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Posted

Condensed version: coasted through Management concentration in undergrad at a good private school, did well within the discipline but was indifferent to everything else, graduated, have been doing the full-time stable Management job for five years, and now I'm stuck. My interests are I/O psychology, change management, and project management. I need expertise and practice in each area. My goal is to be an I/O consultant, but I essentially want to acquire as many valuable Management skills as I can. I have determined that I should pursue graduate study.

I have no research experience and an unremarkable academic record. I won't get into a PhD program without doing awesome work in a MA. Even then, I'm not sure if I need a PhD if I'm focused on an industry career. I applied to Fairfield MA in Applied Psychology and The New School MS in Organizational Change Management. Both have rolling admissions, and I'm confident I'll be accepted to both programs.

However, I feel like I'm "missing" something. Actually, it's everything. I question my ability to do graduate work, how I'll fit in a program, what expectations I should have, and what I'm actually preparing for. I read many posts on this forum and talk to friends in grad school, and I just feel like an ignorant outsider. Do I even belong in grad school? Am I fooling myself by expecting significant career advancement?

Basically, what the hell am I doing here?

Posted (edited)

You're here because you want to better your life and have opportunities that only an MA or PhD will present. You are good enough, smart enough, and worthwhile; just do it!

Everyone here doubts themselves at some point (to an extent, it's healthy), so it's normal. If someone makes it seem like their fully confident being in a PhD program, then they are obviously lying! Grad school is some pretty heavy stuff, but worthwhile things require A LOT of work.

Edited by hejduk
Posted (edited)

You're here because you want to better your life and have opportunities that only an MA or PhD will present. You are good enough, smart enough, and worthwhile; just do it!

Everyone here doubts themselves at some point (to an extent, it's healthy), so it's normal. If someone makes it seem like their fully confident being in a PhD program, then they are obviously lying! Grad school is some pretty heavy stuff, but worthwhile things require A LOT of work.

These. These two paragraphs! I cant say it better than hedjuk did. ;)

Edited by beanbagchairs
Posted

Believe me, I have 10 time your qualifications from a well-known university and I'm beginning to ask if I shouldn't start all over again because I feel I don't know much.

No one knows much while beginning a Graduate programme. Only by years of training do they acquire expertise in their subject. So it's normal that you feel you don't know much - if you knew, you wouldn't be applying to Graduate School. That's what Graduate education is all about. So you should just have faith in yourself and take one step at a time. You will see the end of it with your perseverance. How you'll use it in professional situation is what you have to figure out. But a PhD in a discipline related to industry can lead many kinds of professional paths.

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