1 / 14

Purpose of Graduate School

Purpose of Graduate School. Transformation from a consumer to a consumer/producer Consumer – reads other people’s research Producer – makes an original scholarly contribution Learning the ropes of the academic game. The Key To Success. Work ethic

eitan
Download Presentation

Purpose of Graduate School

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Purpose of Graduate School • Transformation from a consumer to a consumer/producer • Consumer – reads other people’s research • Producer – makes an original scholarly contribution • Learning the ropes of the academic game

  2. The Key To Success • Work ethic • For most graduate students, raw intelligence is not the binding constraint • The binding constraint is often work ethic (persistence, determination, decision making) • Some sound advice from James Buchanan: • “Keep your ass in the chair. If you work from 6:00am to 6:00pm, you will outwork all the other academics around you.”

  3. Writing papers… • …is a learning process • Start early and write often (i.e., every day!) • Keep a small “idea” notebook with you at all times • Some more advice from James Buchanan: • “All work is work in progress. “ • “Don’t get it perfect, get it written.” • “All writing is research.”

  4. Remember Your Roots • Pursue what interests you • Why did you get into your field in the first place? • Pursue your passion, do not pursue what you think is fashionable in the literature • Dare to be different, but be competent

  5. Finding a Topic • Use your discipline (and classical liberalism) as a set of glasses to view the world • Look out the window rather than on the black board for your questions • Strive to find puzzles where it appears that events defy what logic dictates • Work to solve the puzzle using your discipline to illustrate it is just an illusion, that the defiance is only an illusion

  6. Finding a Topic, cont’d • You write what you read so read widely • Be familiar with the main journals in your field • But also read beyond your narrow area of specialization • And don’t minimize the importance of keeping up on current events, news, etc.

  7. Embrace Your Inner Classical Liberal • Stealth strategy doesn’t work • You are what you write • Suppression of your true views are costly • Personal • Professionally: Academics is a very competitive business with seriously skilled people, you cannot “fake out” the competition • Classical liberalism – we need you! • You won’t be happy!

  8. Embrace Your Inner Classical Liberal, cont’d • Writing on classical liberal ideas does not equal dogma or shoddiness • Pursuing these ideas won’t be low quality unless you are low quality • People care what you can show, not what you can think • High quality work is rewarded • Use your unique perspective (and passion!) to find interesting topics and questions

  9. Strategies for Narrowing Topic • Keep it doable • Low probability that your dissertation will be a ground breaking treatise • One part of your research portfolio which represents your larger research program • Contrary to popular belief, everything has not been written

  10. Strategies for Narrowing Topic, cont’d • Build off others (two approaches): • The small twist – one change to variables, different data sets, etc. • Can get published but often boring for you and others • The big twist – applying ideas in a new or novel ways • Keep in mind that you need to keep it doable • No one paper can address all aspects of a topic • That is ok, it means multiple papers

  11. Some other Suggestions • Co-author with faculty and students • Do not fear criticism from others (faculty, students, referees, etc.) • Bob Tollison - “Never consider a criticism as lethal, but instead as another line on your CV.” • Develop a thick skin

  12. Understand How Journals (or Books) Operate • Learn how the journal process works from faculty and senior graduate students • Understand the randomness of the journal process • Always be professional to journal editors

  13. Summing Up • Work hard and appreciate the opportunity you have • Don’t get discouraged (even though you will) • Start writing now! • Never view your classical liberalism as a hindrance, but instead as a plus

More Related