Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Postgraduate Research at Kent 2016 Professor Diane Houston Dean of the Graduate School Dr Simon Kirchin Dean of Humanities The Graduate School.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Postgraduate Research at Kent 2016 Professor Diane Houston Dean of the Graduate School Dr Simon Kirchin Dean of Humanities The Graduate School."— Presentation transcript:

1 Postgraduate Research at Kent Professor Diane Houston Dean of the Graduate School Dr Simon Kirchin Dean of Humanities The Graduate School

2 Getting Started… Enrol...get IT account…pay fees! See your supervisor ...ways of working…teams Check if there are any taught courses you need to attend Check your access to office space/IT support Find out when the School holds research seminars and make sure you attend Find out who the Director of Graduate Studies for your School is Make plans for the year

3 Getting Aquainted... Walk down the hill and climb the Westgate towers, visit the Cathedral and St Augustine's Abbey Walk up the hill and explore Blean Woodland – one of the largest and most ancient woodlands in the South Rent/borrow a bike and cycle to Whitstable on the Crab and Winkle Way Buy a railcard and spend 55 minutes getting to London – some of the world’s best museums and galleries are on your doorstep and they are free! Book well in advance and travel to Brussels and Paris on the Eurostar

4 The Graduate School Mission: to lead and champion the strategic development of provision for graduate education and research at the University of Kent.

5 Postgraduate Research Handbook
Updated for Everything you need to know about being a postgraduate researcher at Kent including information on: Student Services Local community information Regulatory information

6 Kent Postgraduate Community
Student-Led Graduate School Postgraduate Community Postgraduate Experience Awards Multi-layer and interdisciplinary Graduate Student Association Researcher Development Programme Postgraduate College Postgraduate festival The GradPost and Social Media Dedicated PG Space Staff Engagement Review of feedback and activities Research Cafe

7 Benefits of your Postgraduate Community
Career & Personal Development Postgraduate Community Research & Transferable Skills Public Engagement & impact Interdisciplinary research collaboration Friendships & Social Media Access to a range of expertise Support & Networking Variety of opportunities Well-being

8 The GradPost The GradPost Editorial Team
A newsletter created by Postgraduates for the Postgraduate community. The GradPost Editorial Team Information on Gradpost opportunities that will look great on your CV and enhance your postgraduate experience at Kent can be found on our website: Contact:

9 Postgraduate Experience Awards
Do you have a great idea for a Postgraduate event at Kent? Apply for funding through the postgraduate experience awards and your idea could become a reality. Applications for up to £1,500 are invited for the Graduate School postgraduate experience awards Applications will be considered for funding to run events or projects with an interdisciplinary and/or external focus which will enhance the postgraduate experience at Kent. Examples of projects funded in Mun Ching Lee and Keith Grehan for their innovative interdisciplinary Biohacking project, sampling DNA to create music and art.  Vanessa Dias, Chloe Tyler and Catarina Morais for their 'World Cafe' Deadline for applications is 25th November 2016 Application forms and more details at

10 The Researcher Development Programme

11 The Researcher Development Framework
Transferable skills are the skills which once developed give graduates a clear edge in the job market and make researchers more effective and efficient in their work. Following Sir Gareth Roberts’ review of higher education, the UK research councils (RCUK) issued a joint skills statement to all universities, identifying seven areas in which UK postgraduate and postdoctoral researchers should develop further skills while pursuing their research. All of our training falls under the four headings of the Researcher Development Framework: Knowledge and Intellectual Abilities Personal Effectiveness Research Governance and Organisation Engagement, Influence and Impact

12 Kickstart your PhD: Researcher Development Assessment Workshop
Compulsory for all PhD students 3 hour workshops held throughout the autumn term Workshop topics: the Researcher Development Programme, resources for PhD journey, responsibilities of PG researcher and supervisory relationship The workshop also helps you to reflect on and assess your current skills and introduces the Researcher Development Assessment (RDA) Once you have attended this workshop you will be prompted by the system to complete your RDA online. Work with your supervisor to complete the assessment and use this as the basis of your research and skills training Must attend this workshop AND complete online assessment as part of the Probation process All new first year PGRs are sent an to advise them of the RDA workshop. This goes out every month until March. Once they have attended the RDA workshop and their attendance has been logged on the system then they can do their online skills audit 12

13 The Researcher Development Programme
Kickstart your PhD: Guidance, Skills and the Researcher Development Assessment (first years) Writing skills workshops (one-to-one tutorials and writing retreats) Writing for journals and getting published Rapid reading Research methods and statistics (including: SPSS, LaTeX, MATLAB) Negotiation skills Library skills Leadership Presentation skills and Impact Time / Stress Management Networking Research Ethics Teaching and marking skills

14 Online training Epigeum online courses The Good Viva Guide
The key advantage in using our online training is that you can access high quality training where ever you are and where you need it. Thousands of individuals regularly miss training because they cannot attend workshops either because they are part-time, distance-based, or because workshops do not deliver training when it is really needed. Using our online workshops, you can access training 24 hours a day/365 days a year wherever you are - at home, at your desk, in the halls of residence, at the library or in the laboratory. Epigeum online courses The Good Viva Guide Viva Guidance The Alternative Guide to Funding Blueberry Training – training podcasts on a variety of business skills

15 Postgraduate Festival
Annual Postgraduate Festival takes place in May 2017 Open to all postgraduate students Students can present their work to a wider academic audience Opportunity to network with academic staff and peers The Graduate School is running ‘Producing an Effective Research Poster’ workshops (21st March and 22nd March 2017). For more information please contact

16 Postgraduate Space Postgraduate communal space – top floor of Cornwallis East Woolf Foyer & Common Room Graduate School Training Room PCs and study hubs on campus Templeman Library – study carrels, student PC rooms, silent and social study rooms Postgraduate space in your school – this may be a common room or shared desk space

17 Website and Social Media

18 Structure Diagram for PG Programmes
Senate Vice-Chancellor Graduate School Board Dean of the Graduate School Programme Approval Sub-Committee Faculty Boards Deans Faculty Graduate Studies Committee Faculty Directors of Graduate Studies School Graduate Studies Committee School Directors of Graduate Studies Staff/Student Liaison Committees Supervisor/Supervisory Team

19 Get involved…make your voice heard..
Student Involvement Get involved…make your voice heard.. Postgraduate Student Representatives – School, Faculty, University Staff Student Liaison Committees (SSLCs) Postgraduate Student Surveys e.g. PRES Kent Graduate Student Association The Graduate School 19

20 The library To get you started the practicalities of using the library
how to find your resources how to manage your references Find your Subject Guide and make the most of your Academic Liaison Librarian Use your library Research Support Team for help with Depositing your thesis in the Kent Academic Repository Copyright and licensing choices Open Access and funder requirements Looking after your research data 20

21 More support and help Student Learning Advisory Service
Careers and Employability Service PGCHE & AFS

22 Contact Details Professor Diane Houston, Dean of the Graduate School
Cornwallis East 3rd floor, room 323 Graduate School Staff Suzie Morris, Graduate School Administration Manager ext: 3182 Ros Beeching, Graduate School Coordinator ext: 7838 Dr Jo Collins, Postgraduate Development Advisor ext: 16133 Carla Doolan, Postgraduate Development Coordinator ext: 4896 Joanna Addison, PA to the Dean and Graduate School Assistant ext: 4785 Deborah Molloy, Graduate School Assistant ext: 4089 22

23 Faculty of Humanities School of Architecture School of Arts Drama Film
History of Art School of English School of History Centre for American Studies Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (MEMS) School of Music and Fine Art (Medway) Fine Art Event & Experience Design Music and Audio Art School of European Culture and Languages Classical & Archaeological Studies Comparative Literature English Language & Linguistics French German Hispanic Studies Italian Linguistics Philosophy Religious Studies

24 Broadening your horizons: School, Faculty, University
Each School in Humanities is host to Research Centres – there are 23 across our Faculty There are also three interdisciplinary Faculty Centres: Centre for American Studies Canterbury Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (MEMS) Kent Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities (KIASH)- hosting the KIASH lecture series …and one cross-Faculty Centre: Centre for Critical Thought (Politics, Law, SECL, Arts)

25 The Faculty of Humanities
… and European Centres in Rome (History and Archaeology) Athens (Heritage Management) Brussels We also have a campus in Paris

26 The Faculty of Humanities
Culture Literature Arts History

27 The Faculty of Humanities
We define CULTURE as “the arts and other manifestations of human intellectual achievement regarded collectively”.  Within Humanities this definition covers all the disciplines incorporated within the Faculty including the arts, architecture, English, history, modern languages, classical studies, linguistics, philosophy and religion. Culture is taught and researched across the Faculty’s six Schools and two centres in Canterbury, Medway, Paris and Athens as well as being integral to our external collaborations across the globe.  Through Latin and Greek, modern world languages and through English and European literature, Kent offers a broad perspective.



28 The Faculty of Humanities
LITERATURE is fundamental to any area of study and within the Humanities Faculty is studied as a specific subject within English, American Studies, History and Comparative Literature as well as the ancient and modern languages.  At Kent literature covers the classics to the modern age, crossing the traditional boundaries of national literature programmes. Our relationship with Canterbury Cathedral gives us access to their archives; and in the modern period several of our academic staff are well known authors of contemporary literary fiction and poetry. Literature research has a strong international perspective, apparent both in the background of its staff and in the diversity of our teaching and research interests

29 The Faculty of Humanities
ART covers a diverse range of subjects and at Kent includes event design, drama, film, architecture, fine art, music, art history and aesthetics.  Research and teaching takes place across our campuses at Canterbury and Medway and Kent’s own centre in Paris as well as in Rome and Athens.  Interdisciplinary research and teaching across the University includes the dialogue and collaboration between academics, students and practitioners in the fields of drama, cognitive neuroscience, film, digital media, disability studies, history of music, soundscapes, architecture and urban design. External research networks facilitate and foster the exchange within theatre traditions, architecture, contemporary art in Europe.

30 The Faculty of Humanities
Any study of HISTORY engages a natural human curiosity about the past, and how it relates to our present. We offer several courses including a term or year studying in Paris or other European cities. History at Kent is a diverse, dynamic and research-led where students are given the opportunity to work alongside academics recognised as experts in their fields. Kent’s expertise is in African, American, British, European, Irish, Indian and Russian history, with strengths in the history of medicine and science, military history, propaganda and medieval culture.  Cross-disciplinarity is an important feature in our programmes.

31 The Faculty of Humanities
THE SIX SCHOOLS and THE TWO CENTRES

32 The Faculty of Humanities
1. School of Architecture

33 The Faculty of Humanities
2. School of Arts Drama Film History of Art

34 The Faculty of Humanities
3. School of English

35 The Faculty of Humanities
4. School of European Culture and Languages Classical & Archaeological Studies Comparative Literature English Language & Linguistics French German Hispanic Studies Italian Linguistics Philosophy Religious Studies

36 The Faculty of Humanities
5. School of History

37 The Faculty of Humanities
6. School of Music and Fine Art (Medway) Fine Art Event & Experience Design Music and Audio Art

38 The Faculty of Humanities
Centre for American Studies Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (MEMS)

39 The Faculty of Humanities
Faculty of Humanities has a PG teaching centre in Paris Architecture and Urban Design Contemporary Literature The Contemporary Creative Writing 18th Century Studies English and American Literature European Theatre and Dramaturgy Film French and Comparative Literature History and Philosophy of Art Modern French Studies Modern History Postcolonial Studies Religion

40 The Faculty of Humanities
Paris MA students visit to La Villette Paris MA students visit to Versailles

41 … and European Centres in
Athens (Heritage Management) Rome (History and Archaeology) View, Master, Slide Master to change this text to the title of your presentation

42 The Faculty of Humanities
Research activities are focused through over 20 Research Centres within the Faculty: There are also two interdisciplinary Faculty Centres: Centre for American Studies Canterbury Centre for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (MEMS) …and cross-Faculty Centres: Centre for Critical Thought (Politics, Law, SECL, Arts) Centre for Heritage (Classics, Law, SSPSSR) Centre for Reasoning (Philosophy, Law, Computing, Maths, Psychology

43 REF 2014 results Three of our subject areas are in the top 10 for research intensity: Architecture English Language and Literature History An additional four subjects are in the top 20: Classics Modern Languages and Linguistics Philosophy Theology and Religious Studies Intensity takes into account the REF overall score for research quality (GPA) and the percentage of research staff submitted.

44 Progression through your research degree
Key Contacts for Research Students: Your Main Supervisor Your Supervisory Team Your School Director of Graduate Studies (with responsibility for research programmes) Your Postgraduate Student Representative Postgraduate Administrator Faculty Director of Graduate Studies

45 Key Information for Research Students
University and School Postgraduate Student Handbooks University Regulations for Research Programmes of Study Code of Practice for the Quality Assurance for Research Programmes of Study in particular: Annex H (Supervision) Annex K (Progression and Examination)

46 Research Students’ Responsibilities
Annex H (Supervision) of the Code of Practice outlines the responsibilities of research students (see Section 5). Responsibilities include: Ensuring that you are familiar with University Regulations. Preparing adequately for supervisory and progress review meetings. Agreeing a clear programme of work with your supervisor. Making records of supervisory meetings. Contributing to the research environment of your academic school and the wider University community. Seeking advice from your supervisors in an active manner and taking the initiative in raising problems or difficulties. Attending a Researcher Development Workshop, completing a Researcher Development Assessment and discussing this with your Supervisor.

47 Supervisory Interaction
You should have a meeting with your main supervisor at a minimum of once every 4 weeks for full-time students (every 8 weeks for PT students) “Meeting” should generally be face to face, occasionally an exchange or telephone conversation may have to replace this. Following the “meeting”, you should complete a supervisory record form on the Student Data System (SDS) and once this has been completed it will be sent to your supervisor for agreement. The supervisory record template covers: Progress made since the last “meeting” Areas discussed at the “meeting” Work agreed Only one supervisory record is required for July/August. The SDS will remind you when a supervisory record is due for completion. See pp.6-7 of Postgraduate Research Student Handbook for details on completing supervision reports

48 Initial Meeting with your Main Supervisor
Ensure that you have a meeting set up with your Main Supervisor within the first two weeks of registration to discuss: How your supervisory team-student relationship will work (e.g. preferred means of contact, feedback mechanisms and turnaround times) Your meeting schedule Your work plan Any initial concerns Skills training requirements What you will be required to prepare for your induction review (six weeks after registration) How progression monitoring will be handled within your academic school (i.e. any school specific requirements) Facilities/resources

49 Supervision 88% of Kent students are happy with their supervision (PRES 2015, top quartile nationally) Supervisors and students are expected to treat one another with courtesy Discuss any problems at the earliest opportunity so any issues to be resolved quickly and effectively Should there be a more serious breakdown in the main supervisor/student relationship, the matter should be brought to the attention of the School Director of Graduate Studies who will review the situation Concerns about supervision should be raised at the earliest opportunity

50 Progression Monitoring
Review Stages Timing Induction review Within 6 weeks of registration (for both PT and FT PhD students) Probation/end of year review 10 months for FT PhD students and 12 months for PT PhD students End of year reviews At the end of each year Mid-year reviews (if necessary) Mid-year reviews may be scheduled in cases where concerns are raised at an end of year review Submission review 3 months prior to the minimum period of registration (e.g. 3 years for FT PhD and 5 years for PT PhD students) Annex K (Progression and Examination) of the Code of Practice provides detailed information about the review stages and links to the review forms: 50

51 Progression Monitoring on SDS
Your review documentation will be recorded on the Student Data System (SDS). See p.7 of Postgraduate Research Student Handbook. The SDS will provide dates by which the different reviews are due. It will be the responsibility of the Review Panel to complete the documentation on-line but once it is completed you will be able to view this on-line. Annex K (Progression and Examination) of the Code of Practice for Research Programmes of Study provides details of what needs to be prepared in advance of a review.

52 Working During Your Studies
There are various opportunities to undertake paid and unpaid work during your studies. Benefits include: Earning extra income Networking and making new contacts Gaining experience and learning new skills Tier 4 Visa Students All Tier 4 postgraduate students may work up to 20 hours per week until the end of their course. PGR students may have the opportunity to undertake work placements which are integral to your PhD research. These opportunities should be discussed with your supervisor and School.

53 The Employability Points Scheme Get Involved! Get Rewarded!
Gain both ‘real life’ skills and work experience through the EP Scheme to stand out to prospective employers. 1. Take part in extra-curricular activities Activities can include: volunteering, attending workshops, joining societies, working part-time, etc. : Over 6,784 students 132 business and organisations 617 rewards E: W: You can log activities and receive ‘points’ on MyFolio ( 2. Claim Employability Points Rewards range from internships, project placements, work experience, training sessions, assessment centres and vouchers! 3. Get rewarded!

54


Download ppt "Postgraduate Research at Kent 2016 Professor Diane Houston Dean of the Graduate School Dr Simon Kirchin Dean of Humanities The Graduate School."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google