Beginners

“How about beginners?” one may ask. “How can they engage in consulting if they don’t yet know anything relevant? Take statistics, for example – a student needs to know a lot of statistics to start consulting. They should be graduate students, or seniors at least.” 

There are two assumptions in this objection:

  1. Students without a strong technical background do not know enough to begin consulting work.
  2. Clients only ask questions that require a strong technical background.

We have found that neither of these assumptions is universally true: there are, in fact, numerous scenarios and occasions in which beginners and relative beginners can contribute very positively to resolving, or helping to resolve, a client’s requirements.

Mentoring research beginners

The Department of Mathematics at the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth has extensive experience in mentoring undergraduates, of all ability and experience levels, in undergraduate research. Some examples of students who carried out, or began, research as freshman and sophomores are:

            Research mentoring: faculty and students

Beginners & consulting

While consulting for a client is not exactly the same as undertaking and independent research study, there are some significant similarities – particularly in the areas of statistics, data analysis, and mathematical modeling.

A example of a beginning undergraduate student’s efforts at consulting for a scientific client, is: