Aloha guys :-)
Very new to this site and to the idea of completing a PhD... Hoping to apply for a biochemistry/microbiology PhD at a university in Scotland and looking for some general info on studying for a PhD!
1) Do you also study for other modules whilst completing your research?
2) Do you only study during academic trimesters (i.e. off for xmas/new year or summer)?
I apologise if there was previously a thread regarding this (did look through a few pages) but I am a mother of two with a husband who travels frequently for business so having to take in all the practicalities before submitting my application.
Thanks in advance :-)
Hi, I doing a biomedical PhD in the UK and I didn't study for any modules during my PhD. I just did research. You study all year round, i.e. you don't get the long summer holidays that you used to get as an undergrad! My uni was closed over Xmas/New year and easter though, so I took most of those days off ;-) (apart from having to look after cell cultures...). You also tend to get a certain number of days of holiday per year, at my uni it was 25 days.
Mine is going to be a MRes+PhD where you take some taught courses in the first year (at least for the first 3 months). This is a fairly common structure, but there are still plenty of traditional PhDs where you focus on your research for 3 or 4 years with no formal taught aspect. I've known some people sit in on a few undergraduate classes during their PhD if they need to gain knowledge in a particular subject.
You're definitely not limited to term/semester times, a full-time PhD is more like a full-time job, though depending on your subect/supervisor you might have a fair amount of flexibility about the days/hours you work, compared to most jobs. If you're doing it part-time, that's a different matter, I guess you have to discuss and negotiate with work/manager and university/supervisor to work out how much time you're going to commit to each thing.
Hello
There's been a few threads like this - do a search on 'holidays' and you should bring up some results. Yes, course work depends on the discipline you're in - in mine, students are required to do a couple of courses in their first year, and still be expected to finish in 3 years. We're also given four weeks leave, but I've never taken more than a week or so off, a couple of times a year if I'm lucky, during my PhD. You're also expected to put at least the same amount of hours as a full-time job, if you're a full-time student, although I also tend to do much more than this. Other people do less then me though - it also depends on how many conference papers, journal articles etc you want to write.
Hi guys :-)
Thanks so much for taking the time to reply. I have a meeting with one of the project supervisors this afternoon to discuss my many questions that I have! It does seem from all your feedback it is very dependant on the institution that you study with so I'll go find my specifics...
Thanks again
;-)
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