like a great idea, though I think doing a Master’s in AI is a reasonable idea in general.