Enginerd424
New member
- Apr 12, 2015
- 2
Hey everyone
I'm a 3rd year fully-funded PhD student and I obtained my MS degree last year (along the way of the PhD). I am considering leaving the department due to outside pressure. However, I want a PhD even though it is not necessarily useful to industry.
I'm considering a new plan: To begin working, and get a PhD part-time at a "lower" less demanding university. Is this feasible? By the way, I'm in Aerospace Engineering and would like to obtain a doctorate in a computational field ("engineering mechanics", "Computational mechanics", "applied math", etc). I have a few questions on this plan
1) Is a part-time PhD an irresponsible endeavor? A dissertation could constrain my ability to reach deliverables on my actual job at the same pace as my colleagues. Note that I plan on going to a lower, more flexible university (not a Cambridge or MIT)
2) Is there anyway I could convince my employer to help pay for it? I'm sure I would initially need to self-fund the PhD (by taking a mere 1-2 courses a year), but after slowly establishing myself maybe I could convince them?
3) Do you know anyone who has done a part-time PhD while working full-time as an engineer? Is it feasible?
4) Is a PhD at a low-ranked university a poor choice? Currently I'm at a top-ranked school - but I could not do a part time PhD here (I would loose funding and my advisor would loose any interest in me). I noticed a lot of high profile CTOs have PhD's/MS's at low-ranked schools.
Basically, I want a PhD. I find the courses enjoyable, and I've never struggled with the curriculum. However, I'm aware that a PhD is not the most practical endeavor in the engineering world.
Thanks for any input!
I'm a 3rd year fully-funded PhD student and I obtained my MS degree last year (along the way of the PhD). I am considering leaving the department due to outside pressure. However, I want a PhD even though it is not necessarily useful to industry.
I'm considering a new plan: To begin working, and get a PhD part-time at a "lower" less demanding university. Is this feasible? By the way, I'm in Aerospace Engineering and would like to obtain a doctorate in a computational field ("engineering mechanics", "Computational mechanics", "applied math", etc). I have a few questions on this plan
1) Is a part-time PhD an irresponsible endeavor? A dissertation could constrain my ability to reach deliverables on my actual job at the same pace as my colleagues. Note that I plan on going to a lower, more flexible university (not a Cambridge or MIT)
2) Is there anyway I could convince my employer to help pay for it? I'm sure I would initially need to self-fund the PhD (by taking a mere 1-2 courses a year), but after slowly establishing myself maybe I could convince them?
3) Do you know anyone who has done a part-time PhD while working full-time as an engineer? Is it feasible?
4) Is a PhD at a low-ranked university a poor choice? Currently I'm at a top-ranked school - but I could not do a part time PhD here (I would loose funding and my advisor would loose any interest in me). I noticed a lot of high profile CTOs have PhD's/MS's at low-ranked schools.
Basically, I want a PhD. I find the courses enjoyable, and I've never struggled with the curriculum. However, I'm aware that a PhD is not the most practical endeavor in the engineering world.
Thanks for any input!