- Selecting Your Supervisor
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Selecting your supervisor is one of the most important things you will do in your academic career, so you need to take your time and do your homework! Finding a supervisor is not hard, but many excellent supervisors will not be immediately obvious and you should carefully research each potential supervisor as well as meet with them, and most importantly with the members of their research group. Ask around, use the UCL website and PubMed to draw up a short list. You can approach anyone on your short list easily; all supervisors receive many potential applications by email and so an email out of the blue is completely normal. Make sure you write a short but compelling email summarising your current position, your specific interest in a PhD with potential starting times, thoughts about potential funding sources (if you know of any) and attach a CV. If the supervisor is interested in meeting with you then they will set up a short meeting. Don't panic - you are not being interviewed and this is generally a friendly chat to establish interest. You should have some ideas about what you might like to do, but do not need a fully developed project.
Remember three golden rules that should guide your search for a supervisor:
- Your potential research supervisor should have a track record of internationally competitive research, with high quality publications in a number appropriate for their career to date. Look at their PubMed entry and check that you can discern a clear theme to their research; check their research group website for further details of publications and citations. You want to be able to work in the research group of a world leader, or potential leader.
- Regardless of your potential supervisor's publication track record and/or general fame in the field, you must meet them before making any decisions. The professional relationship between supervisor and supervisee will last several years, and for many people this will be the longest they have ever spent in one place. So you must meet with your potential supervisor, chat with them and get an idea about what sort of a supervisor they will be and whether you like them. Gut feelings are important here; you need to be able to get on with your supervisor, but also be inspired and guided by them.
- When you meet your potential supervisor, you must also meet existing students in the research group. If there aren't any, this is generally a bad sign. Even research groups starting off usually have one or two members, although they may not be clinical fellows but might be basic scientists. That doesn't matter; the purpose of meeting the research group members is to find out what the research group is like and how the group leader (your potential supervisor) treats them. It goes without saying that you need such a meeting to take place without the group leader being present, so you get an honest opinion!
- Finding Your Funding
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Sometimes your supervisor will have access to funding that can support you, but it is much commoner to apply for a personal Fellowship. UCL has one of the largest portfolios of clinical research training fellowships from major funders like the British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research (UK), the MRC, and the Wellcome Trust; as well as many of the smaller charities. There are a wide variety of Fellowships available and they vary in the stage of training for which they are appropriate, the length of support offered and the type of support. Some are specific to particular academic topics or clinical disciplines. You need to make sure that you have discussed potential funding sources with your supervisor. It will take time to develop a Fellowship proposal, and after submitting a proposal it will take several months for the funder to make a decision on whether to shortlist and interview you, so you need to leave enough time. Remember you will also need to contact the postgraduate Deanery to plan Out of Programme Experience, which should be done when you apply for a Fellowship and not when you finally secure one! The list below includes most of the charities and research councils that offer clinical academic training fellowships, with links to their websites where you can find details of the eligibility criteria and application deadlines.
- Developing Your Project
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Many people who approach a potential supervisor do not initially have a fully developed and detailed description of a project they want to undertake. This is absolutely fine - in fact, having a very detailed and predefined project can be difficult for potential PhD students or clinical fellows, because it might not be well fitted to the academic environment, the specific supervisors available or to a three year project timeframe. But equally, it is best not to search for a supervisor and a project without any idea at all of what you want to do. Developing a project is therefore a flexible, iterative affair where the trainee identifies a potential supervisor; discusses potential projects of mutual interest; and then works up a specific project into a Fellowship application. This process can take several weeks or months and so it is important you leave enough time to do this. But getting it right is important, because a successful project with an outstanding supervisor is the foundation of your future academic career. A good project is one that has addresses a clearly articulated scientific question of basic or clinical importance; that is achievable in a three year time frame; and has challenging but realistic goals.
- Useful Funding Links
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UCL is a large research-intensive university of global standing and has central London facilities that are amongst the best in the world. Our in-house facilities are complemented by our proximity to and close working relationship with national resources such as the Francis Crick Institute (opening in 2015). UCL is part of UCL Partners, an Academic Health Sciences System covering a population of approximately six million people living and working in London. At UCL, trainees have access to an exceptional research environment that maps onto identified national skills gap including:
UCL Research Centres
- Biobanking;
- Biosciences Electron Microscopy Facility;
- Centre for
Advanced Biomedical Imaging (CABI);
- Centre for Medical
Image Computin (CMIC);
- Embryonic Stem Cell and Chimera Production Facility;
- Genomics;
- Proteomics;
- Zebrafish Facility.
Collaborations with UCL
- Birkbeck/UCL Centre for Neuroimaging;
- Francis Crick Institute;
- Wellcome Trust Centre of Neuroimaging;
- Wellcome/Gatsby
Centre for Neural Circuits and Behaviour.
Other