What next? 1-day careers workshop for LBAS/ID PGRs

Attendance: 20 / 25

This is a one-day online event of expert panels comprising representatives/experts from a variety of different careers paths (including LBAS/ID Alumni from University of Glasgow…

Working across disciplines in an interdisciplinary PhD

Online via Zoom
Attendance: 26 / 30

This workshop equips postgraduate students with the knowledge required to navigate the challenges of interdisciplinary research. Delivered in two parts, the discussion offers a comprehensive look at interdisciplinary approaches, from early-stage considerations such as methodologies and supervision, to writing, dissemination, and career advice.

Research Design – *Online Only Session* – full day course

Online
Attendance: 24 / 30

Research design is a core component of every good research paper, irrespective of is theoretical approach or type of empirical evidence (quantitative or qualitative) to be collected and analysed. Its importance derives from its features: provides a structure to the analysis, makes data collection systematic, guides readers through the logic of the research enterprise, and increases the reliability and transparency of the research endeavour.

A Primer in Systematic Reviews and Meta-regression

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 5 / 20

Traditionally researchers' literature reviews aspired to summarising the knowledge concerning a research topic. The sheer amount of studies makes this a unrealistic ideal. This brief session is meant to give a very quick overview of what systematic reviews and meta-regressions are and what they can do for social scientists.

What would an Inclusive New Normal look like in Academic Culture?

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 16 / 60

If inclusion came as a flat pack what would the instructions look like? There were many challenges to working online through covid, but this did also enable new forms of collaboration and allowed more flexible and accessible engagement for those with caring responsibilities, remotely located or coping with immune compromisation and other disabilities. For some online working provided more equitable experiences than they had previously encountered. As working habits again change, how can we keep the best of digital affordances and overcome the challenges that working in hybrid spaces may entail?

Teaching Quantitative Methods for the First Time

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh

This workshop will discuss the challenges and strategies for those preparing to teach quantitative methods courses for the first time. The workshop will cover aspects such as book selection, to what level to pitch a course at, to how to handle classes/students that do not engage in lectures. There will be opportunities to work in groups to discuss teaching approaches and chances to ask questions that you have regarding teaching practices. 

Publishing from your PhD? Insights into publishing in accounting, business & management

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 10 / 20

Publishing is our currency in academia and there is a long and steep learning curve to it, because it is not about what we know, nor about how good researchers we are, it is about how we report what we have come to know and also about who we are reporting it to. In this session, we will explore publication strategies, from persuasion strategies to applied formulas, and from co-authoring to reviewing and dealing with reviews.

Introduction to Systematic Reviews – full day course

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 22 / 25

This two-session workshop will provide participants with the knowledge and a range of practical tools required for conducting a systematic review. A range of approaches to evidence synthesis and systematic reviews will be considered. The workshop will consist of lectures and opportunities for participants to discuss and develop their own reviews through interactive group work and discussions. 

Doing Ethnographic Fieldwork

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 20 / 20

This session will largely focus on in-person ethnographic research both within your own country or a country other than that within which you live.

Doing Online Collaborative Autoethnography During the Pandemic to Research Academic Precarity

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 7 / 20

This will be an interactive workshop that will explore the benefits of using an online collaborative autoethnographic approach to reflect on personal and shared experiences. Chang, Heewon et al (2012: 17) describe collaborative autoethnography as a ‘qualitative research method that is simultaneously collaborative, autobiographical and ethnographic’. In this workshop we will look at the practicalities of using such an approach online.

Social AI and Decision Making

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 8 / 60

Three talks will be delivered by Dr. Chollet, Dr. Lages and Dr. Guha on the topics of AI and decision making for human behaviour and analysis and synthesis. 

NVivo for Qualitative Data Analysis

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 25 / 25

In this workshop we will look at how to make the best use of NVivo in your qualitative data analysis. We will consider which NVivo tools will be most useful for your PhD study and you will see how to set up an NVivo project. We will also cover how to code your data and where to find help when using NVivo. 

Truth Claiming: avoiding ‘atrocity stories’ and ‘poverty safaris’: a facilitated discussion of how we orientate ourselves toward qualitative data using two case studies

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 5 / 30

The purpose of this workshop is to understand different ways for researchers to orientate themselves toward qualitative data and, in particular, to consider different ways of being 'truthful' to those data. The facilitators will use two extended examples from their own work (an interview study of women's experiences of GP encounters following domestic abuse and a comparative ethnography of men's experiences of the social determinants of health).

Media Interview Skills

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 5 / 16

This session will give participants an insight into who, what, why, where, when and even how journalists and producers gather interviews with academics.

Planning Your Future – Insights from your Strengths and Values

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 21 / 30

This workshop will give you the confidence and agency to move forward with your career planning, helping you identify personal skills and strengths, success drivers and values, and what this means for your future post PhD.

Sampling for Quantitative Research

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 6 / 30

Participants will understand the methodological underpinnings of sampling in quantitative social sciences research. They will learn to select appropriate sampling procedures, evaluate and critique sampling plans.

Comparative Case Studies as Research Design

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 20 / 60

This session will reflect on the use of comparative case studies as a research design. It is aimed at students who are undertaking - or plan to undertake - a comparative case research design. It is not primarily aimed at disciplines that have well-developed methodological positions on this approach (e.g. comparative political economy) although researchers from those disciplines are welcome to join us.

Ethnography Archives and Politics of History

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 6 / 50

The workshop consists of a lecture/seminar and practical research activities where attendees will learn about anthropological approaches to questions of time, history, and their material culture, including archival documents, images, monuments, and commemorative art. Through a series of comparative empirical examples, the workshop will discuss experiences of time as knots rather than lines and explore challenges of interpreting history on the basis of partial records and silenced stories such as stories of slavery and political dissent.

Introduction to Multilevel Modelling – full day course

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 14 / 30

Multilevel modelling is an umbrella term for a wide range of statistical models appropriate for clustered data. Multilevel modelling can be thought of as an extension of the classical Multiple Regression Models that allows the researcher to assess the variation in an outcome of interest at different levels of a predefined hierarchy structure and simultaneously analyse the characteristics associated with that variation.

Doing New Materialist Research

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 8 / 30

This workshop aims to introduce and explain what can be described as new materialist approaches to research. It aims to offer first an introduction to new materialist ontology and second an explanation of how this might be translated into a research methodology in the social sciences.

Diary Methods in the Social Sciences

Queen Margaret University Queen Margaret University Way, Musselburgh
Attendance: 17 / 25

It has long been recognised that diary methods are excellent for capturing people’s daily lived experiences (Bartlett and Milligan, 2020). Diary methods are particularly good at bypassing researcher/researched power relations as the power to document and what to document lies with the participant and not with the researcher.