In our April "how can we help you?" thread, a reader writes:
I am in a tricky situation. I am an incoming PhD student at a low-ranking institution. Naturally, I want to maximize my chances on the job market post-graduation. In the last five months (since my first PhD applications were due), I have recieved five acceptances from very serious journals. I also have a perfect GPA, a perfect GRE score, and a master's degree from a respected university. I was waitlisted by most programs to which I applied. The director of graduate admissions at my top choice program told me that I came within a hair's breadth of a first-round acceptance and probably would have gotten one had news of my publications come sooner. He also told me that, based on my forthcoming work, I was "easily good enough" to excel in a top-five program.
So, here is my question: Should I try to transfer to a higher-ranked institution after a year or two at my current program? Would this be mercenary, ungrateful, or at all likely to improve my job prospects? I should emphasize that I actually quite like the faculty at my current program, based on my initial interactions with them, and that the university has granted me an extremely generous fellowship offer (comparable to the standard funding package at a top-ten program). I am temperamentally quite conscientious and loyal and would almost certainly feel guilty about jumping ship. However, the school's placement late is very low, and I have a family to feed.
Good questions. Another reader submitted the following reply:
There is nothing to be loyal to … graduate school is professional training. If you are able to get that training at a place (i) that is more highly regarded, and (ii) has a better placement record, it seems like a no-brainer. Your currently faculty should be proud of you, not resentful.
I entirely agree. Given that many PhD students who start programs never finish, given that a PhD program can take anywhere from 5-8+ years (in the US), and given that of those who do finish, only a small proportion end up with permanent or TT faculty jobs, one owes it to oneself to do everything one can to put oneself into a position to be successful. And, as the OP writes, they have a family to look after. So, I say, go for it, and do it sooner rather than later. I transferred myself after 2 years in a PhD program (due to multiple faculty getting hired away by a different school), and very few of my classes transferred over–so it would have been much better to transfer after only one year!
But these are just my thoughts. What are yours?
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