Life with a PhD

By Davide Gaglio

The minister said: … I now pronounce you husband and wife! What a happy moment!

Yes I am married! It was such a perfect day. (Listen this song while you reading the Blog): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QYEC4TZsy-Y

“…Oh, it’s such a perfect day

I’m glad I spent it with you

Oh, such a perfect day

You just keep me hanging on

You just keep me hanging on”

We had such an amazing time, having shared it with our close family and friends who traveled from both far and near to be with us. As promised here some photos:

 

 

…and now still with these beautiful moments still stuck in my mind, with my heart full of joy and “amore” …now back in my office…in front of a pile of Excel files and R codes…

I have finished the majority of my field work, so lots of analysing data and writing up awaits me now… I am at the usual stage of every PhD student… asking myself Why? Why am I doing a PhD? Why have I embarked on this journey of constant challenges? Why have I allowed MS Word and printed papers to become such a big part of my life? Why? I was thinking a lot about the answer to these questions.

As mentioned in my previous entry, Matt Might explain a PhD like this; and the following picture shows the difference that my PhD will make to humanity 😦

blip

 

Well, my answer to this question is simpler than I thought and it’s not related to humanity…but to myself, and may be a little selfish. But I do it….to be happy!!!

Do you remember that feeling of happiness when you learned that you were accepted for a PhD program? How happy did you feel when you shared your experiences with other PhD students? Or when your first conference paper was accepted?… Yes, I am happy and grateful when I have the opportunity to share my experience, my vision, the results of my work with others. I feel grateful that there were PhD supervisors in the audience who listened to my perceptions as a PhD student. And you never know, it might have influenced their vision of a supervision process…at least a bit. And it means it might potentially change the life of other PhD students …

And yes the bigger picture…there is always a bigger picture behind your small limited piece of research… you just need to learn to see it. Looking back over the past few months, reading all my previous entry of my blog about my PhD, I can see that I have managed to progress my research considerably and have, indeed, learned much about my own life.

Thanks to my terns for making my job so magic!!! Yes…you are much better than penguins!

last pic

I would like to say goodbye with this sentence:

“Pursuing a PhD, is like beginning a journey… it’s always quite scary. But as you go along in the journey, the fear you had in the beginning becomes obsolete as you open yourself up to new challenges and experiences that change you forever.”

Survival of the fittest

A final-year PhD in the midst of student protest

By Yonela Z. Njisane

 

In the beginning of this blog series (April), my editor requested a list of blog titles for all the months (up to December) we will be blogging for. When I came up with “Survival of the fittest” for the month of November, I was only thinking of the hectic time where I will be wrapping up my PhD studies, dealing with peer, supervisor and/or reviewer critiques on my work.

Little did I know that there will be more to it than just that: personal struggles and the most effective student protest I have ever witnessed in my student years.

What’s the worst that could happen?

hashtag

I support my fellow students and their fights for a better education — yes, #FeesMustFall! However, I remain confused of my role in such cases as a postgraduate student — particularly a PhD candidate. I was taught, if I want to become a great researcher, I have to develop a timeline of activities, develop some sense of discipline, and stick to it. Also, it was made clear that no one will keep tabs on whether I am doing my work or not; independence is key.

boundaries

So I’m confused, as nobody can really tell me what choices to make here. Am I supposed to drop all the (time sensitive) experiments in progress and join in with my brothers and sisters in the struggle? Is it fair that I find myself having to put extra hours (on top of too many hours already in place) on writing up because I missed my deadlines during the protest? These missed deadlines and lost data could actually cost me my degree.

I guess it’s true that what works for one may not work for others…

You see, everyone will fight for the exam timetable to be adjusted but no one will consider the postgraduates deadlines for qualification for a certain graduation date. Remember, that also has funding implications. And think of all the samples in specialized machinery that will go bad when students switch off power to enforce the “no one should work or study” rule, and all the delayed submission plans, such as sudden inability to print and bind a thesis in preparation for examination.

This cannot be good…car

I guess the choice to join in the protest may have been easier for me considering that I agree with the central ideas, but the movement has also turned violent in nature, which goes against my own instincts and beliefs. I’ve watched how students end up ill-treating one another during their fight “for” the very same students.

  1. Bullying: Because you are not taking part in the singing, making fires etc., then you will be harassed and threatened verbally and/or physically by those that feel they have the power to run things at the time.
  2. Holding hostage: Switching the power off all day (till those involved get bored and want to end it for the day), no way of working (my laptop doesn’t even function without power, not for a second), can’t cook in our self-catering residences nor feel safe to drive/walk to town due to the violence and police involvement.
  3. Vandalism: Destroying the very same environment and resources that you find limiting already. How are things supposed to improve after the hype? Looting is just on another level and there is no form of excuse for it, it’s pure burglary.

safetyIt seems some students (and community members) take advantage of such occasions for totally unrelated matters, to exercise their natural hooliganism. I honestly do not think it should go this way. Maybe we should try and be more accommodating on this. Just maybe, more students would join in if things were done differently. And with the management learning to attend to issues sooner than later, success cannot be determined by disorder.

Remember that, “What you allow is what will continue” (Anonymous).