Thoughts on Productivity | Day in the Life of a PhD Student


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The good and the bad thing about being a PhD student is that there is no one way to do things. PhD students face a lot of pressure to constantly be productive and to constantly be working but, in my experience, this isn't sustainable - and most importantly - it doesn't make me happy! Some grad students I know work long hours 5 days a week and then take weekends off. Some of them wake up at noon and work late into the night. Others have families at home and stick to a very strict 9-5 schedule. There's really no one right way to do it, but the lack of transparency when it comes to when and how much PhD students work can lead us into a deep dark pit of self-comparison.

For me, seeing how other PhD students, post-docs, and faculty spend their days has been extremely helpful in creating realistic expectations for my own productivity. So in an effort to try and shed some light on productivity in academia, here's a glimpse into one day in my life as a PhD student (in written and IGTV form!) - with hopefully many more to come as my schedule evolves and changes over the years!

Watch the IGTV version of this day in the life here!

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6:00-6:30 am Wake-up! Since the beginning of quarantine, I've been trying to be better about listening to my body so I don't set any alarms and I let my brain wake up when it wants to which tends to be between 6 and 6:30 because I'm a natural early bird! The first thing I do in the morning is feed my cats and make coffee. Some of the phd students in my cohort don't drink coffee so it's clearly possible to be a fully functioning grad student without caffeine - but this isn't a reality for me 🙂

6:30-7:00 am Journaling. I've started journaling first thing in the morning because I've found that it helps to curb my anxiety a lot if I've reflected on my own insecurities and given myself a pep talk at the start of the day.

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7:15 am Workout. Since quarantine started, I've been working out mostly in the mornings because that’s when my motivation to workout is highest. If it’s past noon, you can usually kiss my chances of working out goodbye haha :)

8:30 am Time to get to work! I usually tackle my emails first, but this changes depending on the day. My days are a mix of research, teaching, and all the admin in between. On this particular day, I was running a study and approving payments to participants.

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I know some academics who designate certain days to do teaching and some to do research but I prefer to have it all mixed together because I have a tendency to get easily bored by doing one task all day! I use the pomodoro method with my pomodoro timer (working in 20-25 minute intervals) to keep myself on track.

9:45 am I had meetings and office hours this day so I got ready for the day. 9:45 might seem a bit late to get ready for the day but I typically prefer to schedule my meetings for later in the day because I am most productive in the morning and want to be able to tackle projects during that protected morning time.

10:00 am Continuing work by preparing lectures and grading student submissions.

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2:20 pm Decided to do a bit of decluttering around the house. I have really been taking advantage of this time at home to declutter and try to create an ideal space for my life. Shoes were my target today. For someone who doesn't wear heels often, I own a lot of heels :P I'm sure many of you can relate!

2:40 pm Back to work creating more notes for my lecture. My standing desk is one of my favorite tools for productivity in the middle of the day. To try to combat boredom during the workday I take breaks, switch between standing and sitting, and will switch spots throughout my apartment.

3:30 pm My lecture notes are prepped and ready to go so I recorded my video lecture with my iPad. This semester I'm teaching a hybrid format class where all of my lectures are online videos.

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6:00 pm Wine time! I like to wrap up all of my work by around 6 pm and spend time with my fiance in the evenings. He works until around 5 pm and time is a precious resource so I try to make the most of the time we have together in the evenings.

6:30 pm Tonight's activity: making an amazing apple crisp because FALL!

9:00 pm Bedtime!

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As you can see, I generally follow an 8:30-6:00 schedule from Monday through Friday but the flip side of this is that I usually work half days on the weekends. The great thing about pursuing an academic career is the flexibility you have to work when and where you want, but oftentimes this means a lot of responsibilities that don't always neatly fall into a 40 hour workweek. Because I work on most weekends though, I usually give myself some leniency on weekday afternoons if I'm feeling burnt out or unmotivated. This is just the way I prefer to work and it may not work for everyone!

This year, I'm a dissertator, meaning I no longer have to take my own classes. This has meant I have a lot more control of my own schedule because I no longer have exams or coursework of my own to complete. I now have more teaching responsibilities and need to focus on research more, but for me, this is a welcome change because I truly enjoy the teaching process whereas I didn't enjoy going to classes quite as much! If you're curious about my days before I was a dissertator, check out my instagram day in the life highlights!

Thanks so much for following along with my day in the PhD life! If you have any questions about PhD life, let me know in the comments - I’d love to create more posts or videos to shed more light on what life is like as a PhD student!

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What's on my iPad: Grad Student Edition | iPad Apps for Grad Students


Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you click or purchase a product through these links I may earn a small commission. Thanks for your support of my blog!

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Hey friends! Welcome to the second post in my back to (grad) school mini series! If you're new around here, I am currently a 3rd year PhD student and recently chatted y'all through why I use an iPad for grad school - but a question I'm often asked is what apps I use on my iPad so today I'm sharing the apps I use most often as a grad student.

My iPad Set-up

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I use both an iPad and apple pencil and this combination has pretty much replaced any printed articles or paper notebooks I might've used in the past. My whole iPad setup is linked above but you definitely do not have to go as all out as I have - I talk about some more affordable options in my post on how I use my iPad for grad school!

Most of the apps I use for graduate school fall into three broad categories. (1) notetaking apps or apps I use for annotating books and journal articles, (2) to-do or planning apps and (3) file storage apps. Of all of these, the majority of my ipad time is spent using notetaking apps because graduate school is so much about reading and writing! In addition to the convenience of being able to keep all of my notes and plans in one convenient place, using an iPad to replace all the mountains of paper I would have used has huge environment-saving sustainability benefits as well. Alright, enough rambling, on to the apps!

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Notability ($8.99)

Of all the apps on my iPad, I use notability the most by a landslide. I started using it at the beginning of my grad school career to download all of my readings so I could highlight, write, annotate etc all over the PDFs and not have to print out a mountain of paper every single week. Even though I'm no longer taking classes as a dissertator, I'm still reading tons of papers for my own research so notability is an app I use daily! Recently, I've also started using it to annotate my lecture slides during online lectures and sign documents for school or work.

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Goodnotes ($7.99)

Goodnotes is the most common note-taking app pitted against Notability. It's common for students to either use Notability OR Goodnotes - but not necessarily both. I use both apps but for slightly different purposes. While they have many similar functions, Goodnotes' organization system is slightly different than Notability's in that everything is organized into notebooks. I have always been an avid notebook, planner, and journal user so I find Goodnotes is a much better replacement for that due to its notebook based organization system. I use Goodnotes primarily as a home for my digital planner where I use daily, weekly, and monthly spreads to plan out my teaching, research, and dissertation-related responsibilities. I am planning on doing a more in-depth blog post comparing the two apps so stay tuned for that!

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Trello (Free)

Trello is a kanban board style productivity app that I've been using since I started college. If you've never used a kanban board style app before, it's a system that allows you to see all of your to-dos and projects on cards that are organized within lists that are organized within boards. That makes it sounds a bit complicated but it's really quite simple when you see it in use! I use Trello primarily to plan research projects and organize long-term task lists. There are so many things to keep track of in so many different areas of life that I often find it easiest to have a place where I can dump long-term to-dos into specific categories so I can organize it later. Trello serves that purpose for me.

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Google Calendar (Free)

I use google calendar to track all of what I call my "butt in the chair" time. As a grad student, there are a lot of different roles and responsibilities you need to fill which means lots of places to be (during non-pandemic times of course). Rather than tracking all of my deadlines and meetings in the same place, I prefer to separate it out so that the places I need to be live in my google calendar while the things I need to do live in my digital planner. Google calendar syncs seamlessly with all of my other devices so it's an essential on my iPad

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Google Drive (Free)

If you're a PhD student, some kind of automatically syncing cloud storage system is a MUST. There are literally a million files flying around at all times and you never know when you're going to need what! I use Google Drive to store all of my files and also back them up to a hard drive (when I remember to!). This means I have an extra copy of all of my files just in case anything goes wrong and I can access files from other computers if I ever need access and don't have my regular laptop with me.

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SimpleMind (Free)

This app recommendation comes from one of the PhD students in my co-hort and it's honestly changed my research life! SimpleMind is an app that allows you to draw mind maps on your iPad to connect concepts, theories, research ideas - all of the above! Before using SimpleMind, I was actually drawing these kinds of mind webs by hand to figure out what my research interests really are and how they all connected with one another. With SimpleMind, I can do all of the same things I did by hand and now I can move things around and edit things, too - without having to redraw the whole dang map!

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iMovie (Free)

This is a new one for me, but it's become a TOP app on my iPad this semester because of all the online teaching I'm doing! I've been recording online lectures all semester and iMovie has been a super easy way for me to edit my lecture videos.

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YouTube (Free)

Admittedly, I don't always use YouTube for grad school purposes (read: lots of time spent watching YouTube for entertainment purposes!) but I often use it to learn new topics or watch videos on topics related to my research. There are lots of great statistics and teaching resources on YouTube that have saved me while trying to run a particularly nasty analysis or when I'm running into a tech snafu on my course website. It's become an invaluable resource for both entertainment and education 🙂

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Hope y’all enjoyed my ramblings about iPad apps! I truly feel like having my iPad has made a world of difference in my graduate school career. It’s allowed me to be a whole lot more productivity and helps to keep all of my notes and plans all in the same place. Have you tried any of these iPad apps? Are there any other iPad apps you use for grad school that you think I should try?

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How I Use my iPad for Grad School | Back to (Grad) School


Hello, friends! Kicking off September with a little back-to-school mini series that I'm excited to share with all of you. If you're new around here, I am currently a 3rd year PhD student and use my iPad religiously - As in pretty much every single day for upwards of 10 hours a day. I would say I use my iPad even more than I use my actual laptop - my iPad goes everywhere with me!

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My iPad Set-up

P.S. If you’re curious about the apps I use on my iPad, I wrote another post about the iPad apps I use for grad school: What’s on my iPad?

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I use the ipad with an apple pencil and y'all - it is a life changer. I highly recommend getting the apple pencil with the ipad if you're someone draws, writes, or takes a lot of notes on books/documents for either your job or just in your personal life. Although all the extra cases and screen protectors aren't necessary, for me, they are 110% worth it because they make writing on the ipad a closer experience to writing on paper.

You definitely do not have to go as over the top as I have with the biggest size ipad as well as a more storage space but since I was such an avid user of my previous ipad and apple pencil, I decided to go big in the hopes that this ipad & pencil combination will last me for many more years - hopefully well into my academic career post graduate school as well. I previously used a similar setup just with the smaller 9.7 inch 6th generation iPad and the 1st generation apple pencil but after hours and hours of use each day, I decided that a bigger setup was ideal for my use case.

If you're a graduate student or an instructor at a university also remember that apple has an education discount of 10% off most products so if you're considering buying a newer model, definitely buy off of their education store to save some money!

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Why you should consider an iPad for grad school:

  • Mobility & Accessibility: you can bring it literally anywhere. Remember the days when you used to drag around 3+ textbooks to school and back? Well, those days are gone. Depending on what you're studying, you might be reading books or you might be reading tons of journal articles (me!) - either way, if you're in grad school you're doing a TON of reading and being able to grab one device that has all of my notes, books, and articles in it is pretty darn magical.

  • Sustainability & Reducing Clutter. This goes hand in hand with the first point but reducing the number of articles you need to print out or physical books you need to buy is saving the environment and saving yourself from a whole lot of clutter (marie kondo would be proud). Nowadays, if I get a piece of paper in class, I'll try to take a scan photo of it and put it on my ipad because I know it'll end up getting lost in the clutter otherwise.

  • Syncing. There are some definite benefits to going digital with your notes and one of those benefits is that your notes syncs between all of your devices (usually haha). Every app I use to take notes, make to do lists, or write assignments also has a phone and computer app that allows me to pick up right where I left off each time.

  • Multiple uses. I've found that there are SO many different uses for my ipad even outside of day to day work life. I use it regularly to watch TV while I'm running around the house, I use it to doodle and color to destress, and I've even started editing videos on my ipad since converting to online lecturing. I'm always discovering more and more uses for it which makes it pretty worth the money for me.

  • Saves money in the long-term. As a BIG ex-stationary and planner addict (ummmm if in doubt please see blog evidence: here, here, here, and here - oops) the number of office things I no longer buy is literally astounding. I've pretty much eliminated the need for any printer paper, printer ink, folders, pens, notebooks, planner, staplers - etc. On top of that, any textbook or personal book I want to buy immediately gets purchased in kindle format which is always available at a lower price point than its physical counterparts.

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How I use my iPad for Grad School.

  • As a planner. This is the primary way in which I use my ipad and it has truly changed the way I work. Prior to getting my ipad, I was a bit planner obsessed. TBH I still am. BUT having an ipad has allowed me to have all my planner fun on a digital device that doesn't clutter up my 2 bedroom apartment :) I know I probably could have converted to planning my life digitally a long time ago, but there's something about actually writing on a physical page that is a lot more satisfying. For me, having the apple pencil and 12.9 inch ipad is the closest to mimicking a real paper planner I've experienced and is finally close enough for me to nix paper planners.

  • Reading journal articles & textbooks. In grad school, you read A LOT. Think hundreds, if not thousands, of pages per week. I remember when I used to download articles for seminars and breathe a sigh of relief when the page count was under 200! nuts, I know. On top of the obvious environmental benefits, being able to take notes in a digital format means you can write all over the document, highlight things that are important, type your notes, erase mistakes, and even record audio of lectures and discussions. I use an app called Notability that allows you to do everything I mentioned above. It's a paid app but it is WELL worth it.

  • Teaching. I started teaching this semester and have just newly started recording lectures by using the screencapture feature on my ipad. Because I use screencapture on my ipad rather than my computer, it's super easy for me to use my apple pencil to highlight important parts of my lecture slides and add additional notes while lecturing.

  • As a second screen. This is a feature I had NO idea was even on the ipad when I bought it, but you can actually use your ipad as a second screen for your macbook through apple airplay. This has been such a life saver when I'm working outside of the home in a coffee shop (pre-pandemic) or even outside when the weather's nice!

  • As a notebook for pretty much everything! I used to scrapbook, journal, and jot notes for work and school in a bajillion (very scientific calculation) notebooks or post-it stacks haha - but now I've been able to eliminate most of that with my ipad and pencil. I definitely still have moments where I love to journal on paper, but it's so comforting to have all of my random notes collected in the same place so I'm not digging around my office before heading out the door!

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Phew! That was a long one haha. Who knew I had so many thoughts about my ipad?! Obviously an ipad is an expensive purchase and it may not be for everyone, but in my own grad school experience, it has simplified and streamlined my work and personal life immensely. Anyway, I hope this was helpful to all of you! Let me know in the comments if you have any other questions about my grad school ipad setup!

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If you liked this post, you might also like: What’s on my iPad, Grad Student Edition!

Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you click or purchase a product through these links I may earn a small commission. Thanks for your support of my blog!