苹果淫院

Updated: Mon, 10/07/2024 - 21:42

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Du samedi 5 octobre au mardi 8 octobre, le campus du centre-ville et le campus Macdonald ne seront accessibles qu鈥檃ux 茅tudiants et aux membres du personnel de l鈥橴niversit茅 苹果淫院, ainsi qu鈥檃ux visiteurs essentiels. De nombreux cours auront lieu en ligne. Le personnel devra travailler 脿 distance, si possible. Voir le site Web de la Direction de la protection et de la pr茅vention pour plus de d茅tails.

Dea van Lierop, Assistant Professor

Dea van Lierop, Assistant Professor
Biography: 

Dea van Lierop completed her PhD in Urban Planning in 2017. In her thesis research she studied ways of increasing satisfaction and loyalty among users of public transit. Today, she is an Assistant Professor of Human Geography and Spatial Planning at the Utrecht University, in the Netherlands.

Q: Let鈥檚 start by asking, how did you decide to do a PhD?

I did a Master鈥檚 degree in urban planning at 苹果淫院, and I discovered that transportation planning was fascinating to me and I had more questions that I wanted to explore. I wanted to dedicate time to thinking about and solving problems that I probably wouldn鈥檛 have the opportunity to solve outside that PhD setting.

Q: What opportunities did you have to teach during your PhD and how did that fit into your professional development?聽

I consider myself very lucky that I had a supervisor who really valued making sure that his PhD students got a chance to teach. I co-taught a class with my supervisor and got to develop lectures and exam questions. I also gave a lot of guest lectures in different classes that were related, either very specifically or a little bit more broadly, to the research I was doing.聽

During my PhD I used the聽Teaching and Learning Services聽to take a class on course development because I thought that was an interesting skill to build. Right after I defended my PhD but while I was still doing the revisions, I developed what they called a 鈥淧ractice and Principles鈥 course that they had at the School of Urban Planning. I developed the course outline with readings and activities and then I taught that course. It was a really wonderful opportunity because I had the training from the Teaching and Learning Services that was not subject matter specific and I was able to apply it to my area of specialty. I really value that, now that I鈥檓 teaching, I had that training before.聽

Q: That鈥檚 wonderful. Not many people have the opportunity during the PhD to develop courses and actually get to teach them.听听

I think that there might be more opportunities than people think, especially through the Teaching and Learning Services. Anyone can send an email to them asking to join their seminars. That initiative came from my interest in teaching, and I recognize that not everyone has the opportunity to actually teach a course they design.聽

Q: How did funding impact your PhD experience?聽

In my first year, I received a MEDA (苹果淫院 Engineering Doctoral Award). One of the best things that came out of the MEDA is that I met some of my best friends at the welcome reception. At the funding reception, there were not that many women compared to men, and we ended up sitting聽 at the same table and introducing ourselves. We started chatting and we are very good friends still to this day鈥攐ne of those women even ended up being a bridesmaid at my wedding. That social bond right at the beginning of the PhD had a huge influence on my wellbeing. The MEDA funding also helped that entire group of friends develop doctoral research that ended up landing all of us jobs we are very happy with in various countries around the world.

I was incredibly lucky to receive SSHRC funding in my second year. That federal funding helped me attend conferences and gave me a sense of security. The day I received that funding, I felt so relieved. I remember it being extremely聽stressful, not knowing if I would have that funding or not.聽

Q: What was your path like after you graduated?聽

I applied for public and private sector jobs and I also did some interviews for Assistant Professor positions, but I wasn鈥檛 successful with those. I had some opportunities for postdocs, but I wasn鈥檛 really sure whether that鈥檚 exactly what I wanted to do.

I ended up going into private engineering consulting working as a transport planner, and I absolutely loved it. I worked with a great team. It was very interesting and I had a great time, but it was not an easy transition, emotionally. I felt very isolated from 苹果淫院 because my perception of what 苹果淫院 was communicating to me was that the story of a successful PhD聽 finishes with a job as a professor.聽

Developing business skills relevant for industry was not a big challenge though. I had taken a business course at 苹果淫院 for non-business students that helped me learn some of the vocabulary that business analysts use. And besides, your PhD isn鈥檛 just science. It鈥檚 human resources, it鈥檚 project management, it鈥檚 figuring out legal agreements for data, etc. There are so many parts of the PhD that are not just calculating something or developing theory.聽

Q: Can you tell me about the job you work in now?

I work in the Netherlands at Utrecht University as an Assistant Professor in Urban Accessibility and Social Inclusion. I had been working in the private sector for a while when a job opportunity opened up. At the time I wasn鈥檛 actively looking for an academic job, but I just saw this particular opening with a group of great researchers that was interesting to me and in a really nice location. I thought to myself聽 鈥渓et鈥檚 just try and see.鈥 These jobs are extremely competitive, but you never know, and this particular academic job was exactly focused on my research interests. So, I applied and I ended up getting the job. I moved to the Netherlands first while my husband was finishing his PhD at 苹果淫院, and now we鈥檙e both living here very happily in Utrecht. It鈥檚 a great place to live and I am very happy with the academic environment. It鈥檚 a different university system compared to Canada, but I鈥檓 still working on the questions and the research that I鈥檓 interested in and teaching also.聽

Q: It鈥檚 great to see an example of someone like you who was able to go back and forth between the private sector and academia.听听

I think it鈥檚 one of the most important things to be discussed at some point during the PhD. These newsletters that lay out the percentages of people working in one sector or the other always seem so binary, but I鈥檓 sure there must be more people like me who go back and forth. Why wouldn鈥檛 you? Some people find their one job and stay there because that鈥檚 what they want to do, but in an international school like 苹果淫院, you have people from all over the world. Sometimes you do a job because you need to be in a certain place geographically. Other times you do a job because you need the money. These things change during different phases of your life. I think that鈥檚 what students need to know, that you don鈥檛 just choose one job after your PhD until the end of your life. You can switch. Maybe you鈥檒l need something now that you won鈥檛 need in 10 years. I think that鈥檚 a much more honest way to think about it, but I never heard that dialog during my PhD. I never thought switching between industry and academia was a real possibility.聽

What I did hear a lot was that if you want to go into the private sector, you should do it before the PhD, or else you鈥檙e going to be too expensive to compete with the Master鈥檚 students. But having a PhD usually means you have a different skill set, so of course it鈥檚 likely that you鈥檙e going to have a different salary. I think any PhD student should have a way to find out what they鈥檙e worth in the market either in the private sector or academia. I think universities can help with informing students of their value to empower them in job negotiations. It shouldn鈥檛 be such a mystery.聽

Audio icon Dea van Lierop reflects on the possibility of changing career paths as your priorities change in your life.

Q:聽 One final question. Is there something you wish you knew before starting your PhD?聽

I would have appreciated being reminded that the PhD is really the time to learn, because there are very few other moments in your life where you get that opportunity. Especially in the first two years when you鈥檙e not rushing to get papers done, you should be selfish about that time. Take the time to read and learn and reflect and talk to different people. It鈥檚 rare to have that much time for thinking. As soon as you get into the post-PhD phase, you鈥檙e expected to deliver.聽

I did do a lot of reading and I did learn a lot, but I also was nervous about making sure I finished on time and I completed all the milestones you鈥檙e expected to achieve. I鈥檓 sure I would have been fine if I鈥檇 relaxed a little bit more about those strict deadlines and focused on the knowledge.聽

During the PhD, there鈥檚 a lot of space to think about the knowledge you want to acquire. That will make you more creative and more successful. It鈥檚 not the time to fear failing your comprehensive exam or not completing your PhD. It鈥檚 a time to live in the moment of what you鈥檙e learning.聽

Area(s): 
Engineering
Department: 
School of Urban Planning
Division: 
Academia - Tenure Track
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