Showing posts with label PhD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PhD. Show all posts

Saturday, 14 June 2025

How to prompt a decision (London)

 

I was helping out Olivia, a fresh PhD graduate from mainland China, with her job applications.  A friend of hers, also from mainland China, turned up at the end of our session to speak to her about something.


    He turned out to be doing a PhD in syntax, a pet subject of mine, so I asked him some questions about his focus:  what it is; how he goes about testing out the theories he’s putting forth; how he picks his informants; how he can be sure that what they say is right; etc.


    Olivia texted me later saying he told her, after I left them, that I’d asked him some questions that were very professional, hitting the nail on the head.  My reply: “He should, therefore, be glad that I won’t be one of his examiners.”


    This reminds me of what happened with Jurek, a chap one year below me at SOAS (School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London) who had then gone on to do his PhD in some classical Chinese grammar topic.


    When it came to submitting, Jurek wasn’t sure if he should pick Professor Angus Graham as his external examiner, or to check his thesis.


    A bit of background here:  Prof. Graham had a fearsome reputation, to which I can testify, as I’d studied under him for three years.  He was so erudite that he found everyone else not quite worth spending his time with.


    We Chinese Section students used to go to the SOAS bar at opening time, as a default — no need to check if anyone else was going; just turn up and there’ll be at least one person there, or someone will come along in due course.  The teachers would put in an appearance as well.  The Japanese Section students used to complain that their peers were so boring, no one ever wanted to go for a drink, and asked if they could join us.


    Prof. Graham loved a tipple or two, but not only for the alcohol.  He’d like to have some kind of discussion about ancient Chinese poetry or philosophy, say, which we undergraduate students, even in our final year, were not quite up to in terms of providing enough cerebral challenge.  This is a constant theme in ancient Chinese literature:  poets and artists with a brush in one hand and a drink in the other.


    Graham would sit there at the table with us, reading some book, waiting for the conversation to become interesting.  After a couple of pints, he’d snap his book shut, get up and leave in silent disappointment.


    Mr. T’ung (Ping-cheng / 佟秉正 Tóng Bǐngzhèng) was once present, and said, “Graham 失陪了.”  失陪了 shī péi le / “lose accompany” is an expression used by the person taking leave early, apologising for not keeping the others company any longer.  So Mr. T’ung was saying, “Graham has just excused himself,” in his typical dry humour.


    That was Graham’s reputation:  he didn’t suffer fools gladly.


    Back to Jurek.  As Graham had by then retired, Jurek could have him as his external examiner, but then Graham couldn’t be invited to check his thesis.


    Jurek approached Dr. Paul Thompson, his supervisor, about this.  With his brilliant mind for analysing situations, Paul Thompson put it this way* to Jurek:


[*my words from memory but conveying the spirit of what Paul Thompson was saying to Jurek at the time]


    “With Graham and his fearsome reputation, do you want him to be on your side, checking your thesis for flaws and warts, from which you can make improvements to your thesis, or do you want him to be on the other side, tearing your thesis apart, which will affect the final result?”  


    Put that way, it took Jurek half a second to decide.


(London, late 1980s)


* See also https://piccola-chinita.blogspot.com/2025/05/the-guardian-angels-in-ones-life-03-ex.html for how Paul Thompson also helped me decide whether to do an MA or not.



Wednesday, 21 May 2025

The guardian angels in one's life: 03 (The ex-tutor)


Having sort of decided to try out Linguistics as an MA subject by attending the free evening classes first, thinking, “That’s at least one decision made for now, phew!”, I then happened to mention it to Paul Thompson, my ex-tutor (academic and personal on the BA course) and ex-supervisor (on the Chinese computer research projects).

    Having the sort of mind he did, always exploring different arguments, testing them out, Paul Thompson then laid out his arguments for my case:


Quote [in the spirit of how he’d said it, as far as I can remember it]

So, you are trying out the MA option because you don’t know if you’d want to do a PhD.

[The reason he said “trying out” is:  an MA can be converted to a PhD if one so wishes and if one passes the exam at that level, or one could just leave it at an MA.]

And you’re trying out Linguistics because you don’t know whether you want to do an MA in Linguistics [or in Education].

So, you’re going for the evening classes in Linguistics to try out Linguistics, and you’re going for the MA to try out if you’d want to do a PhD.

You’re therefore trying out [Linguistics for the subject field] for the trying out [doing an MA or a PhD].

How long is that going to take you?  You might as well just go straight ahead and do the MA Linguistics, which means that you’ll at least get a master’s degree at the end of it.

Unquote


    Once he presented it like that, it was dead easy to decide.

    What a wise man he was!

(More in another blog about his earlier counselling as my BA Personal Tutor.)

(London, 1992)



Tuesday, 20 May 2025

The guardian angels in one's life: 02 (The senior colleague)


I was taken aside one day by a senior colleague who asked what I wanted to do with my life.

    That is a difficult question for a drifter to answer.  I said I was just happy to carry on with being a part-time teacher, having no ambitions at all in life.

    What I didn’t know at the time was that she was preparing me for taking over her post after her departure for her home country (a year or so later, which was not known at the time by anyone except herself).

    I said I didn't care about titles and all that.  She said having a first degree was not enough for modern-day employers, if I wanted to survive in the jobs market, suggesting that I go for at least an MA, if not a PhD.

    The next question was what to study.  She proposed Education or Linguistics since I like both.

    Being a Libran (described by some people as “the unbalanced balance” sign, constantly yo-yo-ing), it’s difficult for me when presented with a choice.  (I’m very good, however, at managing other people’s lives and making decisions for them...)  Well, this senior colleague had pointed out the way for me, and narrowed it down to two subject options.  All within five minutes of a face-to-face conversation.

    As staff could attend for free, I thought I’d try out the basic Linguistics course on the university’s evening programme, and see how I’d feel about Linguistics on an MA level.

    With the balls set rolling for doing post-graduate studies and which subject to pursue, the ball was now in my court to act on it.  (Enter the next guardian angel, in the next blog.)


(London, 1991)