Signup date: 20 Mar 2022 at 7:14pm
Last login: 31 Aug 2023 at 10:03am
Post count: 2
Hello bluejizo,
Firstly, congratulations on your PhD success! It is an amazing achievement that will have required learning many skills and application of knowledge alongside personal fortitude and commitment.
I completely understand your frustrations. Job searching is hard! It takes considerable time and energy, and can be very dispiriting when you face rejection. You are not alone in facing these challenges. I have been through the same process over the last few months, while also trying to put the finishing touches to my thesis. It is exhausting and you need to stay kind to yourself :)
I think the key thing is to understand yourself and what type of work you find interesting, engaging, motivating rather than be too focussed on job titles or job roles. For example, maybe you enjoyed running experiments most, or perhaps you liked writing about science in a clear and understandable way. These can be good starting points for thinking about where your existing skills can be used in many different roles-not just the ones where you think your PhD might naturally fit, or where you might need to find courses to fill a specific skills gap.
I found this account by Jennifer Polk, https://twitter.com/FromPhDtoLife that offers some great advice on moving towards jobs outside academia. Her website is here https://fromphdtolife.com/
Chris Cornthwaite over at roostervane https://roostervane.com/resources/ also has some thoughtful content on PhDers who feel a little lost with their career.
I hope some of this helps! I wish you the best of luck in the journey ahead.
P
Hello n00bster,
I wanted to reply to your post because it seemed very similar to my situation-although I still have about 11 months until my 'official' hand in date. I have had to rely on secondary and simulated data for a lot of my analysis due to not being able to carry out the planned data collection because of the Covid pandemic.
I cannot offer you any certainty about what will happen when you hand in your thesis or when you come to defend it in the viva. However, I will say doing a PhD at any time is an enormous challenge, but doing it in the midst of a global pandemic is an even greater challenge. If you have got this far with your research, kept your family and yourself safe, I say, "very well done!" and don't BIN that thesis!
Academia in general is not very good at talking about mistakes, failed experiments, rough drafts or wrong-turns. I feel it every time I read an article in a high-impact journal or the submitted theses of previous students in my research group. There is little room to discuss the challenges, the mistakes and the need to sometimes change course. All these things have happened to my research and to every single person who has ever attempted to do anything worthwhile in whatever field of research they are engaging in-even if most high ranking Professors will never dare admit that they ever made a mistake or wrote a clumsy paragraph.
I can offer you the things I did that have helped me so far
1. Accept to yourself that the Thesis will never be perfect. It is your first attempt at a (mostly solo) large scale research project. Your advisors and examiners are there to help you get better not just to criticise.
2. Access secondary data in your research field if you can to complete analysis
3. Find a somebody in your institution outside your supervisory team that can take a look at some of your thesis chapters and give you some feedback on what else might be needed. I was lucky that a person who had completed the same programme was still at the University in a post-doc role. They provided good insight into the process of getting to the PhD finish line.
4. Write everything down in your methodology chapter and back it up with evidence from literature that these methods/techniques/analysis have been used before even if they are not the most ideal ones. Think about what was left unfinished or incomplete-maybe that will be your next research project
5. Look after yourself and your family. The thesis often feels like a demanding child, but it will never love you back :)
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