This presentation gives a brief overview of what can make your PhD student life easier. It focuses on steps within the PhD journey, possible hurdles, provides links to some useful tools, and it zooms in on the human factor (peers, supervisors).
Life as a PhD student: identity, tools, hurdles, and supervisions
1. Identity, tools, hurdles & supervisions:
a PhD journey of an older, non-native
English speaking PhD student
Inge (Ignatia) de Waard
2. What drove me to it?
• Hitting a (glass) ceiling (“is this were I will spend the next 10 years?”)
• A pledge once given to my granddad (“en dan ga ik een doctoraat doen”)
I just had to…
3. What formal schooling did I have?
• No formal credits at the time of acceptance, but experienced
(passion)
• Just doing it: mobile learning projects since 2006, organised MOOC
2011, 2012 on mobile learning.
• Took up Master’s: Master in Education track @Athabasca University,
Canada
A high school adult, winging it
High school
Professional
experience
Just Do It
4. Hindsight
Understanding the benefits of collaborating, sharing and being open to
new information/feedback
Lacking structure (writing, academic speaking) and theoretical
background (methodologies, evaluation tools, theories)
Build on
strengths
Attract & learn
new skills
5. First, and more steps
• Keep an eye out for PhD scholarship calls, mostly Jan/Feb: send a proposal
(example of a proposal here)
• Identifying a subject: passion!
• Write a probation report (& mini viva) – 10 months into your research (example
here) + progress reports (every 6 months).
Write proposal
and
application
Identify your
subject
Pilot study –
probation
report + mini
viva
Main study
Write thesis
chapters
Rewrite,
rewrite,
rewrite
Viva (oral
examination)
6. Language
• English is my 4th language: exercise (in international settings, with
high quality language apps)
• Extra layer: academic language (academic language guide here)
• Students with money use professional language editors. We can do it!
7. The importance of side-kicks/PhD-peers
• Finding PhD role models (similar age/method: Jacqueline Bachelor)
• Identifying partners in crime (Ronda Zelezny-Green, Michael Sean
Gallagher: co-writing, support)
8. Organise: 4 things that make PhD life easier
• Choose research that inspires you: intrinsic motivation and passion
• Build a PhD thesis in the cloud (chapters that will be part of actual
thesis) for easy access
• Keep shared notes of supervision meetings (e.g. progress reports)
• Use bibliographic tools/reference managers (e.g. Mendeley which is
free, or Endnote paid software)
9. Supervisors: your core team
• Guidance (subject matter, steps to take, additional training)
• Filtering out your own BS (needed)
• Knowledge by experience (framework, methods, connecting to people)
• Keeping you on target (thank you Mike Sharples & Agnes Kukulska-Hulme)
10. The supervisors
My experience:
• Year 1:
• weekly supervisions: clear actions, feedback => result: get probation report /
pilot study started (ethics clearance)
• Presentation opportunities (1000 £ / year)
• Year 2 & 3:
• bi-weekly supervisions: support and guidance setting up main study (data
collection & analysis), methods
Different supervisors, different experiences: mutual understanding,
give-&-take (research papers, visibility, academic rigor)
11. Post-graduate opportunities
• Conferences (your discipline, high impact… network, write papers,
learn to speak in public), e.g. Work-In-Progress (WIP)
• Workshops (career development early researchers, field specific ws)
• Lectures (on- and offline)
• Review papers (Just Do It)
13. Moving with family to UK
• Becoming the Other
• Isolation (partner): voluntary work in charity shops (Red Cross,
Oxfam).
• Country specific differences: e.g. cost of child care (toddler/pre-
school: 700 pounds per month for 3 days/w); high rental cost
• Family costs covered by scholarship fee?
15. Beyond the PhD?!!! AAAHHHHH
• Where to go next? A team/network that suits your persona, a job that
makes you tick, with opportunities, fitting your life (family/balance)
• How to find a job? In academia: your network (social media), funding
• What to do? Get your stars out (CV, strengths), Work Out Loud (open
science rules: e.g. blog, slideshare, academia/researchgate)
16. Give me the hard data!
• Fee: 14000 GBP per year (3 years, with exceptional grant extension
for personal/health reasons)
• Additional 1000 GPB per year for travel/attending conferences
(posters and/or doctoral consortiums for early work, short/full papers
later on)
• Thesis: approx. 75000 words (all in) depends on department
• PhD-structure templates per discipline (humanities, social science…)
• Viva: supervisors + 1 internal + 1 external examiner (normally UK-
based) – different from other EU doctoral defence.