<p>Hi,</p>
<p>I am an undergrad applying for phd in CS.</p>
<p>in my personal statement, I would like to talk about a research experience (11 weeks over a summer) which didn't turn out so well because</p>
<p>1) while I was really excited about the research area, I didn't have a lot of relevant experience and relevant theoretical/practical background back then. This was my first experience in this area and it is also the largest project in scope I've done.</p>
<p>2) I (or we as a team) started out overly ambitious and the solution proposed turned out be quite complicated and never proven to be sound (my mentor was a very application driven person after all, and so he prefers something that produces great results most of the time to something that performs with mediocre outcome all the time)</p>
<p>3) had to use some other third party library to do some major analysis for the project (the reason was that this library worked on a similar but much smaller project before, even though some hacking was necessary). It turned out that there was a lot of hacking involved and solution just had too much overhead.</p>
<p>Essentially, the research was considered unfinished and the result not substantiated anywhere (in terms of publication) because of a wrong approach in my opinion.</p>
<p>In general, I do not want to come across as being critical on any one I was working with; the main point of this description on my first research experience is on what I learned that helped me later to be much more successful in my later research projects with other mentors.</p>
<p>My question is then what's the best way to write about this? I am thinking of just describing what I had done and learned for this experience, and my achievements later since this experience and what I would've done differently for this project, but at the same time I am concerned about the negative implications of such description if any. For instance, major things I learned include better idea about my research interest, my research approach, and the kind of research advisors I would like to have. However, I am not sure if this makes me sound like a very picky person who cannot collaborate with all types of people. :-/ </p>
<p>In addition, some potential professors I would like to work with in grad school know my mentor for this research experience. I am not sure how I should take this into account. I certainly am not getting a letter of rec from him. For letters of rec, I will get two good ones from the most recent research projects I've done, and another one from a prof at my own school who has taught me.</p>
<p>please help</p>
<p>thanks</p>