I am toward the middle of my PhD career in Statistics and am considering walking out the door. My program has had a horribly high attrition rate with older students who are similar to me due to one qualifying exam, and I fear I am next. The constant anxiety has led to some mediocre grades in a select few classes (mostly those related to the material this qualifying exam would cover). However, I have gotten As or A-s in all classes not related to that exam.
I find the attrition rate to, perhaps, be a blessing in disguise. It seems pretty indicative of the program's overall culture, and perhaps I just want to get out sooner rather than later. It's unfortunate because this shift is new; I've talked with older students who have seen the department change over the past few years.
Anyways, I'm starting to think about next moves, and I've found many of the tools I've learned in my program very useful to a particular interest of mine: political science. I also think the classes I've excelled in lend themselves well to a political science graduate program. I've looked at political methodology curricula and think I could thrive in this sort of environment.
Has anyone out there gone from a quantitative background to political science like this? I've taken exactly one political science class, and that was in graduate school and was still a statistics course primarily. I wonder whether I would even be remotely competitive given this lack of background. I may have the opportunity to stick around in my program next semester and take some courses in political science. If so, what types of courses would make me more prepared/ help me make sure this would be a good move?
Any advice is appreciated as I watch my life plans essentially crumble before me :) Here's to hoping they rise from the ashes, better and stronger.
Question
milka49
Hello!
I am toward the middle of my PhD career in Statistics and am considering walking out the door. My program has had a horribly high attrition rate with older students who are similar to me due to one qualifying exam, and I fear I am next. The constant anxiety has led to some mediocre grades in a select few classes (mostly those related to the material this qualifying exam would cover). However, I have gotten As or A-s in all classes not related to that exam.
I find the attrition rate to, perhaps, be a blessing in disguise. It seems pretty indicative of the program's overall culture, and perhaps I just want to get out sooner rather than later. It's unfortunate because this shift is new; I've talked with older students who have seen the department change over the past few years.
Anyways, I'm starting to think about next moves, and I've found many of the tools I've learned in my program very useful to a particular interest of mine: political science. I also think the classes I've excelled in lend themselves well to a political science graduate program. I've looked at political methodology curricula and think I could thrive in this sort of environment.
Has anyone out there gone from a quantitative background to political science like this? I've taken exactly one political science class, and that was in graduate school and was still a statistics course primarily. I wonder whether I would even be remotely competitive given this lack of background. I may have the opportunity to stick around in my program next semester and take some courses in political science. If so, what types of courses would make me more prepared/ help me make sure this would be a good move?
Any advice is appreciated as I watch my life plans essentially crumble before me :) Here's to hoping they rise from the ashes, better and stronger.
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