Poll for advanced students & faculty: What were the most difficult aspects of graduate school?
Poll: Advanced students & faculty only - what were the most difficult aspects of graduate school?
7 members have voted
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1. Looking back on the process as a whole, what would you say were the 3 most difficult PHASES of getting a PhD?
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Applying [Formulating an SOP, gathering recommendations, taking the GRE, assembling a list of schools, filling out applications, biting your nails and waiting, deciding which program to attend]0
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Being new to graduate school [learning the ropes, trying to find ones place, realizing how very much there is to learn]4
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Slogging through coursework [dealing with requirements that may or may not be useful, persevering through things that distract you from your research]4
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Finding an advisor / committee [navigating interpersonal and academic politics, choosing and/or breaking up with academic mentors, figuring out who your allies are]1
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Learning how to do research [figuring out what questions are interesting and doable, how to design execute and complete your research]2
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Completing the MA/MS thesis [getting through that first great test of ability and dedication]0
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PhD Exams [studying and taking oral/written qualification and/or preliminary exams]3
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Formulating the dissertation proposal [deciding on and creating a project that will set the tone for your early career in academia]1
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Conducting dissertation research [the lonely and alienating nose to the grindstone slog of data collection and interpretation]0
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Writing the dissertation [actually putting pen to paper and getting the behemoth done]4
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Defending the dissertation [taking ownership of your intellectual work and preparing to set sail on the academic seas]0
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The job search [selling yourself in an ever more competitive and cutthroat academic market]2
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Taking a leave of absence at some point during my graduate study0
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Other0
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2. What were the 1-3 most difficult ASPECTS of your overall experience in a PhD program?
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Learning how to be a graduate student0
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Learning how to conduct independent research0
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Learning how to write2
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Learning how to teach2
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Time management3
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Work/Life balance3
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Dealing with interpersonal / departmental politics2
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Feelings of inadequacy / impostor syndrome3
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Financial difficulty1
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Jumping over departmental hurdles (required classes, exams, teaching)1
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Learning how to ask interesting questions0
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Coming to terms with your intellectual interests and potential limitations0
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Learning where your work fits in the discipline1
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Losing sight of the other things that are important to you in life (family, friends, activism, spirituality, etc)0
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Spending so many of my best years in school / impoverished0
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Feeling "overeducated" / forgetting how to communicate outside of academia1
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Feeling that my work would likely have little impact in the "real world" / outside of the academy2
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Feeling inadequately prepared to be a faculty member0
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Feeling unsure whether I will be able to arrive at the future I work so hard to achieve0
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Other0
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3. What would you have done differently? (check as many as you like)
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Waited a few years before committing to attend graduate school3
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Chosen a different discipline altogether2
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Chosen a different department / reapplied the following year if necessary2
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Chosen a different subdiscipline / spent more time finding the right one0
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Chosen a different advisor / been more careful in the advisor choice0
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Chosen a different dissertation topic / been more diligent in the topic choice0
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Been more qualitative0
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Been more quantitative0
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Taken more / different courses2
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Pursued linkages / other interests in different departments or academic disciplines2
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Gone to graduate school before getting married and/or having children0
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Gone to graduate school after getting married and/or having children0
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Been more forceful with my advisor/department about my research ideas and academic needs2
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Published more1
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Focused more on getting outside funding1
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Spent more time collaborating / bouncing ideas off of my cohort and colleagues0
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Spent more time engaging with faculty1
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Invested more in getting professionalized (public speaking, interviewing, networking, etc)2
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Pursued another career altogether0
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Other1
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