Hi all,
long time lurker here. I am in my last stages (after 6 years) of a medical sciences/morphology-based PhD in Ireland and have to submit by September.
My problem is that I didn't do any writing at the beginning and find it very hard now to write the chapters. I am glad I am coming to an end now. I did my PhD part-time although registered full-time (I work in the same department) and I am not a traditional student as such. I went straight from diploma into working life and after some years I got the opportunity to register for the PhD. I thought I was registered part-time but surprisingly it was full-time and I have to submit now by September.
I am not confident at all although I have two peer-reviewed papers published as the main author in the two highest journals in my fields (there is an overlap in my PhD) and also two conference publications as well as some minor presentations but I am still not confident that it is enough. I have ideas for a third and maybe a fourth publication after the thesis but am not sure if I will even have a thesis by September :-(
It's just such a drag, I sit in front of the computer and know I should write, even a small paragraph or something but cannot bring myself to do it. I thought having the deadline and also having the external examiners confirmed (at this stage) would give me the boost to finish it properly but I found the exact opposite is the case.
Another problem is that there is no comparable thesis in our department which I could use as a model as no thesis has been produced in my field here since the 1940's! The general policies on thesis presentation are relatively general, structure, pagination, binding etc. but we don't have minimum or maximum amount of words and whenever I compare it to other Universities theses it feels like a fraud as there are much less pages or words.
By the way, I have a great supervisor who is available to me almost every day (he's just a couple of doors down from my office) but I still cannot get motivated enough to write the thesis. :-(
Any ideas to get out of this mire would be much appreciated ,-)
Danzig
Have you got chapter headings? If not, get some:-) once you have done that, get yourself some large bits of paper, sort of A2 size, give each chapter a piece of paper and jot down bits that have to go in each one, make sure you give yourself time to get down all your thoughts. This is your framework. If there is no limit on words make one up, i think the average science thesis is about 60000, so divide this between your chapters, number your thoughts on your pieces of paper and get writing, don't worry too much about getting the first few sentences right, just get the stuff down. This should get you going.If you want to, do a bit in each chapter, if you get an idea whilst writing something else jot it down somewhere immediately, or you will forget it. good luck :-)
Joyce's advice is really good. I'd also recommend that you don't start at the beginning of the thesis, or any specific chapter. Just write whichever bit is most appealing (or least unappealing?). Breaking the ice is often the hardest thing - that blank page syndrome. But if you start with something, even if it's way through the thesis and not at the start, that might help you crack on to the next bit.
The other thing I do a lot, and a slight variant on what Joyce said, is to draw up lots of lists of things I could be getting on with and subsections. Then I rank them in terms of most appealing downwards, and start picking them off. It's helped pull me out of a patch where I haven't been able to get on with writing at all.
Something else that works for me is recording my thoughts on the computer or a voice recorder. My reasoning for this is that I can often think more clearly and quickly than I can type. So if I get the thoughts recorded I can then play it back and type it up. And again it's a start, and getting somewhere.
Good luck!
great advice given by Joyce and Bilobaggins.
i know how you feel, i was like you last year, i was given a deadline in may to submit by september, and i had nothing really written for my thesis. and felt lost and demotivated all the time, till people made me realise the reason i felt like this was cause i was overwelmed by the sheer amount of work i had to get done.
it is scary writing a thesis. but the only way to do it, is to focus on tiny little tasks, one thing at a time. and just get through them.
basically my advice is similar.
sit down with a large piece of paper, and make a spider diagram, of all the things you want to put in your thesis. the chapters etc.
you said you have 2 papers already published thats really fantastic ! can you use the material from the paper as a foundation for some of your thesis chapters?
i too had 2 papers published and used them as a basis for two of my chapters. obviously you need to expand on the papers and elaborate on them. but its a good place to start.
i too did a biology based thesis. and i believe the maximum word limit is 100,000 words. but usually a science thesis is around 60,000 - 80,000 words.
dont worry about the word limit right at this stage! its quality not quantity that counts.
basically you will have your introduction chapter - that introduces your subject. gives all the foundation as to why you did your project.
then comes to materials and methods chapter - where you throw in all your methods in there.
then you will have a few results chapters.
the way i did it, each results chapter, had a paragraph introducing the results. THE RESULTs, and a small disucssion on the results. and then i did a big conclusion discussion chapter trying to tie everything together. (my supervisor still said my thesis was poorly written but heck i gave it my best shot, and HAD to submit it by the deadline or would have failed)
bottom line, just start by working on zero drafts. dont worry about it being perfect, or accurate or correct.
i would recommend a book that was my bible throughout last year. "how to write your thesis in 15 minutes a day" by joan bolker. she really helped me ALOT.
its great that your supervisor is around.
what my supervisor told me to do, was to make a plan for my thesis. with chapter headings, and what each chapter would contain, like section headings. do that first, kinda like a table of contents, and then show your supervisor, if this is correct, and then your job is to simply fill in those section headings. think of writing your thesis, one section (1 paragraph) at a time.
good luck! you can do it! just do abit on your thesis everyday. even if its just working for 15 minutes and writing down key words.
(up)
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cont...(oh thank the Lord that i did copy my message - before hitting submit! as a backup, cause i reached message limit!)
{quote cont..}
Tell yourself this is not supposed to be the best thing you’ve ever done. Tell yourself that you can write a “B” assignment. A completed assignment that is adequate is better than the best thing you’ve ever done that exists only in your head." {unquote}
in the beggining, when i first started to write my thesis, i was frozen with fear! i kept jumping out of my seat every chance i got.
the following stuff helped me.
having a timer, set to 15 minutes, and literally forcing myself to type, it could be utter nonsense, or just crap, but i was not allowed to stop until i wrote on X subject for 15 minutes. this is known as free writing. and you might suprise yourself!
also i was told that its okay to just copy out notes from papers, and not worrying at this stage about writing it in your own words, but just make sure you have it highlighted that its "verbatim" notes, you dont wanna get done for plagerism. but sometimes you just want to copy out a sentence, and you might use it somewhere but not sure where. i use "red font" for stuff that is copied. and in paragraphs i put the source. i was told by a fellow member, that psychologically, even just writing out notes verbatim, is helpful,
"psychologists were arguing that the best way to write first, was to first write loads and loads of rubbish, be it copies and pasted stuff, or stuff from the top of your head and then edit it down. apparently people who write like that are loads more productive than those who plan meticulously and try to write perfectly first time "
another technique, is to say to yourself, i have to write 3-4 pages of writing everyday, once i have done, i can reward myself with X activity or treat.
the one thing that really helps me , is to set myself really really small tasks. like "read paper" and make notes, even if im just copying verbatim the important points i need to include in my thesis or whatever.
I have the following post its on my wall still to remind me: especially cause like you, it would drive me NUTS when my friends and family would ask how the phd is going and would say, you still doing it???
"burn the boats! when ancient greek armies travelled across the sea to do battle, the first thing they would do after landing was to burn the boats. leaving them stranded. with no way to make it home besides victory, the resolve of the soliders were strengthened. when success and failure are the only options , you have no choice but to follow through"
"everyday is more important, thank how much time you have spent, or how many pages you produce, or the quality "
"one day plus another has an accumulative effect"
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"whereever you are , it is the place to start. the effort you expend today DOES make a difference"
I also kept a log diary, where i would write down how many words i had written, or figures i made, or what not, just a record of what i did, and it would encourage me to do the same the next day. its a nice feeling to feel you did something, cause then when the evening comes, and you wanna relax and watch tv or whatever you like to do, you feel like you "earned it"
also i once read in a dale carnegie book (the man was a genius) that before you go to bed, make a list or just one thing, that you will do tommorow, and organise your notes so that when you come to your desk first thing in the morning, you know EXACTLY what you need to do, that way you wont procrastinate. i actually do this, and the next day when i know exactly what i need to do, i dont procrastinate and i just get on with it.
so your aim today is to choose to do ONE thing connected to your thesis that you will do tommorow. write it on a post it and stick it to your monitor, so tommorow morning, you know exactly what you are doing.
i would also advice you to choose one of your chapters for your thesis, and focus on that. the one you think will be the easiest to write, and start work on that. and just work on it bit by bit everyday, and dont worry about the other chapters for now.
the way i did it, i chose one of my results chapters, and i got my paper that was on the results, and then i copied out stuff from my paper (and flagged it for changing it slightly later), and pulled out all my graphs and data tables, and started working on my figures and tables for the chapter. and i named the document "chapter 3 zero draft" and i wasnt worried about grammer, or anything like that. i just got stuff written down, even if it sounded lame, incorrect, or childish.
after you get a zero draft down, you will feel better, as its "something" down on paper, and you can improve on it.
also the flower technique of writing really helped me out aswell.
check out this website for details.
https://webspace.utexas.edu/cherwitz/www/ie/b_flowers.html
i had it printed and stuck to my wall.
ps sorry for the long post!!! :$
Oh wow, Lara, thanks so much for the information! I need some quiet time to get through all this. One thing seems to jump out which, I think, fits in with me. I developed depression after the first 2 years on the PhD and am only slowly recovering with the help of my GP and others.
I will need to make a conscious decision to sit down and just write. :-)
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