Signup date: 07 Mar 2013 at 8:14am
Last login: 22 May 2014 at 1:14am
Post count: 229
I didn't have a topic in my first year for 6 months and my PhD ended up being something entirely different from my research proposal in the application. I also felt lost during those early months but after reading on what ended up my topic I settled for it and didn't look back. My advice: keep reading on that new topic and don't procrastinate! You'll be fine.
Dear all
Just wanted to wish you a late Happy New Year and tbh even though it's my bday today I feel so sad- job search so far unsuccessful and got rejected from another job in London. I have to do something special not necessarily to celebrate but just to distract myself from all this- any suggestions?
Dear Biomaterials,
Join the club!!! I finished my PhD in Economics a few months ago and you can see from previous posts that I'm also unlucky. I applied to so many postdocs and jobs I've lost count. I'm still waiting on two teaching jobs and one job as a senior economist at a government institution so fingers crossed but everyone is telling me how hard it is to get jobs. What's worse, my PhD is from a top UK uni and my topic is very relevant to economic policy design and implementation.
The only thing you have to do is try: remember these are very tough times and I had to leave the UK to find a part-time teaching job at a college and even here in Canada it is very difficult to land jobs immediately after graduation. I've decided not to get stressed and depressed about it: my CV is great, I have friends around me, and I'm working on other things to improve my CV and myself as a person (publications, attending conferences, learning new skills, self-improvement in general). Have you considered volunteer work to get experience? I'm doing that on the side at the moment.
Keep in touch and don't get depressed. I don't think you need to change your field. I would consider part-time employment and volunteer work temporarily if I were you.
My situation isn't exactly like yours but I passed with minor corrections, which I submitted a month after the viva but it took my internal 6 months to come back to me approving them. The best thing to do is to keep in touch with the examiners themselves directly. If they came back with a good pass shouldn't the registry just approve you?! Sounds strange- or do you need the two external examiners' approval as well?
My suggestions:
1) Don't give too much details to avoid idea theft and boring them with long emails- just confine it to main topic, sub topic, and a line on what you're investigating.
I'll give you an example from my field: if it's Economics, and you're looking at Economic Development, restrict your email to mentioning these of course and say that you're interested in applying a certain methodology or theoretical framework to trade/aid relations between developed country X and developing country Y. They don't need to know the whole story just yet.
2) If you've published it already then no it's not original and you can't use it, at least not as the focus of your study. Now you can take this idea and try to apply it to a different situation. As I'm probably in a different field from you I'm not sure about patenting. But if something's already published the rule is that it lacks the originality required from a PhD thesis.
Hi guys,
Thanks for your answers!
@Wowzers: unfortunately I can't think of anything from my PhD that I could use to start a business- plus my financial situation does not allow me to just start a business and I'm not a fan of taking risky loans. Doesn't seem like the right option. I've been applying to unis, schools to teach, think-tanks, corporations, governments, and banks :(:( as you said I'm doing all the right things to no avail- even my mates from the PhD course concur that I'm doing all the right things.
@TreeofLife: Thanks for that! Maybe there's hope after all!!
Hi Lude,
Thanks for your words of support, and sorry to hear about your PhD rejection.
See we're in the same boat!!! I tailored my cover letter and CV exactly as per the job description and the thing is with my PhD and 4 years work experience as an economist you'd think I'm a shoe-in. But apparently I'm overqualified for some jobs, which means some employers would not consider me :(:(:(. So frustrating.
Yeah I totally understand HR companies are scum I'm afraid- nothing worse than when they say they'll keep the CV on file lol as if they'll look at it again. I'm still waiting on at least 10 other jobs and 2 postdocs and since it's Christmas season it may take a while for them to respond.
Good luck to you as well and keep in touch!! I'll give you the same advice- keep firing those applications! Looks like we'll have to send a gazillion applications before we land even one job/programme acceptance. Have a lovely holiday season as well and wish you all the best. Fingers crossed for both of us!
GRE is both maths and english. Some departments in the UK actually ask for GRE test scores if your undergraduate degree is from outside the UK (when applying for Masters or PhD). If it's a competitive department I'd advise you to take the GRE as it could count especially if your undergrad is from outside the UK.
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