Starting the PhD? 25 things to consider

Share:
Are you just starting a PhD? Worried? Excited? Nervous? Fear not.:There’s lots of support and help available to you. Your institution is likely to provide an induction programme where you’ll find out about all the internal procedures and timelines you have to follow. But there’ll also be more. You’ll also get details of what training is available to you. Your institution will encourage you to make connections with your peers, and to engage with what’s on offer outside your faculty. There’s also veritable truckloads of advice available to you from other sources – facebook and what’s app support groups, youtube, twitter accounts, and books which address doctoral progress, writing the thesis and examinations. I’ve written a fair few posts over the years about starting the PhD. And had a few guests write about early doctoral issues too. I’ve gathered twenty five (well actually twenty six) together here, so you don’t need to go rummaging through the patter archive. And I do answer questions in the form of new posts if there are things missing from this getting going list! Getting down and dirty with scholarly cultures Getting to grips with “the university” – this post looks at what it means to work in a very peculiar particular kind of organisation Learning new vocabulary – the post talks about the process of acquiring a new disciplinary and research lexicon Being “critical” – looks at what it means to evaluate and develop a “helicopter” view of your reading Write and write regularly – well what it says, the importance of setting up a regular writing time, space and habit Choosing your words – this post examines the strengths and limitations of using academic phrase banks to underpin your academic writing practice Don’t try to write “classy” – this post looks at why explaining your ideas clearly is a better goal than trying to sound “academic” Keeping a journal – it’s a very good idea to keep track of your reading, experiences and ideas The very first thing you are asked to do in the PhD – read and write Refining your research topic – looks at how you focus down the big messy idea you started with Digging into the reading – this post offers some beginning strategies for actually getting going, choosing between all of the texts that are on offer Putting the search into research – offers some advice on how to approach the process of searching Searching the field – this post suggests that a key task in initial reading is not just to find material relevant to your study but also to get a handle on your field How to start your literature review – Three different approaches to the big reading and writing task Finding the literatures you need – offers some strategies for locating the work relevant to your project Comparing and contrasting papers – this post is a take on what you need to do when you are reading Seven prompts for writing with literatures – this post offers strategies for doing the early writing your supervisor will ask for How much should doctoral researchers read? – suggests its better to think about what’s desirable and possible in the time Why supervisions can be hard – looks at moving from being marked right and wrong to being asked questions which extend your thinking. It’s good to also read this post Troubleshooting research supervision Some practical issues  Selling up and leaving home – tells the story of moving countries to do a PhD and all that this means Money matters – talks about the importance of thinking about costs and budgets for the whole PhD period Tech matters– sorting out your computer equipment and software is pretty important Managing expectations – this post looks at some of the predictable “tough points” in the PhD ahead Anticipate tasks and timings – this post suggests that it is helpful to get a long term overview of what happens when and why Setting up your routine – advice on developing the habits that will get you through the long haul Get organised now – this post suggests that being in control of where you work, and how you work, is key to success. Don’t panic – talks about PhD highs and lows and that feeling that you don’t know what you are doing. Relax, everyone feels this.

Tags: