Advice on applying Graduate School: Many accomplished, intelligent people fail to achieve their goals and win admission to graduate school, why? Advice on applying Graduate School: So long, and thanks for the Ph.D.! Part 2 :Why get a Ph.D.? Advice on applying Graduate School: Phone Interview 2
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Many accomplished, intelligent people fail to achieve their goals and win admission to graduate school, why?


Applying to graduate school is a difficult task. As a seven-time GRE instructor, three-time graduate school hopeful (once-delayed, once-denied, and once-accepted), and an avid reader of guidebooks and Internet newsgroups, I have yet to find someone who found the process straightforward. Applicants tend to bemoan the experience, don't understand it, and very often fail outright at first. It's a tough process, and not only have I seen several adult Kaplan students shed tears over this process, but I also recall my own experiences and troubles along the way. It is no wonder that such frustrations and fears take hold so readily, for heart-felt hopes and dreams are at stake here, not to mention applicants' professional futures and familial expectations. And indeed, despite their efforts, many accomplished, intelligent people fail to achieve their goals and win admission to graduate school. Why is this so, and more importantly, how can you avoid this?

It is important to realize that we are not alone in our difficulties with regard to graduate school admissions. The confrontation of high standards with a limited number of applicants is not an occurrence unique to our generation. What has happened, however, is a dramatic rise in the perceived utility and importance of a graduate degree without a sufficiently corresponding rise in the related employment opportunities for graduate degree holders. The social perception of graduate degree importance thus has outstripped the available economic opportunities. At the same time, many people view the job market as increasingly stratified, with good jobs for highly educated people on one hand and limited opportunities elsewhere.

Graduate institutions have therefore been faced with the choice of either accepting as many students as apply -- without regard for employment prospects - or alternatively, limiting acceptances. Indeed, since graduate school implies more than simply the attainment of a degree but rather professional training in a field, a lower acceptance rate actually may help save people from needlessly pursuing dead-end career paths. Nonetheless, there are many out there who would still follow this dream, and hurl themselves towards the goal with great hopes. The point to remember, then, is to consider your dedication to the graduate school endeavor and the post-graduation prospects before applying yourself to this difficult and misunderstood process.

There is one "truth" to the graduate school admissions process that stands above all the others. It will be stated and shown in many ways over the pages which follow, but it must always be kept in mind, which is that graduate school admissions are fundamentally different than any other admissions process you may have witnessed or endured. This process is not like applying to college; Grades, Scores, and Recommendations are only the beginning. Therefore, given the variety of strengths and weaknesses that admissions teams are likely to see, it becomes incumbent upon you as a graduate school applicant to set yourself apart from and above the competition. For this reason, focusing solely upon the ordinary procession of grades, scores, and recommendations will not help. Indeed, considering the relative immutability of your Grades, Scores, and Recommendations (what I will call your "GSR"), it is the grand sum of things that you do to supplement these "standard items" that can make the largest degree of difference in your application process. Certainly you can worry about the relative power of your GSR, and try to enhance these things as much as possible, but you ultimately have more to offer than the these numbers alone. Use your strength, creativity, and sheer willpower to bolster your candidacy; these traits ultimately will be essential in catapulting you towards your goals.

The ordinary commencement of graduate school efforts -- the standard application process -- is at once familiar and sadly misdirected. Based upon the aforementioned fundamental misconception of graduate admissions, the experience of a hypothetical "TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT" may help to illustrate the common woes of first-time applicants.

To begin her graduate school odyssey, TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT is going to review the various schools and programs available to her, and express disconsolate alarm over the very high standards required for admissions. In order to get in, TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT decides that she will have to do something serious about her GSR. So, she'll worry interminably about her grade point average, and possibly take extra night classes to get closer to that 3.x range that she has been coveting (she's pretty sure that people with these kinds of grades get in). She will spend feverish months studying for the GRE's, shooting for some pie-in-the-sky score which, she will soon find out, is not only likely impossible but also not nearly that important to most programs. Regardless, to round things out Ms. TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT also will spend much anxious time with the employers and professors from whom she hopes to get a few letters of recommendation. She is not sure exactly what to say, but she smiles broadly and absentmindedly at them. They smile back slightly unnerved by her attention.

A few weeks before the deadlines, TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT is ready to choose three or four schools from among the brochures scattered about the room, and she begins her final preparations. She'll finally ask her convenient authority figures for letters of recommendation (she thinks there may be another form to fill out, though, and promises to bring it early next week). TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT has also begun to request her GRE score reports and college transcripts (one at a time for each school, as it occurs to her). And she may even begin to write a draft of the personal statement, starting off with "Ever since I was a little girl" and ending with "change the world, in my own way." Soon mail will be flying everywhere: transcripts, score reports, faculty recommendations, and replacement copies of marred application forms careening about in postal chaos. And luckily, she's an organized type; all but one of her applications should arrive on time.

Then, she'll wait. And she'll worry. And after five months of telling people of her plans and publicly bemoaning her fears, TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT will not be packing her bags to move off to graduate school. She'll be staying home.

Though this scenario with
TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT clearly is embellished, the pattern of failed applicants is genuine. Typical graduate school applicants like TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT come with an honest and deeply-held commitment to the goal, even without comprehending the process by which to achieve it. And the blame sits not with TO-BE-GRAD-STUDENT's GSR -- which she probably faults for her fate -- but in her poor methods and preparations. Underlying all of it are her strongly-held, widely-perpetuated beliefs that:

A) only the GSR really matters,
B) being earnest, caring and creative will only win you a nice eulogy
C) the process is genuinely quite similar to undergraduate admissions. The sooner these beliefs are dispelled, the better.

I will state this just once more: it is not that GSR's do not matter or that the standard ways of applying to graduate school are bad. There are simply other facets to exploit and additional means for compiling an application with greater chances for success. I have learned these things partly from listening to others, partly from scouring every available resource for ideas, and partly from the experience of personal failure (the worst, but most common, method of education). Above all, I stress the fact that your efforts are paramount: that being earnest, caring, and creative not only will win you a nice eulogy, but also may help you to get into graduate school... the first time you apply.

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So long, and thanks for the Ph.D.! Part 2 :Why get a Ph.D.?

by Ronald T. Azuma

"Being a graduate student is like becoming all of the Seven Dwarves. In the beginning you're Dopey and Bashful. In the middle, you are usually sick (Sneezy), tired (Sleepy), and irritable (Grumpy). But at the end, they call you Doc, and then you're Happy." - yours truly. The most basic question every Ph.D. student must know the answer to is: "Why the hell am I doing this?"

It's a good question. The hours are long. The pay is low, with minimal benefits. After graduation, Ph.D. salaries are higher than B.S. and M.S. salaries, but the difference doesn't make up for the income lost by staying in school longer. The M.S. has a better "bucks for the time invested" ratio than the Ph.D. does. And in terms of social status, a graduate student doesn't rank very high on the ladder.

If you do not have an acceptable answer to this question, then don't get a Ph.D. I repeat: if you do not have a rock-solid reason for getting the Ph.D., then it is better that you leave with a Master's.

Why? Completing a Ph.D. is a long, hard road with many potholes and washed out bridges along the way. You may run over some land mines and have to stop and turn around and explore other routes. If the goal is important enough to you, then these obstacles will not prevent you from completing your journey. But if you don't know why you are on this road, then you will get discouraged and will probably leave without finishing, having wasted years of your life.

I faced this situation after the first time I took the Doctoral Written Exam (which at the time was the entrance examination into the Ph.D. program). I missed passing it by just 4 percentage points. I then had to decide whether or not to try again next semester (committing myself again to spending weeks getting ready for the test) or just leave with an M.S. degree.

I didn't come to graduate school with the Ph.D. as the primary goal. So this test result forced me to answer the basic question "Why the hell am I doing this?" After much soul searching, I found my answer and decided to take the test again, passed it, and went on to get my Ph.D.

I got the Ph.D. because I wanted to get a research position after leaving graduate school. I wanted to work with the state of the art and extend it. I did not want to "bring yesterday's technology one step closer to tomorrow." I wanted a job that would I find interesting, challenging and stimulating. While an M.S. would give me a chance at landing a research position, the Ph.D. would give me a much better chance. And I did not want to live with regrets. If I took the Doctoral Written Exam again and failed again, then I could say that it wasn't meant to be and move on with my life. I would have no regrets because I had given it my best shot and was not able to make it. However, if I left with an M.S. without taking the test a second time, and five years later I was in a job that was boring and uninteresting, then I would have to lie awake every night for the rest of my life wondering "What if?" What if I had taken the test again and passed? Would I then be in the job that I really wanted? That was not a situation I wanted to be in. I did not want to live the rest of my life regretting what might have been.

In hindsight, I think one of the main reasons I successfully completed the Ph.D. was the fact that I didn't pass the exam on the first try. It's ironic, but life sometimes works in strange ways. That initial failure caused me to answer the basic question, providing the mental fortitude to keep going despite the hurdles and problems I would later face.

My answer is you should get a Ph.D. if it is required for your goals after graduate school, such as becoming a professor or a researcher in academia, government or industry. Your answer may differ from mine. As long as you have an answer that you believe in passionately, then that's enough. If you don't have an answer, then save yourself a lot of grief and don't get the Ph.D.


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Phone Interview 2

Hi guys, today i got asked the dreadful question. why would you like to do a phd? i must have said something like...coz am interested in working for an NGO in the longterm, i would like to teach and go into research and i don't get any fulfillment from working in the field. what have you guys been saying at interviews? if only to improve my clumsy answer. thanks.

As long as you sound keen, enthusiastic and sincere that's a goodenough reason. I just said I wanted to do research and think you need a PhD to get ahead.

What would you do in the first week of your PhD if we were to offer you it now (i.e. experimentally)? What do you plan on doing afterwards (e.g. remaining in academia)? Why this Uni/Department/Project?

Here's some of the questions I was asked at my recent interview: Why do you want to do a PhD? Where do you see yourself in 10 years time? What is it about this project that attracts you?

Try to bring out reasons why you are so enthusiastic about the topic in your interview. Read over your application and CV and your Honours project - look at the successes of your project and also the things that didn't go to plan because they may ask you about this and how you overcame the problems. They won't expect you to be brilliant..not at all!! They will know you'll be nervous. Do some background reading on the deaprtment and on the topic of the project too - particularly what research they do on that topic there.

Also, make sure you have some questions to ask them.

Five minutes isn't a long time if you think about it. 1 minute forthe introduction, 3 minutes for the main content and 1 minute for a conclusion/research proposal. Try read as much as possible and anticipate any questions that might get asked.

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