Actively building synergy between students looking for dissertation topics and research-active staff has led to a vibrant research, postgraduate and postdoctoral community in the field of midwifery. This expansion has taken time. In the early 2000s, there were taught master’s programmes with research dissertation components; midwifery has only begun to develop an active research portfolio in the past 20 years.
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This short piece sets out the link between encouraging and supporting research students and building a research team. It presents our experience at the University of Central Lancashire and covers the four areas that have been critical to this achievement.
Build on passion, not (just) fashion
It is important to foster students who have a passion for their subject, and whose passion links with that of the research team. Funded doctoral research opportunities can sometimes be driven by what is at the top of the political agenda at the time. This is a perfectly respectable route. However, it does mean that some postdoctoral researchers have to start again if they want to pursue the topic that really excites them. The alternative (or additional) approach is for a research team to have a broad vision for the field of enquiry that they want to progress together. Then, within that vision, the team can provide opportunities for doctoral students to pursue the topic that they passionately want to spend three or (part-time) six years investigating and which might be a strong launch pad for them for the rest of their research career.
Be realistic with potential students about what is involved
In applied disciplines such as healthcare, many master’s and doctoral students also work part time. Some potential PhD students in this position seem to believe that the step change between an undergraduate degree and a master’s is about the same as that from a master’s degree to a PhD, and that doctoral studies can therefore be fitted into the interstitial spaces of their busy clinical and home life.
It is critical to set out very clearly to intending part-time students that, in fact, the difference in scale of work and concentration required is significant. Being realistic at the beginning gives space for students to think about how they might manage their PhD in the months and years to come. Even for fully funded PhD students, there are times when they feel they just can’t do it any more.
Letting intending students know that this will happen and, at the beginning, helping them to think through ways they could overcome potential blocks and barriers might reduce the likelihood of difficulties happening. It will, in turn, enable students to recognise and deal with these issues when they do arise.
Foster engagement with the research community
PhD students can feel very isolated in their studies, particularly if they are off campus and particularly if they are part-time students also struggling with a professional workload. Building in opportunities for them to come together, with each other and with the broader research community, is critical.
Several of our doctoral students have set up an early career researcher group. The group meets on Teams, given that many are off campus. They have a small annual allowance, which they can spend on anything they feel will enable their community to grow and flourish. We have a biannual postgraduate seminar day, attended by 20 to 30 people. It provides a safe space where the students can present whatever they feel is relevant to the current stage of their work for discussion among peers, the research team and others, in a constructively critical and supportive environment. All attendees are invited to an evening meal to enable students and staff to meet and chat informally.
Students attached to large funded projects are invited to project working groups to see how such projects are managed and to gain confidence in procedures they may encounter later in their careers.
Build delight in gaining and spreading knowledge
The postdoctoral journey includes many times when things are difficult, when it’s really hard to get over a particular hurdle, and when it doesn’t seem that it’s worth it. Those are the moments when it’s important for the research community to foster delight among students. Delight and excitement are reciprocal. If we make the space for students to experience relief and pleasure in completing a difficult experiment successfully, or in carrying out an interview that is uplifting or devastating but really insightful, or in realising that something they have discovered hasn’t been written about before, then we gain a sense of joy and delight in synergy with them. Students who are regularly delighted in their work are likely to flourish (even when the work is difficult), and enthused students stay in research for the longer term.
In conclusion, seeing research students as co-explorers in the overarching research endeavour of improved well-being and thriving in the world is the basis for building successful research teams. Such research teams create virtuous circles for students that then build the basis for positive research and supervision careers into the longer term. This ensures the continuation and expansion of the research endeavour into the future.
Soo Downe is professor of midwifery studies and co-director of the Thrive Centre, which focuses on the first 1,000 days of life, in the School of Community Health and Midwifery at the University of Central Lancashire.
She has been shortlisted for Outstanding Research Supervisor of the Year in the Times Higher Education Awards 2022. A full list of shortlisted candidates can be found here.
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