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Programme timeline

Students spend much of their time in our Franklin Hub at Harwell to learn from our scientists and use the state-of-the-art instrumentation and facilities.

As the Franklin does not hold degree-awarding powers, in their first year, students will be registered with our training partner, University of Edinburgh. In their first year, students will engage in courses with Edinburgh and Franklin training across our departments.

 

In addition the first-year students will develop a 12-week research project, these will be highly innovative projects centred around the Franklin technologies co-developed by the students, university academics and Franklin scientists. The initial starting point for the projects will come from a catalogue of ideas contributed by our UK university partners in academia. These 12-week research project will form the basis for the students PhD projects.

Following evaluation of the proposed PhD project, students will then register at their primary external supervisor’s university for Years 2-4, which will become the awarding body for their degree (e.g. if a student’s primary external supervisor is based at University of Manchester, this will become the awarding university for their PhD).

Projects

Early during their time at the Franklin, students will receive a catalogue of potential ideas for their PhD projects, from which they are asked to shortlist their preferred options. Students are asked to research and compose short proposals outlining how they would take the research forward.

The ideas in the project catalogue are very much starting points, as students are expected and encouraged to take an active role in co-developing their assigned idea into an interdisciplinary research project. This should be informed by their time spent rotating around the Franklin’s various scientific themes during their first weeks on programme. Initially, students will have the opportunity to explore their research idea via the mini-12-week project that takes place from January.

Following evaluation of this mini project in the Spring, students will have the opportunity to either develop it into a full PhD project, incorporating recommended revisions, or to explore an alternative project idea over the summer. In pursuing their research, students will work with a supervisory team comprising academics that are both internal and external to the Franklin, including a primary internal supervisor and a primary external supervisor.

International students will be registered with University of Edinburgh throughout their time at the Franklin and so must select a project with a University of Edinburgh academic supervisor.

Read more about our broad research areas here.

Affiliations

Our collaborators include research institutes, universities and industrial companies from across the breadth of the UK. For the PhD programme, we are collaborating with Franklin member and non-member universities. Some of our PhD collaborators are shown here:

Although Franklin students will have a cross-institutional supervisory team, they will spend the majority of their time in our central Hub in Harwell Campus (Oxfordshire), to ensure that they have access to the resources and technologies which will be instrumental for their research. However, occasional visits to their awarding university and other external facilities are expected.

Some PhD project collaborators

Supervision

Franklin students will each have a supervisory panel throughout their PhD journey. This includes Franklin academics and university co-supervisors. Each student will also have a personal tutor to meet with informally on a frequent basis. Our Early Careers Lead, Reshma Roy, and PhD coordinator, Phil King, who manage the PhD programme, will also be supporting students’ experience and professional development.

There are many potential supervisors available at the Franklin, some of which are pictured below, and other potential supervisor’s can be found on our people’s page.

Potential PhD supervisors

Professor Ben Davis

Science Director, Next Generation Chemistry

University of Oxford

Ben Davis got his B.A. (1993) and D.Phil. (1996) from the University of Oxford. During this time he learnt the […]

Dr Mark Basham

Science Director, Artificial Intelligence and Informatics

Dr Mark Basham is Head of AI at the Rosalind Franklin Institute, and a Research Fellow at Diamond Light Source. […]

Professor Angus Kirkland

Science Director, Correlated Imaging

University of Oxford

Angus Kirkland completed his MA and PhD at the University of Cambridge using high resolution electron microscopy to study the […]

Dr Judy Kim

Deputy Science Director, Correlated Imaging

University of Oxford

Judy Kim is the Deputy Science Director of Correlated Imaging at the Rosalind Franklin Institute and Departmental Lecturer in the […]

Dr Michele Darrow

Head of Data Strategy for Cryo Electron Imaging

Michele received her PhD from Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, TX for her work using cryo electron tomography and […]

Dr Marcus Gallagher-Jones

Associate Investigator

Marcus received his BSc in Biochemistry from Durham University and his PhD in Biophysics from the University of Liverpool. For […]

Dr Tobias Starborg

Senior Support Scientist

Toby completed a PhD at the University of Manchester examining collagen fibril deposition and organisation. He then worked as a […]

Associate Professor Shabaz Mohammed

Deputy Science Director, Next Generation Chemistry

University of Oxford

Shabaz Mohammed is the Deputy Science Director for Next Generation Chemistry and Head of Mechanistic Proteomics, and also teaches at […]

Professor Andrew Baldwin

Head of Biomolecular NMR

Andrew is Head of Biomolecular NMR and Professor of Chemistry at the University of Oxford. He is interested in developing […]

Dr Liang Wu

Wellcome Trust Sir Henry Dale fellow

Liang is a Wellcome Trust Sir Henry Dale fellow. He is establishing a lab to study the processes involved in […]

Dr Michael Grange

Tomography Group Leader

Michael completed his D.Phil in structural biology at the University of Oxford, UK, applying in-cell structural biology techniques to investigate […]

Dr Lucile Moynie

Associate Investigator

After completing her PhD in Structural Biology, Lucile moved to St Andrews as a research fellow where she studied protein […]

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