I'm an international PhD candidate in my third year. My dissertation is on computational linguistics (ironic, right?). My English is... okay. I can have conversations, I can teach undergrads, I can read academic papers just fine. But WRITING a 200-page dissertation? In English? That's a whole different level.
My advisor (native English speaker) has been helping with my chapters, but I can tell she's getting frustrated. She keeps saying "this sentence doesn't quite work" and "I see what you're trying to say but this isn't how we'd phrase it." She's nice about it, but I'm embarrassed. And she doesn't have time to line-edit my whole dissertation.
So I'm looking at options. Two main ones:
Option A: Hire a native English editor. Someone to go through my drafts, fix grammar and phrasing, help me sound more natural. This feels safer academically. I'm still doing all the thinking and research. They're just polishing. Cost seems lower. But will it be enough? What if my problems are bigger than just grammar? What if my structure is weird or my arguments aren't clear? An editor might not catch those big-picture issues.
Option B: Hire someone to write sections from scratch. There are services that offer "dissertation writing." They claim they'll write content based on my research. This is terrifying. It feels like cheating. But also... maybe they could write a draft and then I revise it heavily? Make it my own? Is that how it works? Or do they just produce something generic that I can't actually use?
I've heard horror stories. People who paid thousands and got plagiarized garbage. People who got caught and lost their degrees. I'm scared of that. But I'm also scared of failing because I can't write well enough.
Has anyone here been through this? International students who finished a PhD in a non-native language? What did you do? How much editing help is normal? Where do you find good editors? And is there ANY scenario where using a writing service is okay? Or is that just asking for disaster?
Also, money is a factor. I'm on a stipend. I can't afford $10,000. But I can maybe afford $1,000-$2,000 spread out. Is that realistic for good help?
Any advice would mean the world. I'm so stressed about this.
My advisor (native English speaker) has been helping with my chapters, but I can tell she's getting frustrated. She keeps saying "this sentence doesn't quite work" and "I see what you're trying to say but this isn't how we'd phrase it." She's nice about it, but I'm embarrassed. And she doesn't have time to line-edit my whole dissertation.
So I'm looking at options. Two main ones:
Option A: Hire a native English editor. Someone to go through my drafts, fix grammar and phrasing, help me sound more natural. This feels safer academically. I'm still doing all the thinking and research. They're just polishing. Cost seems lower. But will it be enough? What if my problems are bigger than just grammar? What if my structure is weird or my arguments aren't clear? An editor might not catch those big-picture issues.
Option B: Hire someone to write sections from scratch. There are services that offer "dissertation writing." They claim they'll write content based on my research. This is terrifying. It feels like cheating. But also... maybe they could write a draft and then I revise it heavily? Make it my own? Is that how it works? Or do they just produce something generic that I can't actually use?
I've heard horror stories. People who paid thousands and got plagiarized garbage. People who got caught and lost their degrees. I'm scared of that. But I'm also scared of failing because I can't write well enough.
Has anyone here been through this? International students who finished a PhD in a non-native language? What did you do? How much editing help is normal? Where do you find good editors? And is there ANY scenario where using a writing service is okay? Or is that just asking for disaster?
Also, money is a factor. I'm on a stipend. I can't afford $10,000. But I can maybe afford $1,000-$2,000 spread out. Is that realistic for good help?
Any advice would mean the world. I'm so stressed about this.