Friday, July 1, 2011

Should You Get a PhD?

More students than you think actually aren’t 100% certain that they want to get a PhD. There are some people that desire positions that have a PhD as a prerequisite (e.g., being a tenure-track professor). If what you want to be requires a PhD, then it’s probably in a student’s best interest to be certain she wants the PhD.

So for the rest of us out there who don’t need a PhD for some job we desire, the question is "should we get PhDs?”

I believe you should obtain a PhD if you believe its attainment will add substantial value to your life. 

When some people see the word value, they sometimes immediately think of money, but value is obviously more than that. Take me for example. The number one reason I decided to complete my PhD was that, because I knew I wouldn’t enter into academia, my life had a greater probability of being “interesting”--I couldn’t predict how my life would be altered--I just knew it would be altered, and it would be positive.  Now, I'm not going to lie, I also figured monetarily, if I played my cards I could come out on top financially as well--but this thought wasn't the primary motivation.  Quitting the PhD program after my Master’s to enter the workforce just seemed too boring and predictable a life.

The perceived greater potential of a “interesting life” was enough to drive me to finish my PhD. The trick is to find out if such a drive--that is, something valuable that’s derived from obtaining a PhD--exists for you in your life. Good luck!

Life Lessons Learned From Running


I can honestly assert that my most meaningful achievement has nothing to do with computers or computer science. Nevertheless, it has taught me many practical life lessons and analogies that I apply to my field of study and has shaped my goal achievement. Specifically, I trained for and completed a half marathon last year. Due to the fact that I was never an active runner, this entire experience was very new and difficult, however the process taught me many important principles. 

Firstly, I learned that comparing my performance to the performance of others was completely unnecessary. To explain, I am an extremely slow runner and was frequently discouraged when I encountered much older runners that ran much faster than me. I found that oftentimes, we are preoccupied by the achievements of others and tend to compare our own performance to the performance of others. In reality, my own performance has no bearing on anyone else’s performance and vice versa. Generally speaking, I learned that the achievement of others does not negate my hard work and progress.

Secondly, I learned that preparation is the most important component of the journey. In other words, preparation is what equips an individual to win the race. In terms of training, proper preparation ensures that a runner will successfully cross the finish line on the day of the race. In pursuing a PhD, adequate preparation ensures that when your knowledge is challenged, and you must defend your ideas, there is a firm background on which to base your knowledge.

Finally, I learned the importance of discipline. To be successful, hard work must become a habit, regardless of your individual preferences. For example, during training, I ran at 6am on most mornings. Initially, I experienced extreme difficulty waking up at such an early hour. As I continued running, waking up early became a habit and as a result, easier. The same principle applies for achieving my goal of a PhD. Originally, when I began research, working long hours consistently was extremely difficult. Once, I put aside my own preferences and made this schedule a habit, it became a norm in my life.

Monday, May 9, 2011

The Value of Research Reading Groups

In case you haven’t figured it out yet, doing a Ph.D. by yourself sucks. As a PhD student, much is demanded from you: coursework, teaching, research, publications, and becoming expert at something being among the things demanded from you. There’s so much going on in your field. How could you really read all of it in a reasonable amount of time?

News flash: You can’t.

So what is a Ph.D. student to do? Join a reading group related to your research area. In a reading group, at each meeting of the group, a different member takes the responsibility of reading a “important” paper in the area, and presents it to the rest of the group. This strategy spreads out the work required to stay on top of your field.

But what if there are no groups in your research area? Start one. Are you the only student in your department interested in your field? If so, that isn’t very healthy. In this case, you’ll want to at least occasionally attend another research group’s meetings. A great many ideas have been had by taking ideas from one area, and applying to another area.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Stand Up For Yourself


This sounds really cliché, but I think too few students stand up for themselves.  Students almost believe that they have to take nonsense from an advisor, because the advisor is paying her or controls when she graduates. If you’ve been disrespected by a professor, then you need to make it clear that you don’t take that kind of crap.  

You’re BOTH ADULTS.  

Your advisor shouldn’t treat you like his child. If your advisor can’t stand someone standing up for herself, then you might have the wrong advisor. If your advisor is looking for a child, then tell him to find a spouse and go create or adopt one.  It’s true that PhD students are often low on the totem pole, but it doesn’t make you a child either. I know for some, this advice may be hard to swallow, and I understand. 

I have two responses depending on circumstances.  Perspective one says that you’re afraid of future interactions being awkward with your advisor or you don’t know how he will react.  Look. There’s never a reason for your advisor to disrespect you when you’ve obeyed the Golden Rule and never disrespected him.  You have a right to correct your advisor in such a situation.  You have nothing to feel awkward about, because YOU were in the RIGHT.  You can be tactful in how you correct your advisor, but correct him you must, or be prepared to experience more disrespect throughout your PhD career.  And if you really had to choose, would rather you feel terrible the next X years, or potentially have to your advisor feel awkward for the next X years.  On the upside, he may want to graduate you faster!  Perspective two, you have a plan for redemption in the future.  If you’re being strategic about when you decide to stand up to your advisor, or in how you will stand up to him, know your strategy and implement it unfailingly.  Godspeed.     

Thursday, January 20, 2011

Don't Sleep B/c The Semester's Light (Thus Far)

We’re about two-thirds into January and that means for a number of graduate students, they’ve been back in the classroom for the past couple of weeks going over the introductory material needed for topics that come later in the semester.  Academically, everything probably seems fairly under control at this point.  Compared to the final weeks of last semester, you’re probably finding yourself taking more “chill pill sessions.”  

While I’m not against taking “chill pill sessions,” I am an advocate of trading in some of those chill pill sessions for grind sessions.  Now, what’s meant by “grind sessions?”  Do you recall how you behaved at the end of last semester?  That’s one manifestation of a grind session.  You were in the throes of preparing for final exams. This form of grinding is especially relevant for any course where you’re not 100% confident you understand everything presented thus far.



Now, if you’ve got your courses under control, there’s still something you could be doing: 

PILING UP THE RESEARCH HOURS.  

If you’re taking challenging courses and doing research, you’ll probably find that research eventually takes a backseat to coursework diminishing research productivity.  Allow me to let you in on a little secret you already know: your coursework WILL pick up and subsequently your research productivity WILL go down.  Given this clairvoyance, you can take some offsetting actions: namely, cranking up your research effort.  In any scenario, make good use of this time in the semester--it won’t always be here.  

photo credit: Peter Szustka

Monday, December 13, 2010

All the Value is in the Middle

When it comes to activities, we tend to want to jump to the end.  I just opened to the first chapter of “Introduction to Algorithms,” and I want to immediately get to the end of the chapter.  I’m in lecture and I’m thinking to myself “damn...how much longer is he going to go for?”  The clear problem with wanting to be done immediately with a task we initiated is that all the value in the task occurs between the beginning and the end.  


In other words, all the value in the activity occurs between the beginning and the end--the middle.

All the value in a relationship happens in the middle.  All the value in your college education occurred between the beginning and end of your college experience.  When you go to the gym, all the value you receive comes from all the stuff you do between the beginning and ending of your time at the gym.  This observation points to the importance of how you spend the time during the activity.  If you flip through a dense textbook on biomedical engineering, not even skimming the pages, the value of that process would be unsurprisingly zero.  The same would be true if you jumped directly to the end of a relationship, if you jumped directly to the end of your college education, or if you jumped directly to the end of your workout in the gym.  It’s clear in these examples that you’d be getting nothing out of these experiences if the time between the beginning and the end didn’t exist or wasn’t well spent.   

Whenever you feel the urge to jump to end of something, know that all the value of whatever you’re doing is in all the “middle stuff.”  If you don’t give the middle stuff its appropriate attention, you won’t be extracting as much value out of the experience as you can.  Thus, the next time you find yourself wanting to jump to end of something, remember: all the value is in the *middle.*
Photo credit: Ramzi Hashisho

Monday, November 29, 2010

Beating the 3rd Year Curse

There comes a point in every doctoral student's career when enough is enough and all desires of completing any project, dissertation, paper, etc. goes out the window. You have this overwhelming feeling, a strong desire, to just take your master's and quit. Don't worry you are not alone, over 30% of doctoral students drop out or are dismissed in their 3rd year. While for some the desire to quit is fleeting, for others it is constantly on your mind but you can beat the feeling.

1. Join a graduate student group at your university, like the Math Graduate Student Association, Black Graduate Student Association, etc. Organizations like these offer support, networking, and social activities three things that always benefit a graduate student. In a graduate student organization you are guaranteed to find at least one person that you can relate to.

2. Get a hobby (i.e. working out, volunteering, hiking, etc.), I am not encouraging you to go and get overly involved with some cause or to start working out 3 hours a day. However a healthy diversion from studying and research is needed from time to time. Remember it is physically impossible to work 24/7 because your body requires food and rest, but a having a hobby can give you the time to clear your mind thus resulting in more efficient studying and research.

3. Relax and tap into your faith. No matter what you believe in Christianity, Islam, Buddism, a higher power, or karma, some things are out of your control. You have to keep realistic goals for the completion of your program. I know it's cliche but Rome wasn't built in a day, so you cannot earn a doctorate in a year, but maybe in 4 to 5!