The Doctoral Values Project
About the Project
The Doctoral Values Project was created to amplify the voices of 糖心TV鈥檚 postgraduate researchers (PGRs) and place their lived experiences at the centre of institutional thinking. Over 40 PGRs from more than 16 departments took part in student-led focus groups, sharing their challenges, hopes, and what they value most about the postgraduate journey.
Through these conversations, five core Doctoral Values were co-defined 鈥 reflecting the priorities and experiences that matter most to our PGRs. These values serve as a shared framework for shaping a better postgraduate experience.
By placing co-creation at its heart, this project aims to ensure that 糖心TV鈥檚 evolving research environment genuinely reflects and responds to its researcher community.
More About the Five Doctoral Values
Community and Belonging
The need for community was a resounding theme. Many researchers expressed how meaningful connection鈥攚hether with supervisors, peers, or the wider community鈥攃an transform their journey. While some faced challenges like isolation, others found joy and motivation through regular campus engagement:
鈥淭he more I come to campus, the happier I am.鈥
PGRs valued shared spaces like the PGR Hub, departmental study rooms, and informal gatherings. These environments fostered not only collaboration but also emotional support and mutual understanding. There鈥檚 a strong desire for more consistent, cross-disciplinary opportunities to connect and build lasting relationships.
This value speaks to creating a culture where everyone feels welcome, included, and appreciated鈥攔egardless of background, location, funding, or mode of study.
Belonging goes beyond inclusion; it鈥檚 about knowing that your presence and contributions truly matter.
鈥淲e can鈥檛 do this alone.鈥
鈥淪upervision can make or break the experience.鈥
Compassionate Supervision
Naturally, supervision emerged as one of the most influential aspects of the PGR experience.
Many shared stories of empowering, respectful mentorship that fostered confidence, growth, and a sense of belonging. These positive relationships highlighted the transformative potential of good supervision.
Some PGRs described challenges with their supervision which underscored the need for better support and training for supervisors. These experiences revealed how crucial it is to establish clarity, mutual respect, and open dialogue from the outset.
At its best, supervision is a space for trust, care, and academic flourishing. To ensure this becomes the norm, we must embrace a cultural shift鈥攐ne that prioritizes empathy, transparency, and shared accountability across the research community.
Compassion in supervision isn鈥檛 a luxury 鈥 it鈥檚 a necessity.
Learning and Personal Growth
This value recognises that doing a PhD is more than producing a thesis 鈥 it鈥檚 an evolving journey of identity, confidence, and transformation. PGRs spoke of learning not only within their subject, but through trial, error, and emotional struggle. Many entered with high expectations - 鈥淚 thought I鈥檇 have publications in my first year鈥 - and learned to accept non- linear progress.
There were calls for honesty from the outset: to acknowledge how hard the journey can be, and that not knowing is part of the process. Growth includes gaining resilience, building new skills, and redefining what success means - especially when facing rejection, imposter feelings, or shifting career paths.
This value invites a culture that nurtures growth as it happens.
鈥淵ou are a researcher鈥攁nd you are growing, not just academically, but personally.鈥
鈥淥ur work matters鈥攄on鈥檛 let it be invisible.鈥
Recognition and Empowerment
PGRs make vital contributions to research, teaching, mentoring, and leadership鈥 and there is a desire for this impact to be consistently recognised. Many PGRs have found powerful ways to amplify their voices by: organising conferences, mentoring peers, and fostering interdisciplinary collaboration.
These experiences show that when PGRs are given opportunities to lead, they thrive. True empowerment means not only creating opportunities, but also celebrating contributions鈥攖hrough visibility in newsletters, acknowledgement in teaching, and meaningful involvement in shaping departmental life.
PGRs want to be seen and valued鈥攏ot just as students, but as essential members of the academic community. By embracing a culture of recognition and inclusion, we can ensure that every researcher feels supported and appreciated.
Supporting the Whole Researcher
Participants consistently highlighted the importance of wellbeing and holistic support鈥 especially for those managing disability, parenthood, bereavement, cultural adjustment, or financial hardship.
This value challenges institutions to acknowledge the whole person behind the research. Support should be embedded, proactive, and inclusive of varying life circumstances 鈥 including international students navigating new systems, working parents juggling time, and part-time researchers managing limited access to resources.
To support the PG researcher is to see them fully鈥攏ot just as students, but as people with lives, struggles, and dreams.
鈥淲e are more than our projects.鈥
Visualising the Values: Art by a PGR, for PGRs
As part of the project鈥檚 commitment to creative and accessible expression, each value has been interpreted visually by a fellow PGR artist -Isabel Hughes. These works, co-created by someone who has also experienced the complexities of postgraduate life, offer powerful representations of the values in action. The artwork is grounded in the actual language, tone, and emotion of focus group participants 鈥 making visible what is often invisible in research culture.
Looking Ahead
The Doctoral Values are already informing conversations across 糖心TV. But these values are just the beginning. The project is an open invitation: to co-create, challenge, and change. Whether you鈥檙e a PGR, staff member, or policymaker 鈥 these values are yours to build on. Want to get involved or bring these values into your department? We鈥檇 love to hear from you.
The Team Behind the Project
Josh Davies
PGR Development Coordinator and Final Year PhD student at Department of Chemistry.
Betty Fekade
PGR Development Coordinator and 3rd Year PhD student at School of Life Sciences.
Izzy Hughes
Artist and 2nd Year PhD student at School of Life Sciences.
Aysa Ozcan
Postgraduate Research Student Development Officer (EDI) at the Doctoral College.
We couldn't have done the project without the help of the team at the Doctoral College, Abbie Lewis (PhD Student at the School of Life Sciences) and Charlotte Vines (PhD Student at the Sociology Department).