
TL;DR
This paper surveys PhD astronomy students to understand their perceptions of success, supervision quality, and the importance of hands-on observational experience in their training.
Contribution
It provides insights into student expectations, highlighting the value of practical observation and revealing discrepancies between student and supervisor expectations.
Findings
Students expect to publish more papers than supervisors anticipate.
Students are generally satisfied with supervision quality.
Hands-on telescope observations are highly valued by students.
Abstract
The road to becoming an astronomer is exciting, but often fraught with danger and conflicting messages. A PhD student is inundated with catch-phrases such as "publish or perish" and "it's not about the quantity, but the quality of work". How do we know which advice to follow? How can we publish copious amounts of quality work in only three years so as to maximize our success in the future? How do we even know what "good quality" really is? With only a short time to prepare ourselves for the big wide world of Astronomy, what is the best way for a PhD student to maximize their research and ultimately maximize their success as a real astronomer? The PhD students of today are the astronomers of tomorrow, but their journey depends on a positive work environment in which they can thrive and improve. Here I present the results of a survey of current PhD students on how they believe they can…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth and Medical Research Impacts · Doctoral Education Challenges and Solutions
