I often get asked by people in our field (the learning-and-performance field) about how to select a graduate school and how to approach graduate school once in. Maybe because I spent so much time in graduate school (10 years), I think I can offer some ideas:
- Start reading the research now to find out whose research you admire, etc.
- The ideal is to find a professor you want to work with, although this is very difficult.
- Find a program that is well-respected and offers several professors who are top notch. Go to a school with an active colloquy or open research-discussion sessions.
- If you can, go to one of the best schools. It will help you later as you network your way to career postings you want.
- Expect a long and difficult haul. Expect wonderful rewards if you put in the effort.
- Avoid professors who are evil. Seriously, there are some who are just dysfunctional. Ask for student references and talk to real students who have gone through the program. Ask for the good the bad the ugly.
- Find a program with a very strong research methodology approach. If you graduate without knowing how to evaluate research, you won't do anybody any good. I've seen too many smart people who just shy away from the whole research enterprise because they've never been prepared for it.
- Get a reading list of the articles and books used in the required courses. Ask around to see if these are written by the top thinkers in the field. Do not confuse "top thinkers" with "most-popular thinkers."
- My own bias is to focus on the fundamentals of learning at the same time focusing on what is practical, but this is hard to find.
- Be prepared to have a very thick skin. Be open to ideas. Relish them, but stick to your guns if you know deep down that you've got an intriguing idea.
- Ask the professors what journals they publish in. Determine if these are top tier or lesser tier journals. Aim for the top tier.
- Beware of the programs labeled as "adult learning, curriculum studies" and the like. These often are weak in the foundations of human learning (but not always). If you go to a school focused on instructional technology, make sure you find one with good background in learning.
- If you want to build learning interventions when you get out of school, don't just focus on academics, build stuff while in graduate school that you can show to prospective employers later.
- Note that the best development shops are very skeptical of graduates of instructional-design programs because many come out of those programs with rigidly inflexible mental models of how to build learning. This unbearable hardness of being is often combined with an arrogance that leaves these graduates with little ability to learn. Bottom line: Find a school, and adopt an attitude, that is inquisitive, open, skeptical, and hungry for knowledge. Find a way to test your ideas and learning interventions using valid methods so you can get the feedback loops you need to continually improve what you're doing and thinking.
- Begin to take control of your learning now, before you get into school. In the doctoral program, it's 95% you.
- Realize that when you start reading in the field, it will feel like you are a complete idiot. This is normal as you learn the language of the thinkers and researchers. On the other hand, as you learn more and more, don't forget how the real world talks.
- Most of the time, but not always, PhD degrees are more research-oriented than EdD degrees, which is a good thing.
Note that I write these recommendations because I believe we need many more people in our field who can bridge the gap between research and practice. If you're completely not cut out to do research, that's fine. Be practical. But get yourself enough research background so you can evaluate research claims when you see them. Beware of a fear of research. Fear usually comes from a lack of exposure. Expose yourself.
This is an incredible list and I'm comforted by the fact that you were a grad student for 10 years. There is hope...
Posted by: Janet Clarey | Thursday, 09 October 2008 at 02:12 PM
That is good information I wish I had known when I went to grad school for a degree in adult education. My experience was pretty good however I was surprised about a few things that would have made me consider other insitutions. For example, I wasn't very happy that many of my classes taught a duel curriculum for trainers and school teachers. Many discussions were completely irrelevant to me.
Posted by: Marguerite Inscoe | Thursday, 09 October 2008 at 03:42 PM
Or you could just do what I did. Choose a graduate school at a months notice because you got a job that pays for it and just have everything work out swimmingly.
Seriously though, the workload hits you like a ton of bricks your first semester, especially if your trying to work full time while taking a full course load. The more preparation time you give yourself going into school, the better off you are.
You could even take it a step further and research course topics, software, and methodologies that the courses entail just to give yourself a jump-start on the program. It will make the transition a lot easier and will allow your efforts to be a little bit more inquisitive. It also keeps you from playing catch-up throughout the semester.
Posted by: Ryan S. | Sunday, 30 November 2008 at 10:47 AM
Wow. thanks so much for the info, this is something that i would refer to when i decided to go graduate school.
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