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to provide the necessary income for their daily subsistence. The percentage of
students that leave their PhD studies prior to graduation also seems too high, possibly
due to a lack of funding, arising partly from too long PhD studies and partly from the
fact that research project funding periods do not match the time needed for study
completion. It is unfortunate that the amount of teaching PhD students need to do
depends on the funding source. The panel recommends that all PhD students be given
an equal, but limited, teaching obligation, possibly financed as an additional
contribution on top of the research grant (without increasing the total time of the
PhD studies significantly).
The panel is of the opinion that the level of supervision of PhD students has been
too low. In recent years, some units have been able to reduce the average PhD
completion time to four years by closely following up the scientific progress of the
students. The many different graduate schools have led to an increased awareness of
scientific supervision and the time needed to complete the PhD studies.
More attention needs to be paid to PhD training, and it should be a clearly
expressed goal that a PhD degree should be obtained in four years of study, including
a limited amount of teaching, and that the students should graduate at or before the
age of 30 (assuming that they have otherwise had a normal study progression). It is
important that the different units recognise the importance of and implement regular
supervision of PhD students. The graduate schools are an important means of
ensuring high-quality and good progression, in addition to leading to increased
national research collaboration. The graduate school system should therefore be
continued and strengthened. Research units not participating in national graduate
schools should consider establishing local graduate schools.
There is a need to increase interaction and awareness regarding the quality and
relevance of PhD training programmes. This includes systematic follow-up of PhD
graduates in terms of their employment to ensure that the graduate training
programme meets the needs of both society and academia. It is also important to
follow up PhD students who do not complete their studies in order to identify
bottlenecks in the PhD training.
PhD students should be encouraged to visit international research groups during
their PhD studies. This is particularly important for PhD students not participating in
national graduate schools, where national mobility is a central element. In general, the
panel believes that the national graduate schools should encourage both increased
international mobility and mobility between the participating research units.
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