Intended largely as advice for PhD students and other early career academics, this video covers some way to think about failure (and success!) and how to recover from things like paper rejections, grant rejections, rejections from PhD programs or grad school, and all of the other small and large perceptions of failure we see all the time. When can failure be reframed as success? Why does it seem like you're getting rejected so much more than everyone else? Should everyone just keep a CV of failures?!
I've failed a lot, myself. Like, a lot. I've got a rolodex of rejections. I hope this helps you think about how to deal with failure and academic rejection and how to keep yourself motivated so you can try to find your own metrics for success!
Some resources:
+ Mister Rogers on imposter syndrome: [ Ссылка ]
+ Advice for new PhD students: [ Ссылка ]
+ CV of failures: [ Ссылка ]
+ More CV of failures: [ Ссылка ]
+ Advice on organizing a CV to emphasize successes: [ Ссылка ]
Playlist of videos about applying to PhD programs:
[ Ссылка ]
Playlist of academic advice:
[ Ссылка ]
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Dealing with Academic Failure and Rejection
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how to deal with failuredealing with failure motivationdealing with failure at workacademic rejectionacademic writingpeer reviewphd advicegrad school advicephd studentcollege professorfailurefailure to successcv of failurespaper rejectionpaper revisionrevise and resubmitdealing with failureovercoming rejectionhow to deal with rejection from a jobphd student advicefailure to success story