25

I will be attending my first computer science conference and after reading the advice for how to improve conferences I noticed the several suggestions were about grad students attending their first conference.

What advice do you have for a grad student attending his first conference and what should his focus be.

Juan Besa
  • 384
  • 2
  • 6

2 Answers2

29
  1. Talk to people, even if they are scary big names.
  2. Attend all the keynote/invited presentations.
  3. Attend the talks most relevant to you.
  4. Don't be afraid to ask questions.
  5. Attend the social events, meet other graduate students, have fun.
  6. Talk enthusiastically about your research.
    Make sure you have a 1 minute pitch describing your work, plus a 5 minute description, and also be prepared to enter into a more detailed discussion.
  7. Ask people about their research.
    Simply asking what are you working on? will get the conversation started.
  8. Be open to possible collaborations, and follow up after the conference.
Dave Clarke
  • 16,666
  • 3
  • 60
  • 106
  • 4
  • is sound advice, but on the other hand, visibly trying hard to impress senior people in your field would seem somewhat lame (at least to me), so don't be too serious about that.
  • – Marcin Kotowski Nov 24 '11 at 18:32
  • 6
    I think you are unwittingly combining 1 and 6. You need to be able to talk about your research, otherwise you'll come across as foolish, regardless of who you are talking too. – Dave Clarke Nov 24 '11 at 19:03
  • I agree with everything except number 3. I discovered early on that I simply cannot absorb anything from more than about 10 talks per day; your mileage may vary. The conversations in the hallways (see "social events") are more important than the talks; you can always read the papers later (or in many cases, earlier). – Jeffε Nov 25 '11 at 15:53
  • 1
    I adapted number 3. (It previously said "Attend most talks.") – Dave Clarke Nov 25 '11 at 16:12