Advice for Prospective PhD Students
A short post with advice for if you’re thinking about applying for a PhD in the group, or with Leighton as a supervisor.
Should I get in touch first?
Please do! We’re all friendly, and love to talk about our work - both ongoing and planned. You won’t be wasting anyone’s time - in fact, you might be saving it! Please contact Leighton by any method (though email is preferred for the first contact).
Compatibility
It goes quickly while you’re doing it, but a PhD is a long process and it’s important to keep good relations during that time. The PhD application process and interview is a chance for you to establish whether you will get on with me, the other supervisor(s) and the group(s). A PhD can be a major chunk of your life, and it’s important for you (and everyone else!) that it’s something you enjoy. The selection process is as much for you as the candidate to select your PhD environment as it is for supervisors to select their students.
Some people just find it hard to work together, and that’s OK - it’s not a reflection on ability or anything else. If you have doubts at this stage, it’s better to air them or maybe act on them, than spend four years regretting the choice. If you want to come in to visit before making a decision, that’s great - we’ll be happy to host you (though we can’t pay for travel or accommodation). A visit may give you a much better idea of what environment to expect than an interview alone would.
Commitment and Resilience
Doing a PhD takes a lot of time and energy, and - ideally - self-management. Enthusiasm can carry you through, but on its own that may not be enough. There will inevitably be disappointments and problems (it is research, after all - if we knew the answers we wouldn’t be doing it, and sometimes we even ask the wrong questions!). Hardly anyone starts their PhD process knowing that they will be able to cope, but almost everyone does. You will develop resilience, even if you don’t think you have it, right now.
The Changing Supervisor-Student Relationship
The relationship between a PhD student and their supervisor should change over the course of the process. Initially, the supervisor(s) will have greater knowledge of the subject area, and academic writing, than the student. By the end of the PhD you will be working quite independently, and you will know more about the topic than your supervisor(s).
The nature of supervision changes over the course of the PhD also. Initially, your work might be quite directed: your supervisor(s) might be describing what you should read, do, and holding frequent (maybe weekly) meetings with you to ensure you start off well and go in a productive initial direction. As the PhD progresses, you will gain greater independence, deciding your own direction more, and meetings - and direct guidance - will be less frequent. By the end of the PhD, the supervisor(s)’ role is likely to be principally guidance on thesis writing - by that stage, you will be mostly working independently.