Looking for a Mentor
Is there some type of service outside of higher learning that can put me together with a mentor of some kind to guide me in further developing my skills? I believe am hitting a ceiling with what I can do on my own just from ambition/work ethic/"talent". I feel I am at the point where it would be more cost effective for some external force like a professor or the pursuit of another piece of paper to push me where I want to be in my craft rather than to continue being self taught and take more time to reach this point on my own. Cost of paying for school/hiring a mentor isn't really the concern here, rather the return on time invested seems to be diminishing the more I go on my own. I purposely left this generic to see what people in any field have done if they have reached this point in their career, but to provide some context, my ultimate goal is to reach a master level in CS coming from an unrelated engineering background/undergrad studies.
10 comments
[ 4.9 ms ] story [ 35.2 ms ] threadThat’s my take on mentors—and generally, I feel that mentors aren’t people who do this to get paid. Alternatively, if you’re looking for someone to take on the role of a tutor and willing to pay up, you could go on Stanford/MIT’s popular CS classes, find out who were the TAs last semester, and reach out to them offering 2x-3x the pay.
Why not literally get a Masters degree? Find a professor who is studying something you want to study, then go apply for a degree program with them.
Alternately, I hear that the Recurse Center is cool.
Do you have a specific topic in mind? I made a group called The Polymath Club (thepolymathclub.com) to collaborate on world problems/ ideas. The purpose of building the group was to get input from many smart people in cross-discipline fields. We currently have 8 members. You are more than welcome to join our meetings, you can even ask this very question you posed and we can discuss :)
Cheers! And best of luck in case we don’t get to talk later :)
-Jane