Do you really want to pursue a Ph.D. degree?*
The Basics
A Doctor of Philosophy degree, abbreviated Ph.D., is the
highest academic degree anyone can earn. Because earning a Ph.D. requires extended
study and intense intellectual effort, less than one percent of the population
attains the degree. Society shows respect for a person who holds a Ph.D. by
addressing them with the title "Doctor".
To earn a Ph.D., one must accomplish two things. First,
one must master a specific subject completely. Second, one must extend the body
of knowledge about that subject.
Mastering A Subject
To master a subject, a student searches the published
literature to find and read everything that has been written about the subject.
In scientific disciplines, a student begins by studying general reference works
such as text books. Eventually, the student must also search scholarly
journals, the publications that scientists use to exchange information and
record reports of their scientific investigations.
Each university establishes general guidelines that a
student must follow to earn a Ph.D. degree, and each college or department
within a university sets specific standards by which it measures mastery of a
subject. Usually, in preparing for Ph.D. work in a given field, a student must
earn both a Bachelor's and Master's degree (or their equivalent) in that field
or in a closely related field. To demonstrate complete mastery of the subject,
a student may be required to complete additional graduate-level courses,
maintain a high grade average, or take a battery of special examinations. In
many institutions, students must do all three.
Because examinations given as part of a Ph.D. curriculum
assess expert knowledge, they are created and evaluated by a committee of
experts, each of whom holds a Ph.D. degree.
Extending Knowledge
The essence of a Ph.D., the aspect that distinguishes
Ph.D. study from other academic work, can be summarized in a single word:
research. To extend knowledge, one must explore, investigate, and contemplate.
The scientific community uses the term "research" to capture the
idea.
In scientific disciplines, research often implies
experimentation, but research is more than mere experiments -- it means
interpretation and deep understanding. For Computer Scientists, research means
searching to uncover the principles that underlie digital computation and
communication. A researcher must discover new techniques that aid in building
or using computational mechanisms. Researchers look for new abstractions, new
approaches, new algorithms, new principles, or new mechanisms.
To complete a Ph.D., each student must present results
from their research to the faculty in a lengthy, formal document called a dissertation
(more popularly referred to as a thesis). The student must then submit their
dissertation to the faculty and defend their work an oral examination.
Relationship To Products
In some cases, the results of scientific research can be
used to develop new products or improve those that exist. However, scientists
do not use commercial success or potential commercial profits as a measure of
their work; they conduct investigations to further human understanding and the
body of knowledge humans have compiled. Often, the commercial benefits of
scientific research are much greater in the long-term than in the short-term.
Research Activities
Computer Science research can include such diverse
activities as designing and building new computer systems, proving mathematical
theorems, writing computer software, measuring the performance of a computer
system, using analytical tools to assess a design, or studying the errors
programmers make as they build a large software system. Because a researcher
chooses the activities appropriate to answer each question that arises in a
research investigation, and because new questions arise as an investigation
proceeds, research activities vary from project to project and over time in a
single project. A researcher must be prepared to use a variety of approaches
and tools.
A Few Questions To Ask
Many of you are trying to decide whether to pursue a
Ph.D. degree. Here are a few questions you might ask yourself.
1. Do you want a research
career?
Before enrolling in a Ph.D. program, you should carefully
consider your long-term goals. Because earning a Ph.D. is training for
research, you should ask yourself whether a research position is your long-term
goal. If it is, a Ph.D. degree is the standard path to your chosen career (a
few people have managed to obtain a research position without a Ph.D., but they
are the exception, not the rule). If, however, you want a non-research career,
a Ph.D. is definitely not for you.
2. Do you want an academic
position?
A Ph.D. is the de facto "union card" for
an academic position. Although it is possible to obtain an academic position
without a Ph.D., the chances are low. Major universities (and most colleges)
require each member of their faculty to hold a Ph.D. and to engage in research activities.
Why? To insure that the faculty have sufficient expertise to teach advanced
courses and to force faculty to remain current in their chosen field. The U.S.
State Department diplomatic protocol ranks the title "professor"
higher than the title "doctor". It does so in recognition of academic
requirements: most professors hold a Ph.D., but not all people who hold a Ph.D.
degree are professors.
3. Do you have what it
takes?
It is difficult for an individual to assess their own
capabilities. The following guidelines and questions may be of help.
Intelligence: In your college and graduate
courses, were you closer to the top of your class or the bottom? How well did
you do on the GRE or other standardized tests?
Time: Are you prepared to tackle a project larger than
any you have undertaken before? You must commit to multiple years of hard work.
Are you willing to reduce or forego other activities?
Creativity:Research
discoveries often arise when one looks at old facts in a new way. Do you shine
when solving problems? Do you like "brain teasers" and similar
puzzles? Are you good at solving them? In school, did you find advanced
mathematics enjoyable or difficult?
Intense curiosity:
Have you always been compelled to understand the world around you and to find
out how things work? A natural curiosity makes research easier. Did you fulfill
minimum requirements or explore further on your own?
Adaptability:
Most students are unprepared for Ph.D. study. They find it unexpectedly
different than course work. Suddenly thrust into a world in which no one knows
the answers, students sometimes flounder. Can you adapt to new ways of
thinking? Can you tolerate searching for answers even when no one knows the
precise questions?
Self-motivation:
By the time a student finishes an undergraduate education, they have become
accustomed to receiving grades for each course each semester. In a Ph.D.
program, work is not divided neatly into separate courses, professors do not
partition tasks into little assignments, and the student does not receive a
grade for each small step. Are you self-motivated enough to keep working toward
a goal without day-to-day encouragement?
Competitiveness:
If you choose to enroll in a Ph.D. program, you will compete with others at the
top. More important, once you graduate, your peers will include some of the
brightest people in the world. You will be measured and judged in comparison to
them. Are you willing to compete at the Ph.D. level?
Maturity:
Compared to coursework, which is carefully planned by a teacher, Ph.D. study
has less structure. You will have more freedom to set your own goals, determine
your daily schedule, and follow interesting ideas. Are you prepared to accept
the responsibility that accompanies the additional freedoms? Your success or
failure in Ph.D. research depends on it.
4. A few warnings:
Students sometimes enroll in a Ph.D. program for
the wrong reasons. After a while, such students find that the requirements
overwhelm them. Before starting one should realize that a Ph.D. is not:
Prestigious in itself: Almost everyone who has obtained a Ph.D. is proud
of their efforts and the result. However, you should understand that once you
graduate, you will work among a group of scientists who each hold a Ph.D.
degree. (One faculty member used to chide arrogant graduate students by saying,
"I don't see why you think it's such a great accomplishment -- all my
friends have a Ph.D!").
A guarantee of respect for
all your opinions: Many students believe that once they earn a Ph.D.
people will automatically respect all their opinions. You will learn, however,
that few people assume a Ph.D. in one subject automatically makes you an
authority on others. It is especially true in the science communicaty; respect
must be earned.
A goal in itself:
A Ph.D. degree prepares you for research. If all you want is a diploma to hang
on the wall, there are much easier ways to obtain one. After you graduate, you
will have occasion to compare your record of accomplishment to those of other
scientists. You will realize that what counts is the research work accumulated
after a scientist finishes their formal education.
A job guarantee:
When an economy slows, everyone can suffer. In fact, some companies reduce
research before they reduce production, making Ph.D.s especially vulnerable.
Furthermore, once a person earns a Ph.D., many companies will not hire that
person for a non-research position. As in most professions, continued
employment depends on continued performance.
A practical way to impress
your family or friends: Your mother
may be proud and excited when you enroll in a Ph.D. program. After all, she
imagines that she will soon be able to brag about her child, "the
doctor." However, a desire to impress others is insufficient motivation
for the effort required.
Something you can
"try" to find out how smart you are: Sorry, but it just doesn't work that way. Unless
you make a total commitment, you will fail. You will need to work long hours,
face many disappointments, stretch your mental capabilities, and learn to find
order among apparently chaotic facts. Unless you have adopted the long-range
goal of becoming a researcher, the day-to-day demands will wear you down.
Standards will seem unnecessary high; rigor will seem unwarranted. If you only
consider it a test, you will eventually walk away.
The only research topic you
will ever pursue: Many students make the mistake of viewing their
Ph.D. topic as a research area for life. They assume each researcher only works
in one area, always pursues the same topic within that area, and always uses
the same tools and approaches. Experienced researchers know that new questions
arise constantly, and that old questions can become less interesting as time
passes or new facts are discovered. The best people change topics and areas. It
keeps them fresh and stimulates thinking. Plan to move on; prepare for change.
Easier than entering the
work force: You will find that the
path to successful completion of a Ph.D. becomes much steeper after you begin.
The faculty impose constraints on your study, and do not permit unproductive
students to remain in the program.
Better than the
alternatives: For many students, a
Ph.D. can be a curse. They must choose between being at the top among people
who hold a Masters degree or being a mediocre researcher. The faculty sometimes
advise students that they must choose between being "captain of the B
team" or a "benchwarmer" on the A team. Everyone must decide
what they want, and which profession will stimulate them most. But students
should be realistic about their capabilities. If you really cannot determine
where you stand, ask faculty members.
A way to make more money: While we haven't heard any statistics for the past
couple of years, graduate students used to estimate the "payoff"
using the starting salaries of Ph.D. and M.S. positions, the average time
required to obtain a Ph.D., the value of stock options, and current return on
investments. For a period of at least five years that we know, the payoff was
clearly negative. Suffice it to say that one must choose research because one
loves it; a Ph.D. is not the optimum road to wealth.
5. The good news:
Despite all our warnings, we are proud that we
earned Ph.D. degrees and proud of our research accomplishments. If you have the
capability and interest, a research career can bring rewards unequaled in any
other profession. You will meet and work with some of the brightest people on
the planet. You will reach for ideas beyond your grasp, and in so doing extend
your intellectual capabilities. You will solve problems that have not been
solved before. You will explore concepts that have not been explored. You will
uncover principles that change the way people use computers.
6. The joy of research:
A colleague summed up the way many researchers
feel about their profession. When asked why he spent so many hours in the lab,
he noted that the alternatives were to go home, where he would do the same
things that millions of others were doing, or to work in his lab, where he
could discover things that no other human had ever discovered. The smile on his
face told the story: for him, working on research was sheer joy.
* This article
was obtained from a forum for graduate students on the web site of TASSA (Turkish
American Scientists and Scholars Association).