Welcome to my Dissertation Tips page.
If you are arriving at this page and unfamiliar with the Ph.D. in Values-Driven Leadership at Benedictine University, it is an intensive 3-year program that requires 2 years of coursework and one year of dissertation research and writing. The program is designed for working executives and I recommend it to anyone seeking a challenging, yet highly practical and relevant doctoral program experience. For more information visit https://cvdl.ben.edu/
For those currently in the program, thank you for visiting. I am a member of Cohort 3 and a 2018 graduate. At the time I completed my Ph.D. dissertation my partner (Q) and I were both working full time and preparing for the arrival of our first baby. I successfully defended, walked at graduation, and had a baby girl two weeks later. Whatever your situation might be, I am confident YOU CAN CROSS THE FINISH LINE with the right routine and tools.
I could not have completed this journey without the support of family and friends. It sounds cliché, but it is so true! I also learned so much along the way about discipline and balance. I hope some of this will be helpful to you in your journey. *Some product links on this page are affiliate links*
My dissertation timeline
- November 2016 – Dissertation chair assignment
- March 2017 – Proposal (First draft of chapters 1, 2, 3)
- April 2017 – End of coursework
- April 25, 2017 – IRB approval from home institution
- May 5, 2017 – IRB approval from the research institution
- May 19, 2017 – Data collection begins
- June 6-15, 2017 – Fieldwork
- August 31, 2017 – Data collection ends
- September 2017 – Analysis begins
- September 2017 – Committee member #1 accepts
- October 12, 2017 – ILA Doctoral Consortium feedback (conference)
- December 2017 – Committee member #2 accepts
- January 2018 – Revision to chapters 1 and 2 / rewrite chapter 3
- February 2018 – Continued analysis while drafting chapters 4, 5, 6
- March 31, 2018 – First complete draft to Chair / Revisions from feedback
- April 9, 2018 – Complete revised draft to committee / Revisions from feedback
- April 18, 2018 – Pre-oral defense
- May 4, 2018 – Final defense
- June 2, 2018 – Graduation
- July 2018 – Final manuscript editing and submission
Personal support & life
Getting through this final phase is huge, it takes a village. My three big tips here are to:
- Gather your people
- Make life simple
- Communicate
Gather your people
I had frank conversations with family and friends as I entered the dissertation phase. I apologized in advance for the radio silence, uninstalled and muted social media, and I prepared all birthday and anniversary cards in advance so Q could drop them in the mail. I basically prepared as if I was going to spend 12 months on the moon.
Make life simple
I knew I would need help with a few key things while in the writing trenches. Namely housekeeping, cooking, and caring for our dog “EvieQ”. This is a time to give yourself some grace and ask for help. Hire a helping hand if needed.
Early on in the program, Q and I strategized how we would manage meals. We subscribed to Hello Fresh and received 3 meals a week. We made a weekly selection, they were delivered Monday, Q cooked them through the week, we had leftovers or VERY simple meals on the remaining days of the week. We had very little food waste in our house and did minimal grocery shopping.
Communicate
I found openly communicating with my work colleagues to be very important. I sat with my supervisor at work to share what I was doing and used vacation time to request 2 Fridays off work a month so I had more block time to write. Thankfully I had a lot of support and was able to balance working full time and finishing. I was fortunate to be able to work in all my doctor’s appointments over lunch breaks so I could maximize blocks of writing time on the weekends.
Making peak hours productive
When it comes to the actual work of the dissertation, know your best time. It is different for everyone. I worked best in the early morning with a cup of coffee. If I had to pick up additional hours, I would sit down after work. Sometimes this felt impossible as I was tired from working all day and I had pregnancy fatigue. But even sitting for 30 minutes and getting something done was better than nothing.
On weekdays I would wake up at 4:30 a.m. and be on the computer before 5 a.m. where I would write until 7 a.m. After working 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. I would arrive home about 5:30 p.m. and be back at the computer from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m. I would be in bed by 10 p.m. and do it all over again. I did this from January to April with a May 4th defense date with a few exceptions where I had evening commitments.
On weekends I would wake up and have breakfast. I would then block time 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. and work in approximately 3-hour chunks of time incorporating a break for lunch and an afternoon snack. The longer chunks of time allowed me to get into flow which was difficult to do during the week.
Some weekends I was so mentally exhausted I did not leave the house. Other weekends Q and I would make a point to go out to eat or meet with friends so I could remember that I was a human and do some stress relief. I always reminded myself that this was only temporary to get it done.
I always ended a work session by backing up all my files and writing the next thing(s) to do on a post-it. This helped me pick up where I left off.
Tools & Workspace
Computer setup
You will be spending hours and hours on the computer, get comfortable. I took over our large dining room table that had a window to overlook our backyard. I spread out my articles and books, I did code sorting, and I was able to prop my whiteboards and do brainstorming (more on this below). I spent so much time at the computer I wore away the hair on my arm where I was resting my forearms on the table. I honestly went full velveteen rabbit by the time I was doing my final edits.
Standing desk/fatigue mat
I liked being able to rotate between standing and sitting. I would do more task-oriented items (labeling figures, sorting references, brainstorming) while standing and my heavy writing while sitting.
- Executive Office Solutions Portable Adjustable Aluminum Laptop Desk/Stand/Table Vented w/CPU Fans Mouse Pad Side Mount: https://amzn.to/2XFXfIF
- AmazonBasics Premium Anti-Fatigue Standing Mat: https://amzn.to/35pO976
If you are interested in a larger standing desk that has room for multiple screens, I recommend:
- VIVO Stand Up Height Adjustable 32 inch Desk Riser, Sit Standing Converter, Dual Monitor and Laptop Workstation, Black, DESK-V000K: https://amzn.to/35zmTmz
Audio recorder & transcription services
I purchased a great audio recorder with built-in USB to record my interviews for redundancy (I also had a video camera rolling) and I’m glad I had the backup because one of my cameras malfunctioned and stopped recording during my post-interviews! The files were easy to export into my coding software and upload to transcription services.
- Digital Voice Recorder – https://amzn.to/35pOKWo
- Panasonic HC-V180K Full HD Camcorder by Panasonic – https://amzn.to/3nuy6L9
- Manfrotto MTPIXI-B PIXI Mini Tripod, Black by Manfrotto – https://amzn.to/3oBXVdK
Maximizing input from committee members
I used an app on my phone to record conference calls with my committee members. I found this to be very important so I could concentrate on the call and not worry about taking notes. I highly recommend using a recorder (or app) during feedback calls and pre-orals. I recorded my pre-orals, had them transcribed, and I highlighted every suggested revision. I organized the revisions in a spreadsheet that I was able to prioritize. This is how I was able to track everything I had revised and show my committee how I had incorporated their feedback. I was also able to show my logic on revisions I decided to do and revisions I decided not to do.
- Audio app: Smart Recorder (Android)
My transcription recommendations:
- If you need fast turnaround in 12 hours – https://www.rev.com @ $1/min
- If you have time and can wait a week – https://scribie.com/ @ $0.60/min+ (they charge more for poor quality recordings and accents but check with you before proceeding to authorize increased charge)
Whiteboards
I purchased two 2x4ft whiteboards to map chapters, create reference lists, play with frameworks, and brainstorm themes. I took photos of each whiteboard before I erased it and uploaded it to my project manager Trello.
- 24×36 White Melamine Dry Erase Board: https://amzn.to/3se4khm
Software
Endnote citation manager
I used Endnote (https://endnote.com/) as my citation manager. What I liked about it was how it integrated with Microsoft Word. I was able to easily insert references in-text and it automatically generated my reference list. I also found it easy to import articles. Word of warning – your reference list is only as good as the original input so double check the import is complete and accurate to APA requirements.
Atlas.ti coding software
Atlas.ti (https://atlasti.com/) was my qualitative coding software. I uploaded all my audio, video, transcripts, written journals, memos, photographs, and field notes into the system. It is a very robust program and capable of far more than I used it for. There are many YouTube tutorials that I used to learn the software, they link to their channel right from the website. If you use your student ID to make the purchase, it is a very reasonable investment (2-year license for $99 compared to $670 for a regular educational user).
Trello project manager
Trello (https://trello.com) is a free online project management and collaboration tool. You can upload files, photos, and lists. There are plug-ins that sync with other programs. You can also share with others and have collaborators. I shared with my chair who could view my tasks and to-do lists at any time. There is a great phone app that goes along with the desktop version so you can easily pop things into Trello as needed when you are on the go (when all my random brainstorms would happen). I used it to track my committee calls, task lists, weekly goals, milestones, resources, whiteboard photos, old papers and resources, and conferences.
See my sample Ph.D. Dissertation board: https://trello.com/b/nfZdRpXi
Google Drive
Google drive back-ups – After every working session, I saved a copy of my work to google drive. No exceptions! If you use Atlas.ti or other programs like SPSS, export the project and save a copy in google drive too. Since my Atlas.ti project was so huge I did this twice a week instead of daily.
Please let me know if you would like to talk more about the IRB process, book recommendations for mixed methodology and grounded theory, or coding… or anything else for that matter!
SQ