Self-funded PhD students can feel ¡°less worthy¡± than their peers who receive studentships, experiences outlined in a new blog suggest.
Posts published on , which was expected to launch on 2 May, discuss ¡°socio- academic¡± embarrassment, feeling the need to hide funding status and dealing with the financial and time pressures of part-time study.
In one of the first two posts, Nazia Hussein, a PhD student at the Centre for the Study of Women and Gender at the University of Warwick, writes that other students are sometimes ¡°quite taken aback with my self-funded, part-time status¡±.
¡°To some it indicates that my research is not worth funding by any relevant organisation and institute, while to others, my work appears less important than theirs,¡± she says.
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Meanwhile, Andrea Nevitt, a part-time PhD student at Keele University, says that admitting to working full-time to afford the PhD ¡°feels confessional, [like] admitting I¡¯m not really ¡®good enough¡¯¡±.
Nadine Muller, the blog¡¯s curator, said the assumption that only those who were ¡°good enough¡± secured funding was obviously untrue, given that getting funding was as much about fitting in with funder or departmental priorities as it was about quality.
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¡°A lot of self-funded students still seem to worry about whether or not they¡¯ll be worth less in the job market, despite being told by senior academics that to an interview panel it really doesn¡¯t matter how you funded your PhD,¡± she added.
But the posts also highlight some huge benefits of being self-funded, including students becoming more ¡°resourceful and creative¡±, being free to progress at their own pace and having an increased ¡°sense of ownership¡± over their thesis, Dr Muller said.
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