Metadata
Title
Guide to PhD study
Category
graduate
UUID
353aa95cfd7341debb20a9adc31011e9
Source URL
https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/phd/guide-phd-study
Parent URL
https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/phd
Crawl Time
2026-03-25T01:24:34+00:00
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Guide to PhD study

Source: https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/phd/guide-phd-study Parent: https://www.sussex.ac.uk/study/phd

A PhD is a research degree where you spend a significant amount of time investigating and analysing your chosen topic. Find out who will supervise you and the typical structure of a PhD at Sussex.

PhD or MPhil?

If you choose an MPhil, you might be able to change to a PhD during your studies.

Who supervises me during my PhD?

You are matched with two supervisors or a supervisory team experienced in the field of your research interests.

They help you to refine your research project and produce a realistic research plan.

You need to work well independently to complete a PhD, as your supervisors will not tell you exactly what to read or how to design and carry out work on your thesis.

Search for faculty members on our PhD prospectus

What is the typical structure of a PhD?

  1. Plan your research

In your first year, after your induction and meetings with your supervisors, you write a detailed research plan.

For some research projects, you may need to gain ethical approval before any fieldwork or data collection can start.

Your supervisor will advise you on this. 2. ### Complete your annual review and progress reports

Each year you submit a report outlining your progess to your supervisors. This is called the annual review.

In your report, you need to show a suitable amount of progression in order to continue with your PhD.

Your supervisors also write a report on your progress. 3. ### Write your thesis

You need to write up your research in a thesis. After your third year (if you are doing a full-time PhD), you may be able to apply for a writing-up year.

You can only apply for a writing-up year if you have finished conducting your formal research and your supervisors agree to this.

This is called pre-submission status and you need to pay a reduced fee. If you have pre-submission status, you can spend an extra year writing up your research. 4. ### Submit your thesis

You submit the thesis to be reviewed by two examiners with expertise in your area of research.

Usually, your work is reviewed by one University of Sussex examiner and one external examiner. 5. ### Complete your viva

After the examiners have reviewed your written thesis, you have a viva (oral exam).

During the viva, the examiners ask you questions about your research. 6. ### Make corrections

After the viva, the examiners may ask you to make some changes to your thesis (known as corrections).

You must make these corrections before you can graduate. 7. ### Graduate

When you've passed your viva and made any corrections to your PhD thesis, you are awarded with the degree title Doctor of Philosophy.

Graduate route

If you are an international student, you can apply for a Graduate route visa after you have successfully completed your studies to allow you to look for and start work in the UK.

Part-time PhD study

The majority of our PhD degrees can be studied part time. See our PhD prospectus to find out if we offer your PhD part-time

You have full access to campus facilities, although we don’t offer University-managed accommodation to part-time students.

Find out more about fees for PhD students

Distance learning

If you’re a PhD candidate with a job in your own country and you can’t attend full time in the UK for the whole period of study, you may be able to register as an independent distant student.


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If you are an international student you can apply for a Graduate route visa after you have successfully completed your studies to allow you to look for and start work in the UK