PhD track
The PhD track involves many different aspects. As well as important administrative steps that you have to take, for example, there are also introductory activities, a training programme and opportunities for research abroad.
The introductory activities, progress interviews and training aspect of the PhD track may be different per faculty (see your faculty tab or Graduate School website).
When you start a PhD track at Leiden University, you will follow the central introductory programme for PhD candidates – Inform & Connect – or in any case the online module (Inform) and at least one of the theme sessions (Connect).
Inform: online introductory module
The online introductory module gives detailed information about the university, the steps in the PhD track and the range of provisions and facilities offered. You can start the module at any time, pause it or watch it again.
All PhD candidates are required to go through this module, which counts as five hours of training.
Connect: sessions for PhD candidates
Each year there are several interactive theme sessions, followed by informal drinks. During these sessions you will learn more about important PhD-related topics and will also have the opportunity to meet other PhD candidates:
- Getting started - Grip on the PhD process
- Be the change - Creating a positive working environment through open science
- Taking charge - Communication is key
- What's next? - First step to the next move in your career (available in 2025)
If you’re an LUMC or guest PhD candidate, you can register via this link for Inform and/or Connect.
All PhD candidates are required to participate in at least one Connect theme session, which counts as five hours of training per session.
In addition to these general introductions, Graduate Schools and institutes also organise introductory activities for their PhD candidates. Participation in some of these activities may be compulsory.
Together with your (co-)supervisors, at the start of the PhD track you will draw up a training and supervision plan (TSP; opleidings- en begeleidingsplan OBP), in which you make agreements about your supervision and your academic and personal development.
The TSP will in any case, but not exclusively, contain agreements about:
- Who will act as the (co-)supervisors and who will provide further supervision, if applicable; and also the content, scope and frequency of the supervision and the responsibilities for it;
- The GROW interviews (the annual Conversations on Performance, Development and Well-being; Gesprekken over Resultaat, Ontwikkeling en Welzijn). These are compulsory for employed PhD candidates and recommended for all other PhD candidates;
- The preparation for the ‘go/no-go’ moment and the time when the go/no-go decision will be made;
- The timeline of the research;
- The individual training plan (courses or training activities);
- Teaching duties (if applicable).
The TSP will also specify at which stage of the PhD track these various activities will take place. For PhD candidates with employee status, the TSP is an integral part of the employment contract. In addition to the TSP, you will also draw up a data management plan (DMP), in which you account for your data collection and management. A condition for admission to the PhD defence is that you have successfully completed your training plan (all the agreed courses have been passed).
You must upload the TSP in LUCRIS/Converis GSM within three months after the date of your appointment. Externally financed and external PhD candidates must do this within six months after the start of their PhD track.
The TSP is a living document: additions and, where necessary, adjustments will be made after one year. It is also advisable to keep the TSP up to date after this; you should discuss the agreements and timeline during progress interviews and/or the GROW interviews.
The structure of the TSP and DMP may be different per faculty (see the faculty tab or Graduate School).
Some time after the start of the PhD track, there will be an evaluation interview: the ‘go/no-go’ moment. The purpose of this is to safeguard the quality of dissertations and guarantee academic standards. Your expectations as a PhD candidate and those of your (co‑)supervisors will also be discussed.
Timing of the go/no-go interview
For PhD candidates with a four-year appointment and contract PhD candidates, the evaluation moment usually takes place at the end of the first year. For PhD candidates with a longer appointment (PhD Fellows) and externally financed and external PhD candidates, it is usually halfway through the second year. The precise go/no-go moment can be different per faculty.
Topics covered in the go/no-go interview
During the evaluation, you discuss the progress of the research with your (co-)supervisors. In some faculties, the PhD dean or PhD coordinator and/or an externe evaluator may also be present. The main focus is on the research proposal (updated, where relevant) and your provisional research output, while the training and supervision plan also has an important role. On the basis of the interview and the research proposal, a decision will be made about whether to continue or terminate the PhD track.
The format of the evaluation interview can be different per faculty (see faculty tab or Graduate School).
In addition to conducting PhD research, you will follow an individual training plan that you compile yourself, in consultation with your supervisor. This training plan is part of the training and supervision plan (TSP; opleidings- en begeleidingsplan OBP). For all employed PhD candidates and contract PhD candidates, there is a minimum requirement of:
- 140 hours (5 ECTS) of academic training activities
- 140 hours (5 ECTS) of training activities in the area of transferable skills, including at least one training course in academic integrity
Some faculties have a more extensive programme (see faculty tab or Graduate School). The requirement for externally financed and external PhD candidates is lower. They must follow at least a course in academic integrity and any courses specified as compulsory by the faculty and/or institute.
Courses offered
The faculties offer various research-related and academic training courses themselves, but you can also follow courses outside Leiden University; for example, courses offered by other universities, national research schools or national, international or regional research groups. International courses and summer and winter schools are also organised by Una Europa.
HRM Learning & Development offers an extensive range of courses for transferable skills, and similar or other courses in this area may be followed elsewhere. Teaching can also be counted as hours of training (up to a maximum of 20 hours). It is sometimes possible to obtain a University Teaching Qualification certificate (full or partial), for which the courses and writing a portfolio may likewise be counted as training hours for the transferable skills element.
You should upload all the awarded course certificates in LUCRIS/Converis GSM (see the manual). Hours spent on courses offered by HRM Learning & Development are automatically processed in this system.
Training costs
PhD candidates employed by the university and contract PhD candidates are in principle not required to pay for courses taken in the context of their training plan. It is important, however, to discuss course participation (and the costs of this) in advance with your supervisor, especially in the case of external courses.
The costs of the academic integrity training course and any additional compulsory training courses for externally financed and external PhD candidates are paid by their faculty or institute. If you need further training courses in order to conduct your research properly, your faculty or institute may pay for two of them, in consultation with your supervisor.
As part of the PhD track you may spend some time conducting research or taking classes abroad. You may contact a university or research institute independently for a research trip, but the following options are also available:
- For a short stay, you may be eligible for an Erasmus+ grant. To ask about this, please contact the Scholarships Team of Student and Education Affairs.
- The exchange programme of the League of European Research Universities (LERU), of which Leiden University is a member.
- Una Europa can help you with a stay at one of the eleven partner universities. Please contact Leiden University’s Project Team.
Another possibility is to conduct the PhD research jointly at Leiden University and a foreign university (a joint doctorate degree), and to gain experience abroad in this way.
Some faculties make an individual budget available to their PhD candidates, which they can spend on books, conferences, internal or external courses, if necessary, and other research activities (see faculty tab or Graduate School).
In addition to the PhD budget, you can apply to the Leiden University Fund (LUF) for a grant for a study trip abroad or to attend an international conference.
Getting Started
Below you will find more information on LUCRIS/Converis, and a time table that provides an overview of actions up to your graduation. However, new PhD candidates might find the following documents helpful.
- A checklist for settling in, listing what you will need to get started smoothly.
- A list of 10 actions that are useful in the first 100 days of your PhD, which is supported by a list of questions for critical reading.
LUCRIS/Converis Graduate School Management module
The Graduate School Management (GSM) module is a registration and monitoring module for PhD candidates and their supervisors. All information is stored in a uniform way and made accessible in 1 place. Converis is the software behind LUCRIS.
The GSM module offers functionalities that are designed to facilitate the administrative processing of the PhD track:
- All parties involved in a PhD track will now have access to relevant files.
- Training- and supervision plans (OBP) have to be uploaded here.
- As a PhD candidate you can register the training courses you have followed. Courses offered by HRM will automatically be linked to your course overview.
- The system supports various approvals that occur during the PhD track.
- A large number of forms (annexes) pertaining to the Leiden University doctorate regulations are integrated into the system and will subsequently seize to exist on paper.
- LUCRIS GSM is divided into 3 flows:
- Admissions: Starts with the PhD-candidate’s application and ends with admission to the Graduate School.
- Supervision Plan: Research and writing phase. Ends when the manuscript is finished.
- Graduation Formalities: Organisation of the defence. Ends with the registration of the result of the defence.
Manuals and short instruction videos can be found in LUCRIS at the Help page. Or check out the Converis GSM tutorials channel.
In addition, the Graduate School Office can support you with the use of the LUCRIS/Converis.
Time table PhD Programme: During the PhD programme
When | Who | What | Status Converis GSM | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Within three months after the start of the contract | Supervisor | 7 | Within three months after the start of the contract, the supervisor draws up a training and supervision plan (OBP) in consultation with the doctoral candidate. | For upload of OBP by PhD student |
PhD candidate | 8 | The PhD candidate uploads his/her OBP in Converis GSM. | ||
Supervisor | 9 | The supervisor approves/rejects the OBP. | For approval of OBP by supervisor | |
Annually | PhD candidate/ supervisor | 10 | Each year, the supervisor will hold a Performance and Development Interview (R&O-gesprek) with the PhD candidate. The supervisor registers these meetings for contract PhD candidates in Converis GSM. | Ongoing |
PhD candidate/ coach | 11 | Each year, the PhD candidate has a review or monitoring meeting with an independent coach and registers this meeting in Converis GSM. | ||
During the PhD programme | PhD candidate | 12 | The PhD candidate registers courses on academic activities and transferable skills in Converis GSM. Transferable skills courses that are organized by HRM will be automatically registered in Converis GSM. | |
PhD candidate | 13 | The PhD candidate writes a dissertation with the nature, content and scope of the dissertation conform article 10, 13-17 of the Regulations. | ||
PhD candidate/ |
14 | When the PhD candidate is ready to proceed to the graduation formalities, he/she requests in Converis GSM the start of the graduation formalities. | Request for start of graduation formalities, start of graduation formalities approved by GSO |
Training & Supervision plan
A Training and Supervision Plan (TSP) is compulsory for all PhD candidates admitted to the Graduate School. The TSP must be filled in by the PhD candidate and the supervisor in joint consultation. When you have agreed upon the TSP, the PhD candidate has to upload the document in PhD system Converis. Once it is uploaded, the supervisor has to approve it or ask for revision via Converis.
The TSP will in any case, but not exclusively, contain agreements about:
- Who will act as the supervisor(s) and (if applicable) co-supervisor(s), for the PhD candidate, the further supervision and the content, responsibilities, scope and frequency of the supervision.
- In any case for a PhD candidate with employee status, but preferably for all PhD candidates, the requirement that a performance and development interview (resultaat- en ontwikkelingsgesprek ROG) will take place every year.
- The preparation for the ‘go/no go’ decision and the time when this decision will be made.
- The required courses and training.
- Teaching duties.
PhD candidates with employee status and contract PhD candidates have to upload the Training and Supervision Plan in Converis within three months following the formal start date of their PhD track. Externally financed and external PhD candidates no later than 6 months after the admission date.
As background information for the your training and supervision plan we would advise you to read:
- The Golden Rules for PhD supervision: They offer a range of best practices for both the PhD candidate and the supervisors. These 'rules of conduct' emphasise the shared responsibility of the supervisor and PhD candidate. They also make it clear what expectations they both may have.
- The Guideline for PhD Trajectories, which lay down the minimum requirements for supervision, among other things.
Annual meeting
An important part the PhD trajectory is discussing progress.
At the end of the period set out in the TSP, a ‘go/no go’ decision, to determine whether or not you will continue your PhD trajectory, will be made and recorded in writing for each PhD track. The go/no go decision must be substantiated and must be part of a longer and transparent assessment process. The TSP should contain what should be prepared by the PhD for this decision.
Once a year the supervisor invites the PhD candidate (this applies to all FGGA PhD’s) to a Performance and Development Interview to review the quality and progress of the PhD project and the performance and personal development of the PhD candidate over the previous year. During this interview, the Training and Supervision Plan is discussed and (possible) teaching arrangements are evaluated. Changes regarding the original version of the plan as well as new agreements have to be recorded in the report of the interview (for employee PhD’s_) and in a new version of the TSP.
For contract and external PhD candidates, the supervisor has to report in Converis when the annual meetings have taken place. For PhD candidates with employee status, these meetings will be registered in SAP Self Service.
Academic activities & Transferable skills
All PhD’s will be enabled to develop their skills during their trajectory. PhD candidate and supervisor must discuss the training that will be followed by the PhD at what point in the trajectory.
For employee PhD candidates and scholarship PhD candidates the training (plan) should comprise of: 140 hours of academic training activities and 140 hours of training activities in the area of transferable skills. For PhD candidates who were admitted to the Graduate School on or after 1 January 2024, successful completion of the agreed training plan is a condition for admission to the PhD defence.
See the overview below for development options in both categories and recommended division over four years:
Activity |
Recommended division |
Internal activities
|
Not specified |
External courses
|
Not specified |
Conference visit
|
Not specified |
Activity |
Recommended division |
GS FGGA: Research data management (mandatory)
|
First year |
GS FGGA: Scientific conduct (mandatory)
|
First year |
GS FGGA: informed consent (recommended) | First year |
Other workshops and seminars by GS FGGA | Not specified |
Introductory programme / Career events etc. | First year/Third or fourth year |
Leiden University PhD introductory meeting | First year |
Other HR PhD courses |
One or two courses in the first year e.g.:
Four to five courses in the second or third year.
One or two courses in the fourth year
|
Academic Language Centre | |
Max 20 hrs. teaching | Third or fourth year |
Obtaining BKO
|
Third or fourth year |
For externally funded and external PhD candidates, it should be decided in consultation with the supervisor(s)/co-supervisor(s), whether and, if so, what additional training is needed to enable them to properly carry out their PhD research. If necessary and in consultation with the first supervisor, PhD’s will be given the opportunity to follow two other training courses funded by the faculty/institute, in addition to any compulsory training courses.
External candidates are encouraged to participate to academic activities at their institute such as seminars, workshops, peer-groups, etc.
Mandatory courses
All PhD’s follow three mandatory courses, free of charge:
- Leiden University PhD introductory meeting and 1 out of the 4 thematic meetings PhD introductory programme
- Graduate School FGGA: Research data management course
- Graduate School FGGA: Scientific conduct seminar
Prices
Internal courses are a.o. offered by the Graduate School FGGA (free of charge for all PhDs), see the items on the right hand side, and HRM (free of charge for employee PhD candidates and scholarship PhD candidates).
As of 1 January 2020, the transferable skill courses and career coaching for PhD candidates will be free of charge for employed (those who have access to SAP Self Service) and contract (those who are on a scholarship) PhD candidates at Leiden University and LUMC. In addition, you will no longer need financial permission from your supervisor to sign up. Please note that if you are an external PhD candidate (buitenpromovendus) you will still be charged for courses and will therefore have to provide a SAP number when you register.
Even though the courses will be free of charge for you, some terms and conditions will still apply: if you register for a course, we expect you to attend. If you have signed up for a course but do not show up, or if you cancel within two weeks of the starting date of the course, the HRM department will charge a €100 cancellation fee. If you need to cancel your course participation, you should do so by sending an e-mail to the HRM-department.
Please visit the staff web page for all research courses.
All PhD candidates has to report in Converis on the exact hours of academic activities and transferable skills courses he/she has followed. Courses can only be uploaded after the TSP was uploaded. Transferable skills courses offered by HRM are automatically registered in Converis. Therefore, these courses don’t have to be added by the researcher him-/herself. For other course see instructions below:
PhD training activities overview and administration
Academic training activities
What | Certificate / norms hours spent | Registration |
---|---|---|
Internal activities
|
On certificate by institute | PhD uploads certificate to LUCRIS GSM |
External courses
|
On certificate by host organisation | PhD uploads certificate to LUCRIS GSM |
Conference visit | Visit, paper, presentation = 10 hrs. | PhD uploads proof (programme) to LUCRIS GSM |
What | Certificate / norms hours spent | Registration |
---|---|---|
GS FGGA: Research data management (mandatory) |
20 hrs. Certificates will be sent by the GS FGGA based on full attendance. | PhD uploads certificate to LUCRIS GSM |
GS FGGA: Scientific conduct (mandatory) |
15 hrs. Certificates will be sent by the GS FGGA based on full attendance. | PhD uploads certificate to LUCRIS GSM |
GS FGGA: informed consent (recommended) | 1,5hrs. Certificates will be sent by the GS FGGA based on full attendance. | PhD uploads certificate to LUCRIS GSM |
Other workshops and seminars by GS FGGA |
Certificates will be sent by the GS FGGA based on full attendance. | PhD uploads certificate to LUCRIS GSM |
Introductory programme/Career events etc. |
Certificates will be sent by the GS FGGA based on full attendance. | PhD uploads certificate to LUCRIS GSM |
Leiden University PhD introductory E- learning (mandatory) |
5 hrs. At least 1 out of the 4 thematic meetings PhD introductory programme is mandatory | Will be directly registered in LUCRIS GSM |
Other HR courses | Other courses | Will be directly registered in LUCRIS GSM |
Academic Language Centre |
ATC will provide certificate | PhD uploads certificate to LUCRIS GSM |
20 hrs. teaching | By proof via mail from Programme Director | PhD uploads proof to LUCRIS GSM |
Obtaining BKO | Time per module (assignments and session) based on certificates LLInC + portfolio writing 12 hrs. based on BKO request. | PHD uploads certificate/proof to LUCRIS GSM |