Signup date: 13 Sep 2010 at 6:14pm
Last login: 11 May 2022 at 8:10pm
Post count: 1875
Human resources is not my area either, however, my blog might offer you a little help. Ensure you include funding in the equation.
http://www.wearthesis.talktalk.net
Other than that, Screaming's comments hold true.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 02 Feb 2012 08:35:28 =======
JillW,
Assuming you did your undergraduate degree at the normal 18 years of age and emerged when you were 21 / 22, that would make you 30/31 now.
That's how old I was when I started my PhD. I feel going back as an older candidate helped me approach the PhD in a far more mature manner. I got through quite a long time back with only minor corrections.
If I'd gone in at the youngest I could (23 / 24), I don't know if I'd been mature enough to handle the pressures a PhD puts upon you.
For general help on this, take a look at my blog.
http://www.wearthesis.talktalk.net
All the best,
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 31 Jan 2012 09:03:51 =======
======= Date Modified 30 Jan 2012 15:56:53 =======
As said by others, there are people who manage a career in lecturing without a PhD. I know of one at Sunderland (my undergrad Uni.), who is also well respected as an industrial consultant. However, I would try to pick up a teaching qualification then probably start out at Tertiary / Sixth Form College level first. Alternatively, in trying to gain employment in industry you could say (as one of my line managers during my first post-doc did) advertise your Uni. period as working on a given project rather than a failed PhD spinning a few positives such as analytical and people skills (i.e. the teaching) where possible from it.
Your Uni. (one of five names comes straight to mind - Saford, Liverpool John Moore, Bedforshire, Derby, Manchester Metropolitan) seems to have used you as a cheap lecturing option during your last few months and I think that's disgusting to be honest. The other institute needs a wrap across the knuckles for the way they've handled the situation and when funding disappeared, it would have been kinder after that first year to allow you to pull out and give you a chance to pick up another PhD studentship elsewhere.
The situation you describe deserves a complaint at the least (it's clear from what you say an appeal won't succeed), making sure you don't attach blame to your supervisors (a potential job referee). However, I understand you just wanting you to leave the whole mess behind you.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
My blog might help a little as regards general PhD-related stuff.
http://www.wearthesis.talktalk.net
Specifically, you need to be happy with the environment in which you're going to do your PhD. If you can switch your funding to the new supervisor and group, and that's where you believe you'll be more comfortable then do so. A PhD is a marathon and not a sprint, and you need to have the best environment and support possible to survive and succeed.
Explain to your original supervisor the reasons why and tell them that the alterntive project is that you really want to work on. Supervisors will be used to people initially accepting then declining a position. If they are truely professional, they will understand a candidate needs to be 100% happy with the decision they have made.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
Give yourself a couple of days off then deal with the minors.
You'll still be a bit shaken at the moment, but that will go with time.
Well done!!!
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 26 Jan 2012 20:29:33 =======
======= Date Modified 23 Jan 2012 11:43:24 =======
Your comment that the thesis has become repeditive in places shows they've probably not read it through completely and skipped bits here and there to save time.
I had it said to me way back for M.Sc. that there was no way they were going to read through the entire disseration. I get the impression they did that for my PhD thesis too, as I know of a couple of other typos that were missed by the examiners.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
Do so as funding can be a fickle issue as Delta said.
I actually got a couple of hundred more in funding from my ex-poly Uni. than the established Uni. I nearly accepted. I'm puzzled how the other Uni. calculated a lower amount.
I get the impression that some academics will try to bring on a PhD student without the hassle of chasing up funding and the associated administration, either leaving it up to the candidate to pursue this and failing this, self fund.
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
Congratulations lass!!!
I never got the chance to nurse a hangover as all my colleagues were away at seminars on the day of my viva. :-)
Ian (Mackem_Beefy)
======= Date Modified 23 Jan 2012 11:25:47 =======
Delta, speaking as someone stuck on the outside, how true your words ring!!! :-(
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