• melbourne_wanderer
    link
    fedilink
    arrow-up
    6
    ·
    1 month ago

    this is a difficulty for people who go straight from undergrad to PhD. It can also be a slight warning sign (but absolutely not always) if a phd grad has no experience at all, because usually phd students need to supplement their scholarship/RTP, and supportive supervisors will give good students a boost with some casual work to give them experience/time on the books.

    But yes - I often encourage students to get some experience, one way or another, while studying. Often, the type who go straight from one degree to the next are precisely the type who worry that taking a few hours out to do paid work each week will negatively impact their academic performance, etc, and they need to be gently reminded that a well rounded application is stronger than a straight H1 student who has never seen or done anything!

    • just_kitten
      link
      fedilink
      arrow-up
      3
      ·
      1 month ago

      I feel like some of this is definitely cultural - where I grew up and went to school, I would’ve DEARLY loved to hear this advice:

      a well rounded application is stronger than a straight H1 student who has never seen or done anything

      It was always grades above all else because the system there rewarded that. Was a hard lesson in my own undergrad days and I’m lucky some place gave me a chance in my second year despite hardly any work experience prior. For all the (perhaps partially justified) accusations of mediocrity or lack of rigour in Australian academia, or anti-intellectualism in Australia more generally, I’m very very grateful for the relative sense of groundedness that’s encouraged over here.