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So I've been admitted to master's program in Mechanical Engineering at a US university.

I contacted 2 of the faculty in the department in my chief area of interest , but neither had an opening/ funding . I feel like it was a huge blunder on my part. Should I try to find an advisor in a different subfield or wait a semester and see if any new opening arrive?

If I start research in a different subfield and a spot opens up in my preferred subfield next semester, is it possible to switch?

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    Which country? In certain countries (e.g Italy) you don't get any advisor during your Master's studies up to the last year, when you start working on your thesis and, even then, you don't get any funding (or you get it very rarely for exceptional reasons). Commented Jun 11, 2016 at 16:35
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    I'm afraid I'm rather confused by the whole question here. Can you please try to clarify the situation?
    – jakebeal
    Commented Jun 11, 2016 at 20:50
  • The country is the USA. Commented Jun 11, 2016 at 20:59
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    You should check the department's policies. Sometimes an advisor is mandatory, sometimes it is forbidden. Commented Jun 12, 2016 at 9:19
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    In the US, in most programs I'm familiar with, you first start on coursework. Some programs are all coursework. What did the department tell you is expected in terms of research/finding an advisor?
    – Kimball
    Commented Jun 12, 2016 at 11:18

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Well this is more like an advice rather than an answer:
In the end all of it depends on the funding you might receive. If the advisors are sure to be available with the funding next semester, I would say you don't need to hurry to find a new research area. I assume you are interested and made some preparations for your current field. It would be reckless to throw away the work you have done so far.
However if the funding is not so sure for the next semester, I would say you go with the one that supplies you funding. In the end, you can always turn back to your old questions. Researcher is very much like a qualified worker, you are paid not only for the results you've obtained, but mostly you have the capacity to treat and obtain the result or rather they pay you because it is you who has the capacity to treat and obtain the result, so one should not take research subjects at a personal level, at least not too much.
However I have no idea how US works, so you are on your own concerning the feasiblity of my advice.

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