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Building Self Confidence. Carla Brodley Tufts University CRA-W Grad Cohort Workshop April 2011. 1. Academic History. Started graduate school, UMASS…………….Fall 1988 Ph.D. awarded………………………………….Aug 1994 Started as Assistant Professor, Purdue….….Nov 1994
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Building Self Confidence Carla Brodley Tufts University CRA-W Grad Cohort Workshop April 2011 1
Academic History • Started graduate school, UMASS…………….Fall 1988 • Ph.D. awarded………………………………….Aug 1994 • Started as Assistant Professor, Purdue….….Nov 1994 • Promoted to Assoc. Prof. w/ tenure ………Spring 2000 • Started as a Full Professor, Tufts ..………..…Fall 2004 • Department Chair, Tufts……………………….Fall 2010
Confidence-Level History First journal acceptance Admitted to grad school 1st paper accepted Joining new research group ConfidenceLevel First exam in a grad course 2nd 3rd papers were rejected After 1 semester with my 1st advisor Failing my theory comp Progress through my PhD
How self confident are you? Do what you believe to be right, even if criticized for it Willing to take risks Admit your mistakes and learn from them Wait for others to congratulate you Accept compliments graciously. “Thanks, I really worked hard on that paper.” Govern your behavior based on what others think Stay in your comfort zone Work hard to cover up your mistakes Extol your virtues as often and to as many as possible Dismiss compliments offhandedly. “Oh that paper was nothing really, anyone could have done it.” High Self Confidence Low Self Confidence
How self confident are you ? Take this online quiz http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newTCS_84.htm
Regardless of success achieved or proof of competence, you are sometimes convinced that you do not deserve it Proof is dismissed as luck, timing, or a result of deceiving others Common among successful women and typically associated with academics Widely found among graduate students and first generation college students The imposter syndrome
Research on self-confidence and performance w.r.t. to stereotypes • Stereotype threat and intellectual performance • Two tests of Sophmores who think they are good at math using the GRE questions • Exp. 1: subjects were told that males do better than females • Exp. 2: subjects were told that there is no gender difference in performance • Result: Females performance equal to male in Exp. 2 but significantly worse in Exp. 1 (Claude Steele, American Psychologist, 1997)
Under-confident: you’ll avoid taking risks and stretching yourself – you might not even try at all Over-confident: you may take on too much risk, stretch yourself beyond your capabilities and fail Balancing self confidence
The good news is that self confidence can be learned and built on.
Stories from my female students • “Is this really worth doing?” • Paper rejection in the face of intellectually understanding low accept rates • “I don’t understand, but everyone else does” • Attending your first conference • “My math is not as good as everyone else’s” • In comparing oneself to ECE students
Stories from my female students • Low-confidence moments • “Taking your class. I was sure you would fire me despite your reassurances” • Paper rejection • Turning points: • First summer when I delved into research and had results • Realizing my strengths – better than average writer • Advice: • They let me in for a reason • What are my contributions to the group – I may not be the smartest, but I can do X, Y, Z
Stories from my female students • Low-confidence moments • First paper rejection • Taking computer architecture, prof and projects • Being stuck in my research • Coping strategies: • Knowing that females struggle with confidence, that I am not the only one feeling this way and probably deserve more credit than I am giving myself • Not dwelling on what I am not good at – just do the best I can do • Having a mentor that give sensible advice and supportive peers
Stories from my female students • Low-confidence moments • Paper rejection/grants rejected • Going on sabbatical at lab Top-ranked University X with Super-duper-smart Prof Y • Coping mechanism: • Papers do get accepted eventually/same with grants • There will always be people smarter than I. All I can do is my best. And Super-duper-smart Prof Y wanted to work with me
Take stock of where you are, think about where you want to go, and recommit yourself to getting there. Remember that no one is perfect. Even the most confident people have insecurities. Accept that life is full of bumps down the road and have faith that things will be better tomorrow. #1: Admit the problem
Find someone safe you can talk frankly to Make sure they are people you trust and who won’t judge you in the future based on your current state of self confidence Surround yourself with nurturing friends. Watch out for those who lower the confidence of others to compensate for their own confidence issues Be sure to be there to support others when they need it #2: Find support
Make a list of things that will get you moving towards your PhD goals Identify the first small step needed to accomplish each item on the list and have a plan for making that first step For that rejected paper, let the review “age” for a short while. Then, ask yourself what was good about the paper and what needs improved. Develop a plan for revisions and resubmission. #3: Establish reachable goals
Try to avoid fixating on your failures Make a list of your recent successes, then read the list (out loud if necessary) back to yourself Think about your strengths and what you’ve achieved so far. Give yourself permission to take pride in those achievements Be realistic, but don’t leave it blank #4: Recognize your successes
Take some time off to refresh, reflect, and enjoy Find time to exercise regularly – go for a run, hike, swim, … Have a nice meal with friends/loved ones Go shopping – buy that pair of shoes you’ve been wanting, that tennis racket, … Splurge for wash-dry-fold…. #5: Take a break
Your experimental results don’t support that hypothesis you were so hyped about; your paper was just rejected; … You just saw that man you have such a crush on with another woman; you and your partner had a slamming-door fight this morning; … You forgot your sister’s birthday yesterday because of a class project deadline…. #6: Beware of the “triple low”
Speak slowly and clearly A person who thinks they aren’t worth listening to will often speak quickly and/or softly Stand tall Don’t slouch, don’t walk around with your head held low Accept greetings and complements gracefully When asked how you are doing, say with enthusiasm “Just great.” Don’t roll your eyes, groan, and say “I’m just swamped.” #7: Fake it till you make it
Go the extra mile to be prepared Study hard for that exam Spend more time in the lab running those additional experiments Prepare a few slides for the next group meeting Write, rewrite, rewrite that paper Practice that talk again and again – in front of friends and not-so-friends Just beware of perfectionism (or you will never finish) #8: Be extra prepared
Challenge yourself everyday Don’t be afraid to push yourself, a little bit of pressure is good for you Make it a habit #9: Take a risk a day
Know your principles Live the Golden Rule Live your passion Pay it forward Then actually live them If you don’t have something you believe in, you don’t have anything. #10: Stick to your principles
Self confident language • I think this might be the correct algorithm • I have an idea what the correct algorithm might be • I have an idea about the correct algorithm • This is the correct algorithm, let me show you • This is the correct algorithm
No one will believe in you until you believe in yourself Think about what is important to you and where you want to go … and then go for it ! And, smile often In closing … Believe in yourself
CRA-Women (especially Carole-Jean Wu, Esin Saka, Maria Klawe, Mary Jane Irwin) presenters at previous grad cohort workshops My wonderful advisor, Paul Utgoff, and my female graduate students Various web sites wikiHow: How to Build Self Confidence http://www.wikihow.com/Build-Self-Confidence MindTools: Building Self-Confidence http://www.mindtools.com/selfconf.html 25 Killer Actions to Boost Your Self-Confidence http://zenhabits.net/2007/12/25-killer-actions-to-boost-your-self-confidence/ Credits