For the past few weeks I have been
wondering what to do about this blog. I like the idea of having a blog. I like
to write down my thoughts and reflections and stories from my life, and I like
sharing them with others. But for some reason I just haven’t been very active
here on my blog even though I would want to. I think that may be because of
lack of structure. What is this blog about? What is its purpose? So I have come
up with some answers to those questions that will hopefully make it easier for
me to put up blog posts more regularly. In fact, I have decided to do weekly
blogs. At least! I plan on using Fridays for my blogging days. Well, not the
whole Friday, but you know. I might blog more often, but for now I am giving
myself a task, organising my schedule and an hour or two on Fridays will be
dedicated to my blog.
The big question is, what is this
blog going to be about. I suppose I will mostly be posting the same things I
have been posting, just more regularly. I call myself the RunningResearcher.
That kind of says it all. I am struggling a little bit with my running
motivation these days but I feel that I am getting it back little by little. I
think that might be because it is starting to get cooler here, autumn is just
around the corner, and there is nothing better than going for a run in the cool
air. My body is also starting to get fat adapted, so I am able to run and
exercise more every day. I will, therefore, very likely talk about my running ‘journey’
on this blog, and I might talk a little about my overall ‘health journey’, like
my new way of eating, the fact that I am trying to get into yoga again, and
strength training that works for runners. So the Running part of my dual
identity will certainly be visible on here. The Researcher part of me will
probably be dominant, though.
I am now in my fifth month of my
PhD. Here in New Zealand, when you start your PhD, you start with a sort of ‘conditional
enrolment’, and in the first 6 months you work on your research proposal, get
ethical approval and then present your proposal to a panel of experts. They
will then decide if you can go on to ‘confirmed enrolment’, which means that
you can continue with your research, start gathering data and things like that.
They can also tell you that you need to work on the proposal some more, giving
you feedback and time to fix what needs to be fixed. Or they can just tell you
to go home! Obviously, I am working towards the first option! You can extend those
6 months if you need to, and I will probably extend a couple of months. That is
because my initial idea was to conduct my research here in Hamilton, in the NZ
context. But, after considering a lot of different things, I decided to change
my context to Iceland. So I will be gathering my data in Iceland. Cannot wait
to go back there, but that means that I needed to do some changes to my
proposal, and it always takes time to get things in place. Anyway, the proposal
is split into different sections. You need to state the aim and objectives of
the research, why this is a significant topic worth researching, you need to
present a literature review of previous research on your topic and where your
research sits within the field and what it might add to the knowledge base. You
need to address all ethical issues, present your methodology and have a clear
timeframe of how your research will progress. So those are a lot of things you
need to do in 6 months! At this moment, I am “finished” with the first parts of
my proposal and am now starting to work on my methodology and ethical approval
application. I think everything is going well and I am making good progress.
You often get discouraged when you are working on something, and all of a
sudden it doesn’t seem to make any sense. The other day I was almost in tears
because I just couldn’t see what I needed to see in my literature, how I could connect
this to that. But then the next day, I was in cloud nine because everything was
making such great sense. This PhD is definitely a rollercoaster ride! But I love
it, the good and the bad.
See you next week :)
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