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3.Understand the job market
Don't expect that the work you do in grad school will land you a great university professor job -- good jobs are few and far between these days and there are a lot of unemployed and underemployed Ph.D.'s. Learn some skills that translate as useful outside of academics (in sociology, for example, statistics and survey design are useful in government, business, and private research institutes). General teaching skills would also be useful. Be prepared to be “exploited” as an adjunct instructor for a while before getting a “real” job.
Don’t be afraid to consider non-academic options, even when the department doesn't support such choices. Perhaps you cannot publicize such choices, but don't waste your time being convinced to go the academic route if your heart isn't in it. Try not to tie your self-worth exclusively to your success/choice of the academic job market.
4. Understand and get funding
Consider funding very seriously when making a decision about which graduate school to attend. This is a long process no matter what, which means many years of just scraping by -- the more money you can get guaranteed the better.
Get enough financial support so you can progress through dissertation stage without conflict/distractions.
Ask direct questions, before choosing a school, about how they get funded to do fieldwork/archival work. Most who utilize quantitative methods have much easier access to data for their research. The rest of us (and there are a significant proportion of us across the social sciences) need outside funding. So, if there is not a lot of cash available at the school you are considering, ask directly about the kind of support and mentorship there is for writing grant proposals.
Secure fellowship or scholarship funding.
Think seriously about what being admitted without a financial commitment will mean to you financially as well as how it will affect faculty's perception of your potential.
Save up some money first so that you have cash reserves to fall back on and can attend professional meetings as you wish.
5.Select your advisor carefully
Try and find a mentor right away. Preferably, someone you can work with and whose interests match yours, but even more importantly, someone who is genuinely interested in watching out for you and seeing you succeed. This would be someone who not only helps you academically, but helps you professionally (i.e., encourages you to go to conferences, apply for grants/fellowships, network, helps to make all of those implicit rules of academia explicit, etc...) and mentally/emotionally.
Look at the placement record of your school. Work with faculty who help their students get jobs.
Look closely at how faculty and students interact -- try to find faculty who help students do research and who publish with their students.
Find out the scoop from other students on any faculty member you might be interested in working with. Work with faculty members who known for building students up, not tearing them down. It's important that your advisor have interests and experience related to your dissertation, but it doesn't need to be exactly the same topic, it can be really helpful when your advisor isn't so invested in the research because convincing them of its importance helps you figure it out for yourself, and once you go outside the department, you will surely run across people with different priorities and you'll have to convince them.
Before you pick an advisor, go and speak with him or her and find out if you get along. Talk to other students in the department you are applying to, understand that many grads are bitter, but listen carefully, especially to what they say about the advisor you want.
Don't be afraid to switch advisors if it's not a good fit.
The most important thing (even more important than the prestige of the program or university as a whole) is to find a professor whose work you like and respect, who is willing to work with you, and who will have time for you when you are there (i.e. who isn't on sabbatical, overworked, retiring, etc). I had that, so I had a great grad school experience even though some professors weren't as accessible.
Identify a major sponsor within the department to fund your schooling and promote your career. However, it is also important to not put all your eggs in one basket.
6.Take time off between undergraduate and PhD studies
Even if you're “sure” of what you want to do, try some other things that seem interesting. Give yourself a couple of years to do this.
Get some work experience before jumping immediately into graduate school.
Take time off (1-3 years) between undergrad and grad school to travel and work at a ”real” job. This is especially useful if you develop a marketable skill to bring in a little money when funds are low or debt is building up. It also gives students a very different perspective on the whole Ph.D. experience. |
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