Hi Reader!As we dive right into the summer, I'm trying to come back to a more regular blog and newsletter posting rhythm. In today's newsletter, we bring you a new blog post extracting lessons for doctoral students (also useful for other researchers!) from a classic career advice book. We also flash back to another post about how to change our ways of working to better execute our PhD activities, overcoming the pressures of our everyday lives. New blog post: A PhD So Good It Can't Be Ignored (book extract) -- Passion, Practice, and ControlA doctorate is typically the first step in a longer (academic or otherwise) research career. Many think of it as a grueling rite of passage one must endure to get the job they want later on. But are there ways we can do the PhD to set us up for a remarkable and satisfying career? Are there ways we can make the PhD journey itself feel like a “good job”? In the first part of this book extract, we draw lessons from Cal Newport’s book So Good They Can’t Ignore You, about “passion traps”, properties of a good PhD job, and how a focus on mastery and control can help us develop a more satisfying PhD (and later research career). Flashback: The four disciplines of executing your PhD (book extract)(Tweet-length gists of past posts, so that you don't have to read through the whole blog backlog) Another book we extracted lessons from, gives further advice about how to execute the doctorate's activities amid the whirlwind of our day-to-day lives. A lot of what we are trying to do in terms of supporting doctoral student progress and well-being using technology, is actually based upon these same ideas:
Is achieving that thesis milestone always derailed by the whirlwind of other obligations? Focus on 1 goal, leverage key behaviors, increase engagement and create sustained accountability. More at https://ahappyphd.org/posts/execution/ May you find passion in executing your thesis with autonomy! Did this content help you? Hit reply and send us feedback (I cannot reply to all the emails we get, but I do read all of them), buy us a coffee, or help us spread the word! Forward this email to a friend you think may find this kind of advice useful. If you are reading this and you have not joined the newsletter yet, you can subscribe and get exclusive access to a worksheet to make the strategic plan towards your next dissertation milestone, in the button below:
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Looking for tips, tricks and advice to finish your doctoral thesis on time and with high spirits? Baffled by how little information is out there about how to support PhD students to become independent researchers? As an ex-doctoral student now co-supervising five students, I feel your pain. “A Happy PhD” is a blog (and a series of doctoral/supervisory courses) where I distil what has worked for me, as well as recent research in doctoral education, psychology and many other fields. Join our mailing list and get short doctoral advice in you inbox every week!
Hi Reader! As we rush towards (or just after) Spring breaks and Easter holidays, we may be thinking about all those thesis tasks we wanted to get done before the summer. To help us be productive without burning out, here are two purposeful doctoral productivity tips: one psychological (a new mantra I use a lot myself lately) and one tactical (a classic post on how to schedule time for hard PhD work). Enjoy! New blog post: Monday Mantra: Nothing meaningful without discomfort We spend a lot of...
Hi Reader! In our comeback to (somewhat) regular posting, we are trying out a little experiment -- the "study brief": a new kind of post, in which I briefly summarize a recent research study that I found interesting and which may be relevant for your "happy PhD" journey. Concretely, we delve on a recent study on important factors for doctoral student well-being. To contrast this high-level view of the doctorate, we also bring you a flashback that gets into the nitty-gritty details of how to...
Hi Reader! We are still trying to come back to some sort of blogging and newsletter regularity over here. This week(s), we bring you two very related posts: a new one about restarting a long-term project (especially, thesis work) after a long stretch of not working on it. We also bring you a classic post that explains a lot of the underlying psychology of how these thesis productivity slumps appear and are perpetuated (or not): the role of avoidance in much of our self-sabotaging during the...