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Postgraduate Researcher Training and Development Bulletin- 17 June 2026
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Welcome to this edition of Postgraduate Researcher Training and Development Bulletin. The bulletin is your go-to place for training and development courses and resources offered by the Researcher Development and Research Culture team, across the University and beyond.
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Festival of PGR Research is over for this year- please provide your feedback to help shape next year's plans
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Do you use NVivo? Get hands-on help at in-person course, An Introduction to NVivo, on Tuesday 30 June
If you are unable to attend a course, you can find slides from many of our sessions on our PGR Training & Development Resources SharePoint site.
The full list of courses can be found on our upcoming training webpage.
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Let us know your thoughts on Festival of PGR Research
As our first ever Festival of PGR Research is now wrapped up, we'd like to hear from you- whether you participated or not- so that we can build on the successful elements of this year and enhance what we offer for 2027.
Please leave your constructive feedback via our feedback form; there is space to add your own suggestions.
The feedback form covers all components, from the competitions; workshops; events and anything else on the Festival of PGR Research calendar.
The form will close on Tuesday 30 June.
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About our training sessions
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Our training sessions are not like traditional lectures- they are interactive sessions involving group work so that you can fully engage with the topic being discussed and can share ideas with your fellow PGRs in a friendly and supportive environment. In order to encourage an open welcoming space for everyone, we ask that you join online sessions in a room where you are able to turn your camera on and speak freely.
If you have any questions around accessibility, please contact researcherdevelopment@exeter.ac.uk to discuss how we can support your participation.
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Knowledge and Intellectual Abilities
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An introduction to NVivo (Tuesday 30 June, 12.30-14.30 in person in Old Library Training Room 4, Streatham Campus)
Please note this is an in-person only session.
NVivo is a software program used for qualitative and mixed-methods research, to support the organisation and analysis of unstructured text, audio, video, and image data (e.g. commonly used for projects which involve analysing interviews, focus groups, in-depth qualitative surveys etc).
This hands-on workshop will introduce you to this software, and how to use it for coding during qualitative analysis, for methods such as thematic analysis, content analysis, grounded theory, and so on.
The course is currently fully booked but please add yourself to the waiting list as spaces may become available closer to the time.
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Research Methods Training
Did you know that as a PGR at the University of Exeter, you can access the Consortium for the Advancement of Research Methods and Analysis (CARMA) though our institutional account for free? This gives you access to lots of online research methods webinars and resources. Sign up here using your University of Exeter email account (scroll down the page to ‘Find Out More’, then expand the arrow for CARMA (Consortium for the Advancement of Research Methods & Analysis) and follow the registration/sign up instructions).
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Postgraduate research can be challenging at times, but the Wellbeing Services team are available throughout the year, to offer support if you need it. Check out the services available here.
The Wellbeing Thesis offers all sorts of useful resources to help you on your doctoral journey.
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Research governance and organisation
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Engagement, influence and impact
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Bored of working on your own? Finding it difficult to concentrate? Looking for other people to co-work with online? Then why not join PGR Study Space, which is a welcoming and supportive environment run by PGRs for PGRs. Join our MS Teams PGR Study Space channel or contact our PGR coordinator Yanira Becerra Ortiz at PGRStudySpace@exeter.ac.uk for more information.
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Career Support Resources at University of Exeter

The University has some excellent resources to help with careers. Whether you plan to work in industry, set up your own business, join the third sector, stay in academia, or are not yet sure and want to explore your options, you can find guidance and helpful pointers using these resources:
PGR Career Planning Guide - a dedicated website to support your career development. This resource provides in-depth information and practical guidance specifically tailored towards postgraduate researchers whether you are thinking about working in academia, industry, self-employment or research.
Career Zone- much of the online content is open to all current Exeter students, including PGRs
PGR Training & Development Resources SharePoint- contains presentation slides from past training sessions. For career skills, check out the Personal Effectiveness section
PGR Training and Development Bulletin- find out what courses and opportunities are happening at the University in this monthly newsletter, which all PGRs are signed up to
Upcoming training courses- our training programme is available to book now

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Resource for Academic Writing Skills: The Writing Brain
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Have you explored The Writing Brain? It's a one-stop website to help support your academic writing development. It contains a wealth of resources from the basics, through clarity and style to structure and includes mini video lectures and practical worksheets on a wide variety of topics.
A big thank you to Dr Emily Bernhard Jackson for curating all content and to Research England for funding this resource.
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Travel and Fieldwork Resources
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We have developed some new training and resources to help you prepare for your fieldwork, which can be found at PGR Resources.
This includes a new 'one-stop' handbook that contains key information and advice, timelines and flowcharts, and new online and in-person training workshops. The resources cover everything from planning and selecting fieldsites at the start of your programme, to ethics and risk assessments, budgeting, packing and travel advice, to tips on lone working when you are in the field, and what to do when you get back to your desk at the end.
We hope that you will find these resources really useful, and that they will make preparing for your fieldwork (and trying to navigate all the related university websites) easier and more straightforward. Happy planning and safe travels!
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Academic and General English Language Skills
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The Insessional team run the Academic Literacy and English programme for all students studying at the University of Exeter who are speakers of languages other than English.
There are a variety of ways you can learn:
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Library Training and Events
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Did you know the Library runs its own training programme to help with library skills? It includes events such as:
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library research cafés where you can ask the library staff how to make the most of the Library Search service, identify and use academic databases, and build your online search skills so that you can quickly and easily find research materials to support your studies and research;
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sessions on academic writing and academic listening from English Language Skills Development Team;
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other relevant courses to familiarise yourself with key library skills.
Some courses are discipline-specific or may be aimed at undergraduates/postgraduate-taught students so don't forget to check the details before booking on.
Any questions? Click the 'Ask Us' button on the library webpages to start an online chat or email them at library@exeter.ac.uk.
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PGR Training and Development Resources SharePoint site
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Our PGR Training & Development Resources SharePoint site was launched at the beginning of this year. It's the place to go for slides and other resources from courses on our training programme. Refresh your knowledge from courses you have already attended or explore new topics, this resource can be referred to throughout your degree.
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Arts and Culture Online Resources
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Thinking about adding a creative element to your research work but not sure where to begin?
Developed by the University’s Arts and Culture team, the Get Creative toolkit offers practical, step-by-step guidance for planning and delivering successful projects with creative collaborators. It combines an interactive online guide with reflective prompts, a downloadable Planning Canvas to take ideas from concept to proposal, and detailed how-to advice on running exhibitions, workshops, performances, and other activities. You’ll also find tips on engagement, communications, finance, evaluation, and commissioning creatives.
The toolkit is a flexible resource to help you explore new approaches and make your projects more engaging, innovative, and impactful. Links below:

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Other training & development opportunities
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The Inclusive Research Hub is a living resource developed by the Inclusive Research Collective in collaboration with the People Development Team at the University of Bristol. It provides an accessible introduction to key concepts and practices in inclusive research, with over 20 sections organised across six key stages of the research process. Topics include reflexivity, literature review, budgeting, pre-registration, open-source software, and inclusive communication—alongside a growing collection of case studies that exemplify these ideas in practice.
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Training & Development Resources from Vitae
Why not check out some of the numerous training and development resources available through Vitae? They focus specifically on professional development for researchers and you can register for free using your University of Exeter account. Register here and then head here for general advice on various aspects of doing a doctorate and how to access further support, and guidance at all stages of your studies.
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Use of AI Notetakers in Researcher Development Workshops: New guidance
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Any form of recording whether via Teams or external tools like Fellow and other AI notetakers is NOT permitted. If you have any accessibility needs and do require a recording of the session, please contact Researcher Development in advance and we will arrange this with the trainer.
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A quick message from Researcher Development and Research Culture Team
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We appreciate that unexpected things come up and you may no longer be able to attend, or you may realise a course you have booked onto is no longer relevant to you. Please don't forget to cancel via iTrent so that someone else can book on, as our courses have limited spaces.
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