Sandeep Subramanian, Assistant Professor
Sandeep Subramanian graduated with a PhD from the Department of Physical and Occupational Therapy in 2013. He is currently an Assistant Professor at University of Texas Health Science Center San Antonio.
Q: So what made you interested in doing a PhD in your field?
I was a physiotherapist in India and I was working in a school for children with developmental disabilities. Our mandate was to push for these children to be included in the mainstream school system in India. The place where I was working also had a nonprofit organization that was fighting to make environments more accessible for those with physical disabilities, and I was working with them as a consultant physiotherapist in my free time.
I applied to different schools in Canada and the US, and there was one professor at 看片视频 who was doing work that related to what I was doing. When I wrote to her, she told me to apply next year because she was on sabbatical. I had no idea what a sabbatical meant so I didn鈥檛 withdraw my application and it was still there. Then another professor, who eventually became my mentor, picked up my application and asked if I would like to work for her. I agreed, not knowing much about 看片视频 or Canada because in Mumbai, where I come from, there was not a lot of information about universities.
Q: What was it like applying to PhD programs as an international student?
There鈥檚 a funny story in my application process because 看片视频 accepted my application but then I got an email saying I didn鈥檛 meet the minimum GPA requirements for the program. I remember having a call with my mom and I鈥檓 saying, 鈥淲hat university is this? What are they looking for?鈥 Our school system had rankings and I was within the top five or top 10 in my province. In India, the passing grade is 50% and it鈥檚 difficult for us to get good marks in that system so my marks were around 75% or so. But the next day, I got an email saying 鈥淪orry, not only do you meet the requirements but you are one of the top applicants, please do not withdraw your application.鈥 I remember thinking, 鈥淲ithdraw my application? What is that?鈥 I had no idea you could do that. To be frank, 看片视频 wasn鈥檛 on my radar鈥擨 applied to the US but my visa didn鈥檛 go through. But I was welcomed into Canada and so I came to 看片视频.
Q: Did you get a lot of support during your graduate studies?
My mentor was very supportive of me. She made sure I had stipends and she gave me teaching assistantships and a lot of other scholarships. As an international student, it gets expensive and I had taken a bank loan. 看片视频 also changed its tuition around that time, and so we ended up only paying the Quebec supplement of the tuition. So instead of paying ten or twelve thousand dollars, we only paid around two thousand plus health insurance. So that was very helpful to me. I was also well supported by other professors and lab mates in terms of dressing for the winter, etc.
Q: What would you say were your biggest challenges or your PhD journey?
It took me some time to get established and to have my own friends. I had classes three days a week, and so I was sitting at home pretty much on the weekends. And this was pre-YouTube鈥擨 came to 看片视频 in 2005. So, you know, there鈥檚 only so much music you can listen to and newspapers you can read. The loneliness was there, which was the biggest challenge. Something that really helped me in those days was going to an Indian temple. I used to be there every Sunday when they would have their community kitchen and help out. They had free community meals and would often give me food to take home. Being a part of the Indian community allowed me to slowly build relationships with people. Everything was good.
Another challenge I had was when one of the equipment in the lab was broken. I was just sitting for four months so my PhD had to be extended for about six more months than I would have liked. But I got my paper out, so it鈥檚 not that bad. You鈥檝e got to factor in these things because they can happen. Things can always go wrong. But the good thing was my mentor always had other work for me to keep me busy.
Q: Is there any support you wished you had?
I think in general, students don鈥檛 have too much of an idea of career choices other than being an academic. It never even struck me that there can be non-academic academic opportunities and that I can go out and work in the industry as well. I think that鈥檚 something that 看片视频 can improve upon. I think that is one thing I would have liked to know.
Q: How did you end up in your current position?
The American Physical Therapy Association, the APTA, have a job portal. I used to go on the portal every week. I had applied to a few positions over there. There was a program in San Antonio and I really didn鈥檛 know much about it but the posting was very simple鈥攖hey just wanted me to send a cover letter and a CV. A week later, I had a phone interview. That was in June 2014. I didn鈥檛 hear back from them until September when they asked me to come visit San Antonio for an interview. But I was going to India in October for a family wedding, so I went in December. It was my first interview and it was an excellent experience. They were really nice鈥擨 stayed an extra day before flying out and the department head gave me a tour of the city. I鈥檓 very happy I made the move.
Q: Can you describe what you do in your job day-to-day work?
I am usually more research-focused, so my teaching duties were very low when I started. Now, because we鈥檝e had some faculty resign, I had to put in a little bit more in teaching. So I teach two courses for a semester, which is not very common for the kind of research-based position I鈥檓 in. But I love teaching, so that鈥檚 fine. My typical day can start from anywhere between 7:30 AM to 10:30 AM depending on when I want to go to work. If I go to work early, I leave early and if I go to work late, I leave late. There are no restrictions on how we are expected to spend 35 to 40 hours a week in office, as long as we finish our work and complete our work.
Q: Is there something you wish you knew before starting your PhD?
The PhD is not a sprint, it鈥檚 a marathon race. Don鈥檛 be afraid to seek help. I think often the key is communication, and having a good support system around you. Things happen, like the COVID-19 crisis, and everybody has to stop. Or your machine breaks for months and you can鈥檛 do experiments. But if such a thing happens, 鈥渘ever let a good crisis go to waste鈥, as one of my colleagues would say. What can you do? Can you write a review paper? Yes. Can you write the background part for your thesis? Yes. Maybe you have some data to analyze. You also have to do things that keep you going鈥攜our PhD doesn鈥檛 define you. Have a life outside of the lab. There鈥檚 the academic you, and there鈥檚 the non-academic you. It helps you stay grounded and stay sane.