It is very common for students to feel insecure and that
they are simply pretending to be a doctoral student. You may feel that if
people really understood how little you know they would not allow you to get a
Ph.D.! This feeling actually has a name, the Imposter Syndrome, and it is
particularly common in students who are the first in their family to get a
doctorate. If you consider it carefully, it makes total sense that you feel
this way: you have not known many people socially who have a doctorate and you
are, in all likelihood seeing them as smarter than or more creative than you
are.
Let us consider if this true. Would you expect a doctoral
student to know as much as an accomplished researcher or professor? Of course
not, the student is in school to learn. Give the student 20 years and he or she
will be as knowledgeable and confident as any other professional is.
You are that doctoral student! You are not expected to know
everything at this point. So relax, and take the opportunity to meet other
students and doctoral level researchers and get to know them as people. Ask
about their families and home lives and you will begin to realize they are
similar to other people you know and to you. You have earned your place in your
doctoral program; you will gain the necessary experience you need to be
successful and graduate!
Want to know
more? See Impostor Syndrome Is Definitely a Thing - The Chronicle of Higher
Education http://www.chronicle.com/article/Impostor-Syndrome-Is/23841
. . .
Next time I will begin a series on using theories to
determine your research method. Do you have an issue or a question that you
would like me to discuss in a future post? Would you like to be a guest writer?
Send me your ideas! leann.stadtlander@waldenu.edu
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