Search Career Advice


Browse Archives

Career Advice

Academic Mythbusters

Dissertation Limits

September 12, 2011

Share This Story

FREE Daily News Alerts

Advertisement

In this occasional column I will address common myths that are widespread in academe, particularly among its not-yet-completely-enculturated junior faculty members. Using my training as a cultural anthropologist, as well as my experiences as a former R1 tenured faculty member and department head, I will take up a myth, briefly explore its origins, consider its impact on believers, and then evaluate its value. It is my hope that in doing so, I will pull away the veil of mystification that seems to obscure so many aspects of the academic career, and assist graduate students and junior faculty in distinguishing the realities of life in the rapidly downsizing academic industry from the myths and half-truths often inculcated, oftentimes with the best of intentions, by their usually well-meaning dissertation advisers. The fact is, junior members of the academic tribe are particularly susceptible to these myths, and yet as the academic world financially implodes, these myths, if not countered, can destroy their already slim chances for viable academic careers.

Today's myth is: "People care about your dissertation."

One of the most deeply entrenched myths of the academic enterprise is that the dissertation is the sine qua non of scholarly achievement and the ultimate proof of the value of a young scholar. Graduate students spend years slaving over its minutiae, and struggling over fine distinctions in citations, argumentations, organization, and shades of meaning. It looms over their lives spreading a pervasive cloud of inadequacy, anxiety, and fear, and its completion offers the shining vision of legitimacy and validation.

Dissertation in hand, the young scholar heads out on to the job market trusting that it will impress the search committee masses and lead to fame and fortune, or at least, a paying job.

Dissertation advisers, of course, are at the root of this myth. It is their primary duty, they believe, to dedicate themselves to their students' scholarly projects and to focus with laser-like intensity on the finest distinctions of meaning in the writing process. Details matter. The difference between “they are” and “they do,” between “it is” and “it might be” and “it can be argued” and “it is well understood” can spell the gap between a valid and an invalid argument, and a legitimate and illegitimate scholarly reputation. Months and years pass in the struggle over chapters, paragraphs, sentences, and words. When fretful and anxious students tremulously inquire about what comes next, their advisers reassure them, “Just focus on the dissertation, and the job will take care of itself.” And not knowing any better, and deeply wanting to believe because they don't want to have One. More. Thing. to worry about, the students accept this, and keep writing.

And eventually they finish and defend, and go on the market.

And then they find out. That jobs do not take care of themselves. At all. Even remotely.

They find out that the finished dissertation does not bring fame or fortune or shortlists. They discover that the finished dissertation does very little at all beyond serving as the bare minimum qualification for simply applying to an academic job. Sure, Ph.D. is better than A.B.D. But Ph.D. alone is not a sign of competitiveness for any particular job. Indeed, in the ever more desperate and embattled academic job market, the dissertation barely registers as a line on a C.V.

The reality behind this myth is: after you've passed your defense, nobody cares about your dissertation.

What young scholars don't realize is that the more they talk about the dissertation, the worse they do on the job market. The worst job letter is the one that spends more than one succinct paragraph on the dissertation. The worst interview is the one in which the candidate talks about the dissertation for longer than 5 minutes. The worst campus visit is the one in which the candidate tells everyone they meet about the dissertation.

The fact is, nobody wants to hear about your dissertation.

Yes, they want to know that you wrote one. Yes, they want to know that you defended and submitted it. Yes, they want to know that it was in the appropriate discipline, subdiscipline and topical area for the advertised position.

Beyond that, they don't want to hear about it. This is, paradoxically, true even when they say to you, in the interview, "Tell us about your dissertation."

How can this be true?

Because the dissertation is what a graduate student writes. And they are not hiring a graduate student. They are hiring a faculty colleague. Let me repeat: they are hiring a colleague, not a graduate student.

And I can assure you, faculty members do not walk through the hallways and hang around the main office talking about their dissertations.

So what do faculty members talk about? Here is a partial list: They talk about journal articles and the frustrations of long journal response times. They talk about conferences and the frustrations of getting the paper done in time. They talk about grants and the frustrations of institutional review boards. They talk about teaching and the frustrations of apathetic students. They talk about graduate students and the frustrations of inadequate TA funding. They talk about their large courses and the frustrations of dealing with the dean. They talk about parking and the frustrations of the football program.

When a search committee interviews you, the last -- the very last -- thing they want to hear about, frankly, is your dissertation. Because hearing about your dissertation just reminds them of the milling throngs of irritating graduate students in their own department, all of whom drone on and on at excruciating length about their dissertations at every possible opportunity.

Indeed, the members of the search committee are already feeling anxious, stressed, and guilty. Why? Because they're shocked that their one position drew 500 applications. They're horrified at what this indicates for their own hapless graduate students in the program. And they're stressed because they've just had their own course loads increased by 30 percent without warning and their teaching assistant funding cut in half.

So when a search committee reviews you and your material, they want to relax, and feel like they're dealing with a peer. And a peer is someone who "gets it," and who presses forward as a professional in the midst of overwhelming frustration, and whose trajectory points to a brighter future. In short, search committee members want have their faith in the future of the academic enterprise restored.

The dissertation, young scholar, is about the past -- even if you're A.B.D. and still writing it! Your job search is about the future.

So what role does the dissertation play in this future? None at all? Far from it. The dissertation is critical to this future. But it is not what the dissertation is that is critical to your future. Rather, it is what the dissertation does.

What a dissertation does is bring about tangible and visible results in the world. What are these results, you ask? Here is a partial list:

  • It intervenes in major debates in the field.
  • It generates important peer-reviewed publications
  • It qualifies for large and prestigious grants and awards.
  • It provokes dynamic discussion at symposiums and conferences.
  • It transforms efficiently into a book, preferably at an influential press.
  • It inspires interesting and unconventional classroom teaching.
  • It catalyzes an original second major project.

The dissertation does the very things that faculty like to talk about — publications, grants, contracts, teaching, and new research.

Until you transform your dissertation bladdedy-blah into short, pithy, punchy statements about refereed journal articles, book plans, conference papers, prestigious grants and fellowships, innovative teaching and new research, and learn how to express all of these in a dynamic (not static), dialogic (not monologic), symmetrical (not hierarchical) manner to your would-be future colleagues, you are dooming yourself to fail, forever, on the academic job market.

So in short: you spent years slaving over this dissertation, and now you must stop talking about it.

Sorry. Go ahead, cry, it's O.K. And then get to work. Write out some short and punchy spiels about pubs, grants, conferences, etc. Practice them in writing and aloud. Do this until they're second nature. Get some decent clothes and a good haircut, and start gesturing widely and confidently as you talk. Re-learn the art of the dialogue, which you may have forgotten in graduate school, and try and dig out your sense of humor.

And then, young scholars, forget about your dissertation and go out into the world as the professional you were destined to be. Good luck.

Karen Kelsky is a former tenured faculty member and department head who taught at the University of Oregon and University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, in the departments of Anthropology and East Asian Languages and Cultures. She left the academy to open an academic careers consulting service, The Professor Is In.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Matching Jobs

Comments on Dissertation Limits

  • Dissertations for the rest of us
  • Posted by Katherine Chaddock , Professor at University of South Carolina on September 12, 2011 at 7:45am EDT
  • Very true, but the issue is not the disappointment of no more opportunity to chat about the dissertation. The issue is failure to recognize that the research and writing is like the acquisition of knowledge: It is not what you know; it is what you do with what you know that counts. The bullet list presented near the end of the article makes the point well: Get going on the "what you do with" stage of your dissertation research and writing. That's what counts.
  • Posted by gradstudent , adjunct/grad student on September 12, 2011 at 12:00pm EDT
  • wow. thanks for writing this.
  • very nice, but...
  • Posted by Graduate Student , Social Science at Major Public University on September 12, 2011 at 12:00pm EDT
  • How does this get the grad student beyond the minutiae? By your own account, this slaving away is not because *the student* wants to do it, but because the advisor insists on it.

    Your advice is all very well and good once the PhD is in hand -- talk about the spinoffs, not the original series, but does nothing to help get the original series on the air in the first place.
  • Well said!
  • Posted by Grad Stu , COE on September 12, 2011 at 1:30pm EDT
  • As a graduate student representative on a faculty search committee I once recommended that someone not be hired simply because they represented themself like me - like a graduate student.
    While I thoroughly enjoyed meeting this person and they were very likable, I felt they had nothing new to teach me...I felt like they were a grad student colleague, not someone who could assist me towards the next level of scholarship.
    Excellent information on how to change our thinking from look what I did to watch me now.
  • Re-learning
  • Posted on September 12, 2011 at 2:45pm EDT
  • Very well said.

    "Re-learn the art of the dialogue, which you may have forgotten in graduate school..." - very true

    Thank you for writing this.
  • Keep the end in mind
  • Posted by dissertation writer on September 12, 2011 at 4:15pm EDT
  • It seems to me that you have to write the dissertation already thinking about possible book or articles. The end game is more than the Ph.D.
    It's all the things this article points out. Even at the writing stage nobody wants to hear about your dissertation, they want to know what you are going to do with it.
  • Excellent advice
  • Posted by Jo VanEvery (JoVE) , Academic Career Coach at Http://jovanevery.ca on September 12, 2011 at 6:30pm EDT
  • I have often described this myth as thinking that the dissertation is the end. And countered the myth by pointing out that it is a beginning.

    Only 6 people will read your dissertation, maybe fewer. Your committee. The external examiner. Maybe your mother.

    If that work makes an important contribution to knowledge then you need to publish it to make that contribution. In some fields, as a book. In others, as a series of journal articles.

    And you need to tell the story of the dissertation as the BEGINNING of your academic career. The bullet points suggest the specifics of what that looks like.
  • Yes and no
  • Posted by PQuincy , Tenured, and former chair at A middling R1 on September 12, 2011 at 6:45pm EDT
  • There's some truth here, but Dr. Kelsky has followed her own advice a bit to much, telling a punchy, humourous and peer-oriented story that is, alas, leaves something important in the dust.

    At least in my department, at least some of the faculty voting on appointments care quite a bit about the candidates' dissertations -- and certainly expect the search committee members to care. Of course, the general advice Dr. Kelsky gives is good: don't drone on about the minutiae and fine distinctions of your dissertation during the interview and campus visit, tell the people you meet why it's important, the articles you have planned from it, and the best stories in or about it. Nevertheless: our committee and faculty care a great deal about one feature of the dissertation, one that Kelsky gets around to eventually: will it easily become a publishable book. We hire people we expect to tenure, and we can't tenure anyone without a published monograph from a decent press. While some people write a second book after the dissertation to publish, most of us in my discipline publish something closely based on the dissertation. If our reading of the dissertation suggests it's not a potential book, all of the other advice in the column will make terribly little difference.

    Then again, if your dissertation advisor is not routinely asking you "So what?" and "Who could care?" and "Don't get bogged down in fine points," s/he is doing a bad job (which is common enough).
  • it's more complicated
  • Posted by Rob A , Professor at Big Ten University on September 12, 2011 at 7:16pm EDT
  • As previous commentators have noted, some search committees do care about the dissertation. In my department, we look for candidates whose dissertation will serve as the basis of a first book. There are "bookable" and "non-bookable" dissertations, and candidates with the latter are often at a disadvantage in the search process. Of course, this varies from field to field.
  • New Media
  • Posted by Dr Guynup , Instructor / Game Design at AIP-OD on September 12, 2011 at 9:01pm EDT
  • The idea that nobody cares is true for a wealth of academic literature and insights.

    but...I can speak on one area that seems different.

    In new media and technology related subjects, dissertations can hold great value. Kurt Squire's on Educational Games is a foundational text for the field. My friend Chaim's Master's Thesis got him an invitation from Wil Wright to work on Spore. My own dissertation, done as a defense within an online 3D world that utilizes and expresses the principles of virtual design it discusses is becoming a tool for my institution. Others in my class have trotted out their works for VC's and firms like Google, Apple, and Microsoft and gotten hired.

    As a side note, there's fair number of schools with military/defense contracts who pitch research topics out to students without the students realizing they are doing free research for the CIA etc...
  • Perseverance
  • Posted by CP on September 13, 2011 at 7:00am EDT
  • The best dissertation is a DONE dissertation!
  • "Best Kept Secret"
  • Posted by Theresa Yugar , Women Studies in Religion at Claremont Graduate University on September 13, 2011 at 2:30pm EDT
  • I am So glad to have read this article on this particular day. I am in the midst of writing my dissertation but know I also need to be working on a dossier, revised vitae, possible post-doc fellowships and job-leads. It all takes time. In this job-market, dissertation students need to have a marketing plan in place. Thank you very much for writing this. Gratefully, Theresa Yugar
  • I'm glad
  • Posted by Karen Kelsky , Academic Career Coach at The Professor Is In on September 14, 2011 at 4:00am EDT
  • I'm glad this was helpful to you, Theresa!
  • true, but
  • Posted by Cultcrit on September 14, 2011 at 4:00am EDT
  • I will share this with my grad students, but I think it's just a bit overstated. People outside of your department won't care about the departmental requirement known as the "dissertation," but will very much care about "your project" and the "research program." I think the point is that this professional coming-of-age that you describe requires seeing the diss. as a piece of a much larger picture, rather than the all-encompassing frame of one's existence.
  • Posted by A Search Committee Chair on September 15, 2011 at 12:30pm EDT
  • I am chairing a search this year and I can say that this article is completely wrong and provides unhelpful advice.

    Our search committee (in the humanities at research university) cares very deeply about the topics and quality of the dissertation for new scholars applying to our search and we will ask for the whole thing from finalists- and yes we will read them. For more senior applicants, of course what they have done with it since is more important, but unless they have published it as a book, the diss. is still the best indication of an applicant's ability to produce a large scale research project and their future abilities and output. A cutting edge dissertation can trump a uninspired published book. Their ability to talk about their research in an interview, communicate their ideas in front of an audience is also important, but they won't get the interview if the dissertation is crap. This glib advice given is from someone who isn't committed to scholarship but to gamesmenship (obvious from the fact that they are now a 'academic consultant,' whatever that is).
  • Begs the Question....
  • Posted by PhDCandidate on September 15, 2011 at 2:45pm EDT
  • If no one cares about your dissertation are there better, more useful methods in determining the skills needed to succeed as a PhD? Smaller, more frequent research projects?
  • Dissed and Dismissed
  • Posted by Poppy Addict , Grad Student on September 15, 2011 at 4:00pm EDT
  • Glad to hear everyone's comments, particularly one from a search committee member and particularly this hopeful sounding quote: "A cutting edge dissertation can trump a uninspired published book" - one I'm banking on this job application season!