Is it inappropriate for a student to attend their mentor's dissertation defense? Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?Number of slides for 45 minute defense presentationIs it ethical for an instructor to “hack” my system as part of the evaluation for my thesis defense?Why did my advisor criticize my work for the first time at my Master's Thesis defense?How important is the thesis document for judges on the day of the thesis defense?Having a co-author as an external examiner for doctoral thesis defenseWhat questions to prepare for PhD defense?What are the restrictions placed by copyright laws on reuse of figures in dissertation defense?What are the common mistakes PhD candidates make in their final defense session?How soon to send dissertation to committee before defense?Tips for being a good jury member for Master's defense

Why wasn't DOSKEY integrated with COMMAND.COM?

Do wooden building fires get hotter than 600°C?

How to tell that you are a giant?

Withdrew £2800, but only £2000 shows as withdrawn on online banking; what are my obligations?

Does lack of seasonality imply random time series?

Is it fair for a professor to grade us on the possession of past papers?

Why does it sometimes sound good to play a grace note as a lead in to a note in a melody?

Would "destroying" Wurmcoil Engine prevent its tokens from being created?

How to Make a Beautiful Stacked 3D Plot

Chinese Seal on silk painting - what does it mean?

How do I use the new nonlinear finite element in Mathematica 12 for this equation?

Has negative voting ever been officially implemented in elections, or seriously proposed, or even studied?

Dating a Former Employee

What do you call the main part of a joke?

Fundamental Solution of the Pell Equation

Drawing without replacement: why the order of draw is irrelevant?

Is it ethical to give a final exam after the professor has quit before teaching the remaining chapters of the course?

How to write the following sign?

What is the meaning of the simile “quick as silk”?

Is this homebrew Lady of Pain warlock patron balanced?

Crossing US/Canada Border for less than 24 hours

What is GELU activation?

Why do we bend a book to keep it straight?

How to write this math term? with cases it isn't working



Is it inappropriate for a student to attend their mentor's dissertation defense?



Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)
Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?Number of slides for 45 minute defense presentationIs it ethical for an instructor to “hack” my system as part of the evaluation for my thesis defense?Why did my advisor criticize my work for the first time at my Master's Thesis defense?How important is the thesis document for judges on the day of the thesis defense?Having a co-author as an external examiner for doctoral thesis defenseWhat questions to prepare for PhD defense?What are the restrictions placed by copyright laws on reuse of figures in dissertation defense?What are the common mistakes PhD candidates make in their final defense session?How soon to send dissertation to committee before defense?Tips for being a good jury member for Master's defense










61















I'm an undergraduate student at a research one university. My former instructor and current research mentor is defending their dissertation soon. I asked if I could attend and they said they would be fine with it.



My primary interest in doing so is to see how the defense process works for when I attend graduate school. I am also just genuinely interested in supporting them since we both research the same material and they've been incredibly encouraging and helpful to me.



I know defenses are open to the public, but, in your opinion, would a student attending your defense add more stress or disrupt the process? I just want to make sure I'm not making anything more difficult for them or overstepping a boundary, even though they say they are totally okay with me attending.










share|improve this question



















  • 5





    A country tag might be appropriate. Some countries do not have public thesis defenses, for example, and in some places the defense happens in several parts with different assumptions about attendance.

    – Tommi Brander
    Apr 3 at 7:19











  • Discussions about the definition of professor as well as answers in comments have been moved to chat. Please read this FAQ before posting another comment.

    – Wrzlprmft
    Apr 5 at 10:11












  • Go! Four of my friends flew nearly 700 miles to attend my defense. I was really happy to see friendly faces in the room, and they took me out to a memorable dinner afterwards. (You don't need to do the dinner, though.)

    – Bob Brown
    Apr 5 at 23:34















61















I'm an undergraduate student at a research one university. My former instructor and current research mentor is defending their dissertation soon. I asked if I could attend and they said they would be fine with it.



My primary interest in doing so is to see how the defense process works for when I attend graduate school. I am also just genuinely interested in supporting them since we both research the same material and they've been incredibly encouraging and helpful to me.



I know defenses are open to the public, but, in your opinion, would a student attending your defense add more stress or disrupt the process? I just want to make sure I'm not making anything more difficult for them or overstepping a boundary, even though they say they are totally okay with me attending.










share|improve this question



















  • 5





    A country tag might be appropriate. Some countries do not have public thesis defenses, for example, and in some places the defense happens in several parts with different assumptions about attendance.

    – Tommi Brander
    Apr 3 at 7:19











  • Discussions about the definition of professor as well as answers in comments have been moved to chat. Please read this FAQ before posting another comment.

    – Wrzlprmft
    Apr 5 at 10:11












  • Go! Four of my friends flew nearly 700 miles to attend my defense. I was really happy to see friendly faces in the room, and they took me out to a memorable dinner afterwards. (You don't need to do the dinner, though.)

    – Bob Brown
    Apr 5 at 23:34













61












61








61


5






I'm an undergraduate student at a research one university. My former instructor and current research mentor is defending their dissertation soon. I asked if I could attend and they said they would be fine with it.



My primary interest in doing so is to see how the defense process works for when I attend graduate school. I am also just genuinely interested in supporting them since we both research the same material and they've been incredibly encouraging and helpful to me.



I know defenses are open to the public, but, in your opinion, would a student attending your defense add more stress or disrupt the process? I just want to make sure I'm not making anything more difficult for them or overstepping a boundary, even though they say they are totally okay with me attending.










share|improve this question
















I'm an undergraduate student at a research one university. My former instructor and current research mentor is defending their dissertation soon. I asked if I could attend and they said they would be fine with it.



My primary interest in doing so is to see how the defense process works for when I attend graduate school. I am also just genuinely interested in supporting them since we both research the same material and they've been incredibly encouraging and helpful to me.



I know defenses are open to the public, but, in your opinion, would a student attending your defense add more stress or disrupt the process? I just want to make sure I'm not making anything more difficult for them or overstepping a boundary, even though they say they are totally okay with me attending.







thesis students defense






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Apr 3 at 2:58









cag51

18.7k93970




18.7k93970










asked Apr 3 at 2:53









NicoleNicole

312123




312123







  • 5





    A country tag might be appropriate. Some countries do not have public thesis defenses, for example, and in some places the defense happens in several parts with different assumptions about attendance.

    – Tommi Brander
    Apr 3 at 7:19











  • Discussions about the definition of professor as well as answers in comments have been moved to chat. Please read this FAQ before posting another comment.

    – Wrzlprmft
    Apr 5 at 10:11












  • Go! Four of my friends flew nearly 700 miles to attend my defense. I was really happy to see friendly faces in the room, and they took me out to a memorable dinner afterwards. (You don't need to do the dinner, though.)

    – Bob Brown
    Apr 5 at 23:34












  • 5





    A country tag might be appropriate. Some countries do not have public thesis defenses, for example, and in some places the defense happens in several parts with different assumptions about attendance.

    – Tommi Brander
    Apr 3 at 7:19











  • Discussions about the definition of professor as well as answers in comments have been moved to chat. Please read this FAQ before posting another comment.

    – Wrzlprmft
    Apr 5 at 10:11












  • Go! Four of my friends flew nearly 700 miles to attend my defense. I was really happy to see friendly faces in the room, and they took me out to a memorable dinner afterwards. (You don't need to do the dinner, though.)

    – Bob Brown
    Apr 5 at 23:34







5




5





A country tag might be appropriate. Some countries do not have public thesis defenses, for example, and in some places the defense happens in several parts with different assumptions about attendance.

– Tommi Brander
Apr 3 at 7:19





A country tag might be appropriate. Some countries do not have public thesis defenses, for example, and in some places the defense happens in several parts with different assumptions about attendance.

– Tommi Brander
Apr 3 at 7:19













Discussions about the definition of professor as well as answers in comments have been moved to chat. Please read this FAQ before posting another comment.

– Wrzlprmft
Apr 5 at 10:11






Discussions about the definition of professor as well as answers in comments have been moved to chat. Please read this FAQ before posting another comment.

– Wrzlprmft
Apr 5 at 10:11














Go! Four of my friends flew nearly 700 miles to attend my defense. I was really happy to see friendly faces in the room, and they took me out to a memorable dinner afterwards. (You don't need to do the dinner, though.)

– Bob Brown
Apr 5 at 23:34





Go! Four of my friends flew nearly 700 miles to attend my defense. I was really happy to see friendly faces in the room, and they took me out to a memorable dinner afterwards. (You don't need to do the dinner, though.)

– Bob Brown
Apr 5 at 23:34










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















136














It's fine. As you say, these are open to the public, and it's common for family members, department members, and friends to attend. Since you perhaps are not "firmly" in any of these categories, asking whether it's okay to attend is probably a good idea -- but you've already done this and been given the green light. Enjoy.






share|improve this answer


















  • 69





    I would actually have been more offended if the student I was tutoring did not attend the defense.

    – Bernhard
    Apr 3 at 6:00






  • 24





    This answer really sums it up, the only thing I would add to it is that the OP even asked if it's ok to attend. At this point it would be almost inexcusable to not show up.

    – posdef
    Apr 3 at 7:32


















106














I think @cag51's answer ("it's fine") is actually a bit too mild. Please go if you can!



Attitudes towards thesis defenses seem to vary a bit from program to program. My PhD program had a pretty strong (but informal) expectation that people would attend defenses, especially if they a) worked together b) worked in the same sub-field, or c) were friendly. That expectation is weaker in my current department: students do go, but it's acceptable to skip defenses due to non-specific 'busyness' too.



On a more personal note, the final stages of grad school are often lonely and miserable, or at least it was for me. It was therefore incredibly touching to have people turn up for the defense: the room was packed with friends, family, collaborators, and even a few new people who were inexplicably interested in my work. To the extent that your presence triggers an emotion, I think it's much more likely to be gratitude and pride ("Awww, she came!") than stress or confusion ("What's she doing here?!").



Plus, there might be some free food afterward!






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    Re: loneliness and stress.. What you say is on point, although how people react to that varies, to say the least. My gf didn't want me to attend her thesis, specifically saying that my presence there would stress her even more.. Re: free food - for us there is usually a reception with bubbles, food and beer... so that's always a plus :P

    – posdef
    Apr 3 at 7:31






  • 9





    Re: free food afterwards. It is quite common at my university to have a small snack and a drink right after the defense with your commitee and all the guests, and often you have even more snacks and drinks with your guests, after the commitee left. Essentially, after the defense is over you have a party of sorts.

    – Dohn Joe
    Apr 3 at 8:59






  • 1





    +1, and agree that it varies...perhaps I was too mild because we never ever had more than ~10 people show up to a defense, and for my defense, there was only the committee and one student (even I didn't show up! [was on the phone from thousands of miles away]). I can imagine such a situation being uncomfortable for an undergrad

    – cag51
    Apr 4 at 1:16






  • 5





    +1 for free food!

    – Jakub Konieczny
    Apr 4 at 9:01






  • 1





    Echoing praise for paragraph 3. That's how I felt about it. It helped quite a bit.

    – Randall
    Apr 5 at 1:16


















11














In the similar situations I know (habilitation kind of dissertations) it will be seen bizarre if you are not there, both on scientific as well as human relationship point of views.






share|improve this answer






























    2














    This is a normal thing to do. I was in a similar position and will be attending my mentor's dissertation in May. It's nice to give back to someone who has helped you out a lot by supporting them during a very challenging experience. Just make sure he's okay with it. He will probably be very encouraged!






    share|improve this answer






























      1














      It's fine, I have walked into stressful defence-type lectures which one of my teachers was teaching. I don't mean to put the person off, but it's standard and you have to get used to it. When I first started teaching even though I was nervous I invited my friend to sit in on one of my lectures as it's something you have to get used to. Anyone can walk in there, you could be giving a stressful lecture one day and a family member you haven't seen for ages will randomly walk in and sit down to watch.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 5





        It's not about teaching

        – George M
        Apr 3 at 20:49






      • 2





        @GeorgeM : No, but it is a similar situation

        – MPW
        Apr 3 at 20:55






      • 8





        Not at all, but whatever..

        – George M
        Apr 3 at 20:56











      Your Answer








      StackExchange.ready(function()
      var channelOptions =
      tags: "".split(" "),
      id: "415"
      ;
      initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

      StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
      // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
      if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
      StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
      createEditor();
      );

      else
      createEditor();

      );

      function createEditor()
      StackExchange.prepareEditor(
      heartbeatType: 'answer',
      autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
      convertImagesToLinks: true,
      noModals: true,
      showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
      reputationToPostImages: 10,
      bindNavPrevention: true,
      postfix: "",
      imageUploader:
      brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
      contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
      allowUrls: true
      ,
      noCode: true, onDemand: true,
      discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
      ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
      );



      );













      draft saved

      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function ()
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f127430%2fis-it-inappropriate-for-a-student-to-attend-their-mentors-dissertation-defense%23new-answer', 'question_page');

      );

      Post as a guest















      Required, but never shown

























      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes








      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      136














      It's fine. As you say, these are open to the public, and it's common for family members, department members, and friends to attend. Since you perhaps are not "firmly" in any of these categories, asking whether it's okay to attend is probably a good idea -- but you've already done this and been given the green light. Enjoy.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 69





        I would actually have been more offended if the student I was tutoring did not attend the defense.

        – Bernhard
        Apr 3 at 6:00






      • 24





        This answer really sums it up, the only thing I would add to it is that the OP even asked if it's ok to attend. At this point it would be almost inexcusable to not show up.

        – posdef
        Apr 3 at 7:32















      136














      It's fine. As you say, these are open to the public, and it's common for family members, department members, and friends to attend. Since you perhaps are not "firmly" in any of these categories, asking whether it's okay to attend is probably a good idea -- but you've already done this and been given the green light. Enjoy.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 69





        I would actually have been more offended if the student I was tutoring did not attend the defense.

        – Bernhard
        Apr 3 at 6:00






      • 24





        This answer really sums it up, the only thing I would add to it is that the OP even asked if it's ok to attend. At this point it would be almost inexcusable to not show up.

        – posdef
        Apr 3 at 7:32













      136












      136








      136







      It's fine. As you say, these are open to the public, and it's common for family members, department members, and friends to attend. Since you perhaps are not "firmly" in any of these categories, asking whether it's okay to attend is probably a good idea -- but you've already done this and been given the green light. Enjoy.






      share|improve this answer













      It's fine. As you say, these are open to the public, and it's common for family members, department members, and friends to attend. Since you perhaps are not "firmly" in any of these categories, asking whether it's okay to attend is probably a good idea -- but you've already done this and been given the green light. Enjoy.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Apr 3 at 3:02









      cag51cag51

      18.7k93970




      18.7k93970







      • 69





        I would actually have been more offended if the student I was tutoring did not attend the defense.

        – Bernhard
        Apr 3 at 6:00






      • 24





        This answer really sums it up, the only thing I would add to it is that the OP even asked if it's ok to attend. At this point it would be almost inexcusable to not show up.

        – posdef
        Apr 3 at 7:32












      • 69





        I would actually have been more offended if the student I was tutoring did not attend the defense.

        – Bernhard
        Apr 3 at 6:00






      • 24





        This answer really sums it up, the only thing I would add to it is that the OP even asked if it's ok to attend. At this point it would be almost inexcusable to not show up.

        – posdef
        Apr 3 at 7:32







      69




      69





      I would actually have been more offended if the student I was tutoring did not attend the defense.

      – Bernhard
      Apr 3 at 6:00





      I would actually have been more offended if the student I was tutoring did not attend the defense.

      – Bernhard
      Apr 3 at 6:00




      24




      24





      This answer really sums it up, the only thing I would add to it is that the OP even asked if it's ok to attend. At this point it would be almost inexcusable to not show up.

      – posdef
      Apr 3 at 7:32





      This answer really sums it up, the only thing I would add to it is that the OP even asked if it's ok to attend. At this point it would be almost inexcusable to not show up.

      – posdef
      Apr 3 at 7:32











      106














      I think @cag51's answer ("it's fine") is actually a bit too mild. Please go if you can!



      Attitudes towards thesis defenses seem to vary a bit from program to program. My PhD program had a pretty strong (but informal) expectation that people would attend defenses, especially if they a) worked together b) worked in the same sub-field, or c) were friendly. That expectation is weaker in my current department: students do go, but it's acceptable to skip defenses due to non-specific 'busyness' too.



      On a more personal note, the final stages of grad school are often lonely and miserable, or at least it was for me. It was therefore incredibly touching to have people turn up for the defense: the room was packed with friends, family, collaborators, and even a few new people who were inexplicably interested in my work. To the extent that your presence triggers an emotion, I think it's much more likely to be gratitude and pride ("Awww, she came!") than stress or confusion ("What's she doing here?!").



      Plus, there might be some free food afterward!






      share|improve this answer




















      • 2





        Re: loneliness and stress.. What you say is on point, although how people react to that varies, to say the least. My gf didn't want me to attend her thesis, specifically saying that my presence there would stress her even more.. Re: free food - for us there is usually a reception with bubbles, food and beer... so that's always a plus :P

        – posdef
        Apr 3 at 7:31






      • 9





        Re: free food afterwards. It is quite common at my university to have a small snack and a drink right after the defense with your commitee and all the guests, and often you have even more snacks and drinks with your guests, after the commitee left. Essentially, after the defense is over you have a party of sorts.

        – Dohn Joe
        Apr 3 at 8:59






      • 1





        +1, and agree that it varies...perhaps I was too mild because we never ever had more than ~10 people show up to a defense, and for my defense, there was only the committee and one student (even I didn't show up! [was on the phone from thousands of miles away]). I can imagine such a situation being uncomfortable for an undergrad

        – cag51
        Apr 4 at 1:16






      • 5





        +1 for free food!

        – Jakub Konieczny
        Apr 4 at 9:01






      • 1





        Echoing praise for paragraph 3. That's how I felt about it. It helped quite a bit.

        – Randall
        Apr 5 at 1:16















      106














      I think @cag51's answer ("it's fine") is actually a bit too mild. Please go if you can!



      Attitudes towards thesis defenses seem to vary a bit from program to program. My PhD program had a pretty strong (but informal) expectation that people would attend defenses, especially if they a) worked together b) worked in the same sub-field, or c) were friendly. That expectation is weaker in my current department: students do go, but it's acceptable to skip defenses due to non-specific 'busyness' too.



      On a more personal note, the final stages of grad school are often lonely and miserable, or at least it was for me. It was therefore incredibly touching to have people turn up for the defense: the room was packed with friends, family, collaborators, and even a few new people who were inexplicably interested in my work. To the extent that your presence triggers an emotion, I think it's much more likely to be gratitude and pride ("Awww, she came!") than stress or confusion ("What's she doing here?!").



      Plus, there might be some free food afterward!






      share|improve this answer




















      • 2





        Re: loneliness and stress.. What you say is on point, although how people react to that varies, to say the least. My gf didn't want me to attend her thesis, specifically saying that my presence there would stress her even more.. Re: free food - for us there is usually a reception with bubbles, food and beer... so that's always a plus :P

        – posdef
        Apr 3 at 7:31






      • 9





        Re: free food afterwards. It is quite common at my university to have a small snack and a drink right after the defense with your commitee and all the guests, and often you have even more snacks and drinks with your guests, after the commitee left. Essentially, after the defense is over you have a party of sorts.

        – Dohn Joe
        Apr 3 at 8:59






      • 1





        +1, and agree that it varies...perhaps I was too mild because we never ever had more than ~10 people show up to a defense, and for my defense, there was only the committee and one student (even I didn't show up! [was on the phone from thousands of miles away]). I can imagine such a situation being uncomfortable for an undergrad

        – cag51
        Apr 4 at 1:16






      • 5





        +1 for free food!

        – Jakub Konieczny
        Apr 4 at 9:01






      • 1





        Echoing praise for paragraph 3. That's how I felt about it. It helped quite a bit.

        – Randall
        Apr 5 at 1:16













      106












      106








      106







      I think @cag51's answer ("it's fine") is actually a bit too mild. Please go if you can!



      Attitudes towards thesis defenses seem to vary a bit from program to program. My PhD program had a pretty strong (but informal) expectation that people would attend defenses, especially if they a) worked together b) worked in the same sub-field, or c) were friendly. That expectation is weaker in my current department: students do go, but it's acceptable to skip defenses due to non-specific 'busyness' too.



      On a more personal note, the final stages of grad school are often lonely and miserable, or at least it was for me. It was therefore incredibly touching to have people turn up for the defense: the room was packed with friends, family, collaborators, and even a few new people who were inexplicably interested in my work. To the extent that your presence triggers an emotion, I think it's much more likely to be gratitude and pride ("Awww, she came!") than stress or confusion ("What's she doing here?!").



      Plus, there might be some free food afterward!






      share|improve this answer















      I think @cag51's answer ("it's fine") is actually a bit too mild. Please go if you can!



      Attitudes towards thesis defenses seem to vary a bit from program to program. My PhD program had a pretty strong (but informal) expectation that people would attend defenses, especially if they a) worked together b) worked in the same sub-field, or c) were friendly. That expectation is weaker in my current department: students do go, but it's acceptable to skip defenses due to non-specific 'busyness' too.



      On a more personal note, the final stages of grad school are often lonely and miserable, or at least it was for me. It was therefore incredibly touching to have people turn up for the defense: the room was packed with friends, family, collaborators, and even a few new people who were inexplicably interested in my work. To the extent that your presence triggers an emotion, I think it's much more likely to be gratitude and pride ("Awww, she came!") than stress or confusion ("What's she doing here?!").



      Plus, there might be some free food afterward!







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited Apr 3 at 7:20

























      answered Apr 3 at 7:11









      MattMatt

      1,94711014




      1,94711014







      • 2





        Re: loneliness and stress.. What you say is on point, although how people react to that varies, to say the least. My gf didn't want me to attend her thesis, specifically saying that my presence there would stress her even more.. Re: free food - for us there is usually a reception with bubbles, food and beer... so that's always a plus :P

        – posdef
        Apr 3 at 7:31






      • 9





        Re: free food afterwards. It is quite common at my university to have a small snack and a drink right after the defense with your commitee and all the guests, and often you have even more snacks and drinks with your guests, after the commitee left. Essentially, after the defense is over you have a party of sorts.

        – Dohn Joe
        Apr 3 at 8:59






      • 1





        +1, and agree that it varies...perhaps I was too mild because we never ever had more than ~10 people show up to a defense, and for my defense, there was only the committee and one student (even I didn't show up! [was on the phone from thousands of miles away]). I can imagine such a situation being uncomfortable for an undergrad

        – cag51
        Apr 4 at 1:16






      • 5





        +1 for free food!

        – Jakub Konieczny
        Apr 4 at 9:01






      • 1





        Echoing praise for paragraph 3. That's how I felt about it. It helped quite a bit.

        – Randall
        Apr 5 at 1:16












      • 2





        Re: loneliness and stress.. What you say is on point, although how people react to that varies, to say the least. My gf didn't want me to attend her thesis, specifically saying that my presence there would stress her even more.. Re: free food - for us there is usually a reception with bubbles, food and beer... so that's always a plus :P

        – posdef
        Apr 3 at 7:31






      • 9





        Re: free food afterwards. It is quite common at my university to have a small snack and a drink right after the defense with your commitee and all the guests, and often you have even more snacks and drinks with your guests, after the commitee left. Essentially, after the defense is over you have a party of sorts.

        – Dohn Joe
        Apr 3 at 8:59






      • 1





        +1, and agree that it varies...perhaps I was too mild because we never ever had more than ~10 people show up to a defense, and for my defense, there was only the committee and one student (even I didn't show up! [was on the phone from thousands of miles away]). I can imagine such a situation being uncomfortable for an undergrad

        – cag51
        Apr 4 at 1:16






      • 5





        +1 for free food!

        – Jakub Konieczny
        Apr 4 at 9:01






      • 1





        Echoing praise for paragraph 3. That's how I felt about it. It helped quite a bit.

        – Randall
        Apr 5 at 1:16







      2




      2





      Re: loneliness and stress.. What you say is on point, although how people react to that varies, to say the least. My gf didn't want me to attend her thesis, specifically saying that my presence there would stress her even more.. Re: free food - for us there is usually a reception with bubbles, food and beer... so that's always a plus :P

      – posdef
      Apr 3 at 7:31





      Re: loneliness and stress.. What you say is on point, although how people react to that varies, to say the least. My gf didn't want me to attend her thesis, specifically saying that my presence there would stress her even more.. Re: free food - for us there is usually a reception with bubbles, food and beer... so that's always a plus :P

      – posdef
      Apr 3 at 7:31




      9




      9





      Re: free food afterwards. It is quite common at my university to have a small snack and a drink right after the defense with your commitee and all the guests, and often you have even more snacks and drinks with your guests, after the commitee left. Essentially, after the defense is over you have a party of sorts.

      – Dohn Joe
      Apr 3 at 8:59





      Re: free food afterwards. It is quite common at my university to have a small snack and a drink right after the defense with your commitee and all the guests, and often you have even more snacks and drinks with your guests, after the commitee left. Essentially, after the defense is over you have a party of sorts.

      – Dohn Joe
      Apr 3 at 8:59




      1




      1





      +1, and agree that it varies...perhaps I was too mild because we never ever had more than ~10 people show up to a defense, and for my defense, there was only the committee and one student (even I didn't show up! [was on the phone from thousands of miles away]). I can imagine such a situation being uncomfortable for an undergrad

      – cag51
      Apr 4 at 1:16





      +1, and agree that it varies...perhaps I was too mild because we never ever had more than ~10 people show up to a defense, and for my defense, there was only the committee and one student (even I didn't show up! [was on the phone from thousands of miles away]). I can imagine such a situation being uncomfortable for an undergrad

      – cag51
      Apr 4 at 1:16




      5




      5





      +1 for free food!

      – Jakub Konieczny
      Apr 4 at 9:01





      +1 for free food!

      – Jakub Konieczny
      Apr 4 at 9:01




      1




      1





      Echoing praise for paragraph 3. That's how I felt about it. It helped quite a bit.

      – Randall
      Apr 5 at 1:16





      Echoing praise for paragraph 3. That's how I felt about it. It helped quite a bit.

      – Randall
      Apr 5 at 1:16











      11














      In the similar situations I know (habilitation kind of dissertations) it will be seen bizarre if you are not there, both on scientific as well as human relationship point of views.






      share|improve this answer



























        11














        In the similar situations I know (habilitation kind of dissertations) it will be seen bizarre if you are not there, both on scientific as well as human relationship point of views.






        share|improve this answer

























          11












          11








          11







          In the similar situations I know (habilitation kind of dissertations) it will be seen bizarre if you are not there, both on scientific as well as human relationship point of views.






          share|improve this answer













          In the similar situations I know (habilitation kind of dissertations) it will be seen bizarre if you are not there, both on scientific as well as human relationship point of views.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Apr 3 at 10:41









          AlchimistaAlchimista

          44737




          44737





















              2














              This is a normal thing to do. I was in a similar position and will be attending my mentor's dissertation in May. It's nice to give back to someone who has helped you out a lot by supporting them during a very challenging experience. Just make sure he's okay with it. He will probably be very encouraged!






              share|improve this answer



























                2














                This is a normal thing to do. I was in a similar position and will be attending my mentor's dissertation in May. It's nice to give back to someone who has helped you out a lot by supporting them during a very challenging experience. Just make sure he's okay with it. He will probably be very encouraged!






                share|improve this answer

























                  2












                  2








                  2







                  This is a normal thing to do. I was in a similar position and will be attending my mentor's dissertation in May. It's nice to give back to someone who has helped you out a lot by supporting them during a very challenging experience. Just make sure he's okay with it. He will probably be very encouraged!






                  share|improve this answer













                  This is a normal thing to do. I was in a similar position and will be attending my mentor's dissertation in May. It's nice to give back to someone who has helped you out a lot by supporting them during a very challenging experience. Just make sure he's okay with it. He will probably be very encouraged!







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Apr 5 at 14:11









                  ribs2spareribs2spare

                  211




                  211





















                      1














                      It's fine, I have walked into stressful defence-type lectures which one of my teachers was teaching. I don't mean to put the person off, but it's standard and you have to get used to it. When I first started teaching even though I was nervous I invited my friend to sit in on one of my lectures as it's something you have to get used to. Anyone can walk in there, you could be giving a stressful lecture one day and a family member you haven't seen for ages will randomly walk in and sit down to watch.






                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 5





                        It's not about teaching

                        – George M
                        Apr 3 at 20:49






                      • 2





                        @GeorgeM : No, but it is a similar situation

                        – MPW
                        Apr 3 at 20:55






                      • 8





                        Not at all, but whatever..

                        – George M
                        Apr 3 at 20:56















                      1














                      It's fine, I have walked into stressful defence-type lectures which one of my teachers was teaching. I don't mean to put the person off, but it's standard and you have to get used to it. When I first started teaching even though I was nervous I invited my friend to sit in on one of my lectures as it's something you have to get used to. Anyone can walk in there, you could be giving a stressful lecture one day and a family member you haven't seen for ages will randomly walk in and sit down to watch.






                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 5





                        It's not about teaching

                        – George M
                        Apr 3 at 20:49






                      • 2





                        @GeorgeM : No, but it is a similar situation

                        – MPW
                        Apr 3 at 20:55






                      • 8





                        Not at all, but whatever..

                        – George M
                        Apr 3 at 20:56













                      1












                      1








                      1







                      It's fine, I have walked into stressful defence-type lectures which one of my teachers was teaching. I don't mean to put the person off, but it's standard and you have to get used to it. When I first started teaching even though I was nervous I invited my friend to sit in on one of my lectures as it's something you have to get used to. Anyone can walk in there, you could be giving a stressful lecture one day and a family member you haven't seen for ages will randomly walk in and sit down to watch.






                      share|improve this answer













                      It's fine, I have walked into stressful defence-type lectures which one of my teachers was teaching. I don't mean to put the person off, but it's standard and you have to get used to it. When I first started teaching even though I was nervous I invited my friend to sit in on one of my lectures as it's something you have to get used to. Anyone can walk in there, you could be giving a stressful lecture one day and a family member you haven't seen for ages will randomly walk in and sit down to watch.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered Apr 3 at 10:42









                      TomTom

                      3466




                      3466







                      • 5





                        It's not about teaching

                        – George M
                        Apr 3 at 20:49






                      • 2





                        @GeorgeM : No, but it is a similar situation

                        – MPW
                        Apr 3 at 20:55






                      • 8





                        Not at all, but whatever..

                        – George M
                        Apr 3 at 20:56












                      • 5





                        It's not about teaching

                        – George M
                        Apr 3 at 20:49






                      • 2





                        @GeorgeM : No, but it is a similar situation

                        – MPW
                        Apr 3 at 20:55






                      • 8





                        Not at all, but whatever..

                        – George M
                        Apr 3 at 20:56







                      5




                      5





                      It's not about teaching

                      – George M
                      Apr 3 at 20:49





                      It's not about teaching

                      – George M
                      Apr 3 at 20:49




                      2




                      2





                      @GeorgeM : No, but it is a similar situation

                      – MPW
                      Apr 3 at 20:55





                      @GeorgeM : No, but it is a similar situation

                      – MPW
                      Apr 3 at 20:55




                      8




                      8





                      Not at all, but whatever..

                      – George M
                      Apr 3 at 20:56





                      Not at all, but whatever..

                      – George M
                      Apr 3 at 20:56

















                      draft saved

                      draft discarded
















































                      Thanks for contributing an answer to Academia Stack Exchange!


                      • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                      But avoid


                      • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                      • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                      To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function ()
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2facademia.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f127430%2fis-it-inappropriate-for-a-student-to-attend-their-mentors-dissertation-defense%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                      );

                      Post as a guest















                      Required, but never shown





















































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown

































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown







                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Adding axes to figuresAdding axes labels to LaTeX figuresLaTeX equivalent of ConTeXt buffersRotate a node but not its content: the case of the ellipse decorationHow to define the default vertical distance between nodes?TikZ scaling graphic and adjust node position and keep font sizeNumerical conditional within tikz keys?adding axes to shapesAlign axes across subfiguresAdding figures with a certain orderLine up nested tikz enviroments or how to get rid of themAdding axes labels to LaTeX figures

                      Tähtien Talli Jäsenet | Lähteet | NavigointivalikkoSuomen Hippos – Tähtien Talli

                      Do these cracks on my tires look bad? The Next CEO of Stack OverflowDry rot tire should I replace?Having to replace tiresFishtailed so easily? Bad tires? ABS?Filling the tires with something other than air, to avoid puncture hassles?Used Michelin tires safe to install?Do these tyre cracks necessitate replacement?Rumbling noise: tires or mechanicalIs it possible to fix noisy feathered tires?Are bad winter tires still better than summer tires in winter?Torque converter failure - Related to replacing only 2 tires?Why use snow tires on all 4 wheels on 2-wheel-drive cars?