Before starting a PhD, it is important to understand why you are starting a PhD. Here is a list of positive and negative motivations!
Positive motivations for doing a PhD:
- You have a cutting-edge idea for research you want to pursue, and doing a PhD will allow you to do so. You want to achieve something significant.
- There is an area of research that attracts you, and you feel you may be able to contribute to it.
- You want to become an expert in a particular field, with an aim to pursue a related career.
- You want to discover or learn something new.
- You enjoy the academic environment and wish to challenge yourself academically. You believe you can do it.
- You have the opportunity to study for a PhD and want to invest in yourself.
- You want to develop transferable skills that will help you in your career/life course.
Negative motivations for doing a PhD:
- Seeing a PhD as a marker of how ‘smart’ you are.
- Getting a PhD because you want to be recognized or respected.
- Doing a PhD because somebody else did or wishes they had.
- Doing a PhD for short-term personal gain.
Source:
The realities of completing a PhD: How to plan for success (Nicholas Rowe)
