This is understandable— some people worry they’ll be held to their still-evolving ideas as if they were chiseled in stone; and others simply haven’t thought those ideas through very much yet. Take a deep breath! No one’s going to produce your SOP when it’s time for you to start writing your thesis and expect it to correspond exactly—everyone knows your knowledge and ideas will develop throughout your grad program. On the other hand, the SOP is the way for the committee to see that you possess depth of interest and comprehension in your field, and that you understand what goes into research. If you talk about ideas that are too vague or nebulous, or that aren’t addressable by your discipline, then you risk sounding naïve.
Here are some questions/pointers to help you focus and narrow your interests:
• What are the broad research
questions/issues that interest you? Can you describe your interests in a
sentence? In a paragraph? Try to create a summary of your interests
that you can work with.
• Within those broad areas of interest,
have you begun to focus on more specific questions? If you’re not sure
what the current questions/problems are in your field, now is the time
to start catching up—look at recent journal publications, go to
conferences if you can, etc. Reading the lit in your field will also
give you a sense of how to frame your ideas in the language of your
field.
• Have you done any research in this
field already? If so, do you intend to build on your previous work in
grad school or go in a new direction?
• How will your research contribute to the field?
• Some projects described in SOPs are
achievable in the short-term, while others are big enough to last a
career. If your interests/goals fall into this latter category,
acknowledge the fact that you’re being ambitious—and try to identify
some aspect of your interests that you can pursue as a first step.
• Use your SOP to demonstrate your skills
(and past experience) in your field, as well as to define the next
steps you intend to take.
• Focusing your interests will also
involve more detailed research about the programs you plan on applying
to. Who might be your research supervisor? How do your interests relate
to the work this scholar or scholars are doing now? How would you
contribute to the department, and to the discipline?
• Your SOP will also address your
longer-term goals (post-degree). Do you plan to pursue a career in
research/academia? (For many PhD programs, this remains the department’s
formal expectation, even though many PhDs find employment outside the
academy.) If you’re applying for your MA/MS, be prepared to discuss what
your plans are. How will the degree help you?
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