Guest post: Julio Peironcely
A PhD is definitely not a walk in the park. I know; I had my fair share of struggles as a
PhD student. Productivity, motivation or coming up with scientifically sound ideas, you name it.
Luckily I had good mentors and I read inspiring books. I got good advice and
study tips
from both of these sources, and I would like to share some of the most
useful advice I came across. These PhD tips are based on my own
experience. Some I learned early on during my struggle as a PhD student,
and others I wish had had learned earlier. I hope they can help you.
PhD study tip #1: Write early and write often
Obviously the more papers you write the better – but that’s not what I
mean. I mean write as often as possible, even if you don’t have a paper
on the horizon.
Start writing as early as possible in your PhD, and write regularly.
Some people write daily, others once a week. The goal is to consistently
document your progress, what you did, how, and the obstacles you
encountered.
Writing early will help you to develop and maintain your writing
skills for when the time comes to write a full-fledged paper. By writing
often you will accumulate content that you can reuse when you need to
write abstracts, papers or proposals.
I didn’t follow this PhD study tip myself and I regret it. I think I
could have written my papers in half the time if I had. Not only this,
their quality would have been much higher.
PhD study tip #2: Read lots of papers
At the beginning of your PhD you have to read lots of papers. The
goal is that you get a clear overview of your research field. You must
understand all the important research already done. This is what people
call the "state of the art”.
Once you know the state of the art in your field, you can see where
your PhD fits in. How you are going to contribute and expand the scope
of research? It also gives you a roadmap to avoid duplicating existing
research and reinventing the wheel.
Once you have done most of the reading, you will need to keep track
of new developments in your field, by reading new papers and speaking to
others about what research is underway.
PhD study tip #3: Read other things
PhD students don’t just encounter academic problems; they also face
challenges in time management, motivation or creativity. Reading papers
may help you in some of these areas – but not always. That’s why you
need to read other types of material.
Productivity, personal skills and business books can help you grow as
a PhD student. They provide practical advice, including study tips and
also general guidance on how to develop essential skills applicable in
all kinds of roles.
Following blogs such as Thesis Whisperer, Next Scientist or
TopUniversities.com can also help you boost your motivation and show you
inspiring stories from other PhD students.
Remember that you must think creatively, and reading only one type of
content (scientific papers in your specific field) may narrow your
thoughts.
PhD study tip #4: Work in short sprints
Another study tip that boosted my productivity came from the world of
software development. Some people call this agile development, others
talk about fast prototyping, short sprints, or ‘ship it fast and get
feedback’.
Have you ever waited a long time to show something until you felt it
was perfect, only to find that, well, the other person disagreed?
That waste of time is what you want to avoid. The idea here is to
work very fast to produce something that is just good enough, show it,
get feedback and improve it in another sprint. And iterate on and on.
One great time management technique based on the idea of working in short sprints is the
Pomodoro Technique.
PhD study tip #5: Focus on small signs of progress
Halfway through my PhD I lost motivation because I felt I hadn’t
produced anything substantial. My mistake was to bind my satisfaction to
having reached important milestones like publishing a paper.
Wrong. Those things take too long. I needed some small doses of sweet PhD love along the way.
Once I started focusing on smaller signs of progress, everything
started to look brighter. I knew that if on a given day I finished three
small tasks then I was on the right track, I was making enough
progress.
Instead of thinking “Am I there yet?” you should ask yourself, “Am I closer than I was three months ago?”
PhD study tip #6: Don’t cut corners
So far we’ve focused on productivity study tips for the PhD student.
These allow you to skip unnecessary tasks and focus on what really
matters for your PhD. But there is one area where you cannot find
shortcuts. That’s in your reputation.
During your PhD you may be tempted to do things that seem like a
benefit in the short term, but that could harm your reputation in the
long term. These shortcuts involve your credibility, your thoroughness
and your accountability.
Imagine: after six months of preparing your paper, you are almost
there. You find there’s a little mistake in the data, but you don’t
think it will harm the overall outcome. So why waste your time fixing
it? Or why cite all the relevant papers when with a few will do? Even
worse, why not use somebody else’s method but not acknowledge that, so
it looks like it was your own creation?
This sloppiness will eventually come back to haunt you. Sooner or
later people won’t trust you. They will not want to collaborate with
you. They will not cite your papers. So, even it if means extra work,
stay away from cutting corners!
Do you have other study tips for PhD students? Share them in the comments below.
Julio Peironcely is the founder of NextScientist.com, a blog that aims to help PhD students succeed. He’s also the author of the free e-book 17 Simple Strategies to Survive Your PhD
.