QUOTE(pixie1989 @ Mar 1 2017, 10:59 AM)
I graduated from overseas university and I don't know which uni is better. I don't plan to go overseas for PhD because of scholarship problem. So I think just continue local. Let say I already found good supervisors to do PhD in both universities with research i am interested in. One uni requires me to write thesis in Malay which is a red flag but I love the potential supervisor. While UM is so extraordinaire but i heard lots of students take more than 5 years to complete their PhD. So k can give their opinions. Really appreciate
I think for PhD in Biosciences and if you intended to stay in academy, only publication is important. So whichever lab that work on research that you are interested in and has good publication track record should be good to go (I am not saying just looking at publications, but that's how the academy field work right now). Besides, how's the funding of the potential lab? If the supervisor is not tenured, you might potentially be left hanging once the supervisor contract is not continued.
On a side note, as far as I know, most PhD programmes are funded either by fellowship or the grant from the PIs (at least in Biosciences). Assuming your undergraduate was done in a good standing oversea university (with good grade and lab experiences), I think it should not be a problem to get a PhD position oversea).
Regarding duration, most PhD programmes require ~5 years to be completed (and largely depend on how fast and how lucky you are. Yes, you will need a lot of luck, because even if you are hardworking, your project is shitty or turns out to be not as biological relevant as you hypothesised, there gone your time!). So far I only know Aus/UK/EU phd can be completed within 4 years (For EU, you will need a master for phd,ipso facto, it will be ~ 5 years too).
This post has been edited by Ivangile: Mar 1 2017, 11:24 AM