How do researchers tell their peers and the wider world about their work, especially when just starting out on their PhD studies?
We talk to AHRC-funded students about their experience of communication and public engagement work during their PhD and how they managed to build interest groups and promote themselves as academics.
"It's become important... the university wants to know that the people they have been supporting have got their name out there. When people want a specialist they want to know you've got a profile." Kadija George (University of Brighton)
Watch this, the thirteenth of 15 AHRC films giving a sense of the emotional and intellectual investment in studying the arts and humanities at PhD level.
Featuring in order of appearance:
Kadija George (University of Brighton), Alex Fitch (University of Brighton), Bruce Haines (University of Kingston), Dr Jenny Richardson (University of Brighton), Kim Walker (Royal Holloway University of London), Chloe Lee (Royal Holloway University of London).
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These films were organised through the Techne Doctoral Training Partnership in 2020 on behalf of the AHRC and represent the opportunities available for any of the doctoral training partnerships and centres developed through AHRC funding.
AHRC Techne DTP: PhDs in the Arts and Humanities © Royal Holloway University of London
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