C
Cristiano
Guest
That is a good point; however even a priest can be subject to vanity while still considering their vocation the most important thing. I think that it is easier to identify a priest than to identify a priest with a PhD.Father (and steer clear of any priests with PhD’s who prefer to be called Dr.- their vocation to the priesthood should be their most important one)
I said that, and yes I have a doctor degree, I spent more than a decade working with graduate students. In your opinion the tests are very difficult, in my opinion they are not if the students are willing to spend time in class and to study. Same thing for the dissertation work. The main difficulty of going through graduate school is with time and consistency. Everyone with an average intelligence and a lot of motivation can go through graduate school.(I don’t remember who said this). I suspect you have not tried to get a Ph.D. You don’t just have to pass some tests. The tests you do have to pass are very difficult, you have to write a dissertation that is very difficult- and present it to a committee (you have to defend it in front of them). If not a dissertation, then a difficult internship (for medicine/Psy.D.), or a couple of recitals, or compositions, or exhibits, or productions (Music, Theatre, Art, Dance, etc.)
The probability of success in graduate school, as in professional life, is mainly based on attitude. You must be willing to sacrifice some of the other interests and probably to put in (for real) an average of 10 working hours a day six days a week. I know a lot of people that do that in their regular jobs independently of their education level.
When you interview for a large company, usually people look at your attitude more than your knowledge (behavioral interviewing). The idea is that people with good motivation can be trained in anything.