I am putting this question because I have not seen a question that addresses if a candidate can get admission into Ph.D. without a reference letter. I am considering looking for PhD positions but I know for sure that I do not have a recommendation letter for my application. If that is the case, would I ever land a PhD? It is my dream to have an academic career to be able to produce more researchers who wish to have an academic career as me.
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3"my recommendation letter has stated false/fake things about me" How did you know that ? – Nobody May 30 '23 at 08:57
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My supervisor upon his experience with me, has come to this conclusion. – kc_nul May 30 '23 at 12:26
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Lots of similar questions here, such as Changing PhD programs: should I submit a recommendation letter from my old advisor if it's not purely positive? and How to handle not having my PhD advisor as a reference? – cag51 May 30 '23 at 18:24
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This revision may work, I'm personally going to leave some time for others to look at it in case there's a dupe target I'm missing. – May 31 '23 at 17:37
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Thank you so much. – kc_nul May 31 '23 at 19:54
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As you are in the UK you should probably have various elements such as a transfer that doesn't depend on your supervisor only. There should also be other staff you can approach for advice.
Having said that, it may be that you are either struggling to adapt to the difference between a PhD and a masters, or you are struggling overall. A PhD is not like a taught degree and there are no set steps to completion. The way people "fail" a PhD is by failing to complete, not by having their thesis rejected.
Paul de Vrieze
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Thank you for your suggestion. I am in Europe and the only way to get a transfer is to qualify in my first year. Now that I know that I wouldn't be qualified (my supervisor has decided to give me a negative evaluation), I do not think I can take up transfers. – kc_nul May 30 '23 at 12:46