1 / 16

Student Progression

Student Progression. John Kirby Graduate School Faculty of Medical Sciences. Etc…. Our commitment. We are committed to ensuring each student maximises his or her opportunity to gain a higher degree. Students who submit a thesis very rarely ‘fail’

tmeehan
Download Presentation

Student Progression

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Student Progression John Kirby Graduate School Faculty of Medical Sciences

  2. Etc….

  3. Our commitment • We are committed to ensuring each student maximises his or her opportunity to gain a higher degree. • Students who submit a thesis very rarely ‘fail’ • No point continuing to struggle with a PhD if along the way we agree that an MPhil is a more suitable degree for you • We must make sure all students complete their work within the set time limits

  4. Your project • Must be suitable for higher degree research • Peer review • Internally by assessment team (usual for MDs) or • Externally by grant reviewers

  5. Etc….

  6. Your project • Must be suitable for higher degree research • Peer review • Internally by assessment team (usual for MDs) or • Externally by grant reviewers • Your supervisor(s) must have appropriate experience • Fellowship of the Graduate School

  7. Day-to-day progress and training • Research project specific • Don’t worry if you seem to be progressing more slowly than the next student (he or she might have problems later!) • Ask and listen to: • Your supervisor • Post-docs • Technicians • Senior students

  8. Keeping everyone on track is complex! A full-time PhD (regulation a) must be submitted within 4 YEARS A full/part time PhD (regulation b) must be submitted within 5 YEARS A part-time PhD (regulation c) must be submitted within 7 YEARS A full-time MD/DDS (regulation a) must be submitted within 3 YEARS A full/part time MD (regulation b) must be submitted within 4 YEARS A part-time MD (regulation c) must be submitted within 5 YEARS A full-time MPHIL (regulation a) must be submitted within 2 YEARS* A part-time MPHIL (regulation b) must be submitted within 4 YEARS*

  9. Assessment • You will be examined by 2 assessors • Experts in your field • Not part of your supervisory team • You will submit appropriate written work before the assessment • You and your supervisor(s) will receive formal feedback after the assessment • It’s good to gain experience of oral examination before the ‘big one’!

  10. Monitoring progress

  11. Monitoring progress

  12. Monitoring progress

  13. First assessment • We recommend the following structure for your report: • Table of contents • A literature review • A clear statement of the aims of your project • A summary of the methods developed and results obtained to date • A discussion of the strengths and weaknesses of your work to date • An outline of your future work In order to stop students from submitting over-long mini-theses, the Graduate School suggests a maximum word limit for this report (excluding references and figures) of 7,500 words (or 3,000 for MPhil)

  14. Assessment report forms

  15. The outcomes

  16. Don’t panic • This all seems very daunting – but it really isn’t • We are all here to help you to get your degree • Everyone involved in your work is an enthusiast and shares an interest in your research • They want to know the answers as much as you do! Good Luck!

More Related