Oh, the Places You Could Go - with a Ph.D.
How graduate education is changing to prepare students for broader career options
The pace of work for doctoral students is more tortoise than hare, which is why a recent assignment pushed Lizzie Hunsaker far from her comfort zone.
She was asked to summarize a journal article in jargon-free writing suitable for a mainstream media outlet. In 20 minutes.
Ack!
鈥淲hat I liked was that we had little to no prep time, and we just had to do it,鈥 recalled Hunsaker, a chemistry Ph.D. student. 鈥淚t was challenging but highly effective. Someone can give a lecture on how to communicate your science, or they can make you do it.鈥
The class wasn鈥檛 required as part of Hunsaker鈥檚 doctoral training. It was a science communications course offered as part of the new Duke Summer Doctoral Academy, offered to Ph.D. students earlier this year to fill in gaps in their traditional graduate training.
The new, voluntary venture is one of many resources around the university that help graduate students prepare for careers in academia or, increasingly, outside of it.
Though the job prospects for newly minted Ph.D.鈥檚 in many fields are growing more scarce, that isn鈥檛 the impetus for many of the initiatives underway, officials say.
Rather, there鈥檚 a broad desire at Duke to make doctoral students as skilled as possible, regardless of where their careers take them, said Ed Balleisen, a Duke historian. Balleisen is both co-chair of a campus task force examining doctoral education and a leader of the Versatile Humanists project, the latter a grant-funded effort to prepare humanities graduate students for life after Duke.
鈥淲e want to train people to make a difference wherever they go,鈥 Balleisen said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 the capacity to work with others in different fields. It鈥檚 the ability to pose questions with broader salience. It鈥檚 communicating effectively within a field and outside it, whether with other academics, to decision-makers, or to the broader public.鈥
Doctoral Academy
Hunsaker and roughly 200 other graduate students took part in the first summer doctoral academy earlier this year. There were 16 classes that met three hours a day for five days. The topics ranged widely -- from visual storytelling to negotiation tactics to the best ways to use archival materials in undergraduate teaching.
鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 going to go on for 10 or 14 weeks. People wanted to be in those classrooms and no one felt burdened by it,鈥 said Executive Vice Provost Jennifer Francis, an organizer of the initiative. 鈥淪tudents weren鈥檛 coming with prior knowledge and experience, but they had enthusiasm.鈥
In Aria Chernik鈥檚 class, the enthusiasm was palpable. A lecturing fellow at Duke鈥檚 Social Science Research Institute, Chernik co-taught an education technology class with Matthew Rascoff, Duke鈥檚 associate vice provost for digital education and innovation.
Their class, which enrolled doctoral students from disciplines as disparate as microbiology, religion, literature and engineering, included a 鈥榙esign sprint.鈥 In it, teams of students sought out a problem in education, devised a technology-based product to solve it and then actually designed that product. Again, the hare approach, not the tortoise.
鈥淚t was wonderful to see the awe in learning,鈥 Chernik reflected. 鈥淎ll of these students are getting their Ph.D.鈥檚 and have been in school an extremely long time. On the first day, when we told them what they鈥檇 be doing on the last day, they looked at us like 鈥榯here鈥檚 no way!鈥 It was outside their comfort zones.鈥
In the Graduate School, a change in thinking
At Duke鈥檚 Graduate School, assistant dean Melissa Bostrom and others are trying to change a mindset.
Too many master鈥檚 and doctoral students view a shift away from the academic path as failure 鈥 even if, after a couple years in graduate school, it becomes clear academia isn鈥檛 for them. But it shouldn鈥檛 be that way, Bostrom argues, particularly because academic jobs are scarce in many disciplines in the humanities and elsewhere.
The data isn鈥檛 new, but it鈥檚 still jarring. The majority of Ph.D. graduates from Duke end up in business and industry, a fact influenced by industry demands for skilled graduates in engineering and the physical sciences, said Bostrom, the graduate school鈥檚 assistant dean for graduate student professional development.
The story is different in other disciplines. While most humanities Ph.D. graduates pursue tenure-track faculty positions, only about half nationally actually get those jobs, a reflection of a very tight job market. (There is, though, fluctuation within the humanities, and some Duke departments and programs report higher numbers of grads in tenure-track positions.)
It鈥檚 even more stark in biology and biomedical sciences, Bostrom said; in biology, for example, just about 10 percent of students who enter Ph.D. programs nationwide will end up in tenure-track academic jobs. That number rises to 15 percent among Duke Ph.D. graduates in the biological and biomedical sciences, with almost twice that many going into business and industry.
鈥淭here is a tremendous mismatch between the number of graduate students and postdocs and the number of tenure-track jobs available,鈥 she said.
Yet, many students still see that as the primary career path, often stalling out in relatively low-paying, tenuous postdoc positions for years.
鈥淐hanging that mindset is critical,鈥 Bostrom said. 鈥淎cademic culture is very much about the CV, about accomplishments and achievements. I try to get students to focus on the skills they have that make them successful.鈥
That conversation is often eye-opening for students who can be unaware of just how many coveted skills they possess.
鈥淭he ability to fail and fail and fail some more and then keep going and try again and make discoveries 鈥 those are really valuable skills.鈥
-- Melissa Bostrom, Graduate School assistant dean for graduate student professional development
鈥淲hat are the skills that go into being a good TA? Planning. Time management. Conflict resolution. Problem solving. Communication, leadership,鈥 Bostrom said. 鈥淭hose are all skills our students use in a classroom setting, but we don鈥檛 talk about them in Ph.D. programs.鈥
鈥淭he ability to fail and fail and fail some more and then keep going and try again and make discoveries 鈥 those are really valuable skills,鈥 she added.
The Graduate School has a battery of resources to help students think broadly about their skills and future. They include the website, which lets students create a personalized career planning roadmap based on their specifics and interests. And if their goals and interests change, they can go back and make changes to their timeline.
Employers also stress the importance of writing and communication skills, the impetus for a the school hosts and students contribute to. It is filled with profiles of successful Duke alumni, written by current Duke graduate students.
Making the University Smaller
Like the doctoral academy, Duke鈥檚 Versatile Humanists initiative attempts to shift long-held mindsets among graduate students that they must study within an academic department, an oft-solitary and, some say, outmoded approach to graduate education.
鈥淭he premise we鈥檝e had for decades is that graduate students predominantly get their mentoring and advice through departmental channels,鈥 said Balleisen. 鈥淭hat structure doesn鈥檛 often provide students a full appreciation for what鈥檚 available across the university.鈥
So Versatile Humanists purposefully makes the full university far smaller and more attainable -- customizing the advising process, creating mentoring networks, building collaborative research teams and providing internship opportunities in environments that students might not otherwise experience.
Take Ashley Rose Young, for example.
Back in 2017, Young was close to finishing her dissertation and heading onto the academic job market 鈥 the traditional path for history Ph.D.鈥檚 鈥 when the detour she had hoped for finally emerged.
鈥淥ne of the things I like about my job is that I can go from conducting archival research, to recording a podcast, to hosting a cooking demo related to Julia Child and her cooking legacy. These are all about food, but they鈥檙e distinct. I like that diversity.鈥
-- Ashley Rose Young
It came in the form of a two-month internship at the Smithsonian National Museum of American History 鈥 funded by Duke 鈥 that quickly turned into a job offer. Now, Young is happily ensconced in her new career as a food historian at the Smithsonian. It is a multi-faceted job of her dreams, mixing traditional scholarship 鈥 like poring over archival material and collecting oral histories 鈥 with more public work like bringing in celebrity chefs for cooking demonstrations and curating an exhibition that features Julia Child鈥檚 Cambridge, Massachusetts kitchen.
The internship came in Young鈥檚 seventh and final year as a doctoral student, and the opportunity was unusual in that internships are generally associated with undergrads looking for summer work experience.
But Duke officials see these graduate internships as a critical cog in the new Versatile Humanists initiative, Balleisen said. In its first year, the program connected seven students with internships, and nine more this summer.
鈥淲e need more exposure for doctoral students to collaborative environments,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a crucial dimension of the world of work outside academia, and increasingly so, inside academia.鈥
For Young, it provided an edge she desperately needed.
鈥淰ersatile Humanists was so key for me,鈥 Young said recently. 鈥淚t鈥檚 hard for institutions to pay interns to do labor, so for Duke to sponsor me was a huge deal. I鈥檓 not sure I would have made the internship happen otherwise. It provided funding, structure and legitimacy.鈥
Young first got the museum bug while a Yale undergraduate interning at the Southern Food and Beverage Museum in New Orleans. When she entered the history Ph.D. program at Duke, she planned to go in two directions at once 鈥 doing work that would ready her for both an academic career and one now known as 鈥榓lt-academic鈥 (graduate student shorthand for careers held by Ph.D.鈥檚 that aren鈥檛 tenure-track academic appointments).
Now she has what she considers a best-of-both-worlds career that involves serious scholarship and a lot of interaction with the public.
鈥淥ne of the things I like about my job is that I can go from conducting archival research, to recording a podcast, to hosting a cooking demo related to Julia Child and her cooking legacy,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hese are all about food, but they鈥檙e distinct. I like that diversity. I like that I can be a serious researcher and two hours later I can be chatting with kids about technological changes in the microwave.鈥