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四. English
1. Know yourself and know what doctoral study entails
Only go to graduate school if you have a clear sense of purpose, a clear sense of what your work is about. Don’t go simply because you don’t have a sense of what else you might do. If you don't know why you’re going to grad school and what sort of work (at least roughly) you're going to do once you get there, don't go. Wait until you know. Being a doctoral student isn’t like being an undergrad, only more so. It’s a massive commitment of time and a guaranteed sentence of poverty. It is, arguably, no way for a self-respective grown-up to live. Moreover, the rewards are extremely uncertain.
Be sure you can cope with it financially, and don't expect anything to be smooth, easy, or without great sacrifice. I have almost no sense of peer support and--definitely--the faculty simply use us to stave off the work they should be doing. Because grad school draws in a workforce of eager and highly-qualified people, the faculty need not take any steps to ease the problems that the grad student encounters. Grad students allow faculty members to pursue their pet projects and are not at all rewarded for their efforts.
I, however, must make a distinction. While I regret the terrible state of academic life for graduate students, I do not regret going to grad school. In part because of faculty indifference and in part because of the better aspects of grad school, I have myself lived a decade knee-deep in rich and complex intellectual pursuits. These experiences may not lead to a job, but I have had them. I can read and think and write all day and for that I will always be thankful. Grad school will allow you to grow intellectually even if you must do it in isolation.
All entering students should assiduously research the schools they are considering, and should be absolutely sure that they are interested in their field and in earning a Ph.D., whether or not doing so leads to any further career advancement. For most people, I would say that a Ph.D. in the humanities probably should not be undertaken, especially without an extremely clear understanding of the financial and professional difficulties thereof.
Just be sure that you're there because you want to be and not to get a job.
Don't go to grad school in English with the sole goal of getting a teaching job. Only go if you want to fulfill a personal goal, if the means is the end. You will be disappointed otherwise!
If you want to be a professor, being a great teacher is not enough (actually it doesn't matter at all), only research/scholarly skills and achievements can secure you a teaching job in this field (paradoxically and wrongfully so!).
Know what you are getting into! I did not expect many of the personal challenges of graduate school, in terms of time commitment (6 years for Master's and Ph.D. work) and how different my life would be from others I know who did not go to graduate school. The delayed gratification of graduate school (not getting a permanent job or starting a family until later in life) was a surprise to me. However, I have greatly enjoyed my time in grad school, and I know that grad school has made me a vastly different person than I was when I first began my program of study.
Make sure you're focused and committed; it can be lonely and isolating particularly after you've completed exams and coursework. Many students seem to lose their momentum at this point and have difficulty finishing.
Make sure you are clear on funding, whether you will be supported throughout; and find out if funding has been cut over the years.
I think I would just be very frank about the pressures and sacrifices of graduate school. My intention would not be to be cruel, but I would want to disillusion them, basically, of any romantic notions they might have. On the other hand, I would also give them advice to try and keep hold of the (often idealistic and excited) reasons they elected to attend graduate school. There are plenty of difficult days (years!), and it can help to remind yourself of what this all used to mean to you and still does at times.
Know that an English Ph.D. commonly takes seven or more years to complete, not the five I was expecting.
If you go to grad school because you love studying (your field), beware, graduate school is not designed to foster that passion, but rather to train you for a career in academia. During my first two years of coursework, when I was being “forced” to study things I wasn't as interested in, I lost the passion for literature that I had had upon matriculation. Many people I know left grad school for this reason. What I found helpful was the realization that those early years are a kind of intensive “training camp,” where you learn to revise your vision of the field and see it as a professional, a scholar rather than a student.
Grad school is a place for self-starters. It is often very isolating and for many (actually everyone, I think) it affects their self-esteem, self-respect and general overall view of life. Academia is not, as if often assumed, free of petty locker-room talk or competitiveness or even slander. It has its problems just like any other profession. In short, you need a strong sense of yourself and your goals (as well as your options) before you get to grad school. It is not for the faint-hearted.
Recognize that, whatever one's career goals are, graduate school is about the dissemination, creation, and sharing of knowledge. It is not 13th grade.
Don’t do a Ph.D. in the humanities--not because the learning experience is not worthwhile, but because the profession is so troubled--even those who succeed have to make unhealthy sacrifices to do so, and academia inculcates students with the idea that the real world is too coarse for them, thus preventing them from making the discovery that their insane sacrifices are not worth it. Of course this is easy for me to say, having spent my 20’s reading and hanging around, not at an office.
I would advise students in the humanities to make sure that they want to enter a doctoral program since about 55% of people in my field don't get tenure-track jobs.
Don’t enter a doctoral program unless they were fully funded for the majority of the estimated time to degree. |
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