ความคิดเห็นที่ 10
When I (around 24 years of age) was in a graduate school (not in engineering field) in Thailand.
My advisor assigned me to give a seminar with a topic that required extensive readings in very difficult journals (e.g. Science, Nature, Cell, PNAS, and so on).
After reading through the first ten papers, I thought that I was a complete idiot. Even though I could litterally understand what they said but I could not really understand or interpret what they were presenting.
I almost gave up the topic. But I still kept reading the papers. After reading, reading, and reading (it took several weeks of serious reading in libraries though--maybe more than 50 papers in the related topic), I got more and more familair with the topic, and those "Martian" journals.
In papers, they are always refering to some essential background information published elsewhere. If you would like to dig deep down into the topic, you must get the cited papers, and study it. So you will understand what the paper is refering to more and more leading to more insight into the whole thing.
Even my experience is not directly related to your engineering field. But I believe that, fundamentally, it would be the same of how to seek knowledge.
Rome wasn't built in a day. It took time and effort to achieve it krub.... :)
Good luck finding a way to a life-long learning by yourself krub.
จากคุณ :
amatuer translator
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29 ธ.ค. 48 05:51:09
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