Research Assistants at University of Cincinnati give their company a 4.3 out of 5.0, while the average rating for University of Cincinnati is 4.2, making them 2% happier than every other employee at University of Cincinnati and 2% less happy than every other Research Assistant on CareerBliss - the happiest Research Assistants work for University of Notre Dame.
"I worked as a research assistant, UC is a great place to work. I got to work for several projects ranging from computer vision to ML and AI. A great learning experience and gave me a good base to start my career in the USA."
"I've worked with University of Cincinnati for about 2 years and the place is very diverse, you are exposed to different technologies and they are very people minded."
Year | Salary |
---|---|
2011 | $4 |
2012 | $4 |
2013 | $5 |
2014 | $4 |
2015 | $4 |
2019 | $3 |
2020 | $4 |
"Great chance to get access of different research projects and have big room for self-development. Good collaboration."
"I start my graduate school at the university of Cincinnati since 2014. When I joined to the nano-materials group for my research, it was an active group with funding and nice equipment. Now there is no money in that group and one of the faculty member retired and another one is head of the department who does not have time. Overall, the condition of this group is not good for a new PhD student."
"Nanoelectronics Lab in the University of Cincinnati is an excellent place to study and work in."
"I've worked here for 2+ years. The directors have been very accommodating and helpful with their advises."
"Great work place and very stimulating environment."
What do you like about working at University of Cincinnati?
"Helpful supervisor, great team members and continuous learning opportunity at every step."
Do you have any tips for others interviewing with this company?
"You need to be academically very sound and should have a research oriented mindset. Great work place and very stimulating environment made me realize my career goals. Working on so many projects introduced me to many of the technologies on which I plan to build my future career. I got to learn to be a team player and contribute to other projects as well as working on my own, which taught me how to handle multiple projects at the same time. The interdisciplinary nature of the work was well suited to give an exposure of how different concepts can be merged to give a holistic solution."
What don't you like about working at University of Cincinnati?
"Lack of infrastructure and less facilities when it comes to technology."
What suggestions do you have for management?
"Spend some money to upgrade technological resources and facilities for better results."
"I love to work at University of Cincinnati."
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