RafuSS
New member
- Joined
- Mar 6, 2026
- Messages
- 11
I'm working on a research project about transfer student experiences at UCLA. Specifically, what helps transfers succeed and what makes them struggle. I interview students, analyze their stories, look for patterns.
Every interview, I hear my own story. The loneliness. The imposter syndrome. The moment when things click and you realize you belong.
It's weird to study something you've lived. When a student says "I felt like everyone else knew each other already," I remember standing alone at orientation. When someone says "I almost dropped out my first quarter," I remember that panic attack in Powell.
My professor says this is a gift. That I notice things other researchers miss. That I ask better questions because I lived the answers.
Maybe she's right. Maybe lived experience isn't a bias to overcome. Maybe it's insight to use.
I'm presenting this research at a conference next month. To an audience of people who study transfer students. I am the research. I am the researcher. It's weird. It's wonderful.
Every interview, I hear my own story. The loneliness. The imposter syndrome. The moment when things click and you realize you belong.
It's weird to study something you've lived. When a student says "I felt like everyone else knew each other already," I remember standing alone at orientation. When someone says "I almost dropped out my first quarter," I remember that panic attack in Powell.
My professor says this is a gift. That I notice things other researchers miss. That I ask better questions because I lived the answers.
Maybe she's right. Maybe lived experience isn't a bias to overcome. Maybe it's insight to use.
I'm presenting this research at a conference next month. To an audience of people who study transfer students. I am the research. I am the researcher. It's weird. It's wonderful.