Getting Started

The Department is located in the Kilburn Building, and the IT building behind it (accessed via the internal first floor walkway). Due to the interdisciplinary nature of computer science, several of our staff are located elsewhere, most notably at the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology (MIB). MIB is building number 16 on the University Interactive Map 15. Plans of the building are included at the end of this document.

People and Places

The Faculty Doctoral Academy Support:

The Doctoral Academy is located at FSE Doctoral Academy, Fourth Floor, Core 4, Engineering Building A,. Just search ‘Doctoral Academy’ in the building map to see the exact location. You can drop in and speak to a member of staff at any time during the opening hours, from Monday to Friday, between 10am and 4pm. Or email: Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1. They provide administrative support for all students, from registration to graduation. They will be very helpful during your time here and you can speak to the team about a wide range of queries, including:

  1. PGR policy advice and guidance (Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1)

  2. CDTs, PGRTAs, Dual and Joint Awards (Faculty Doctoral Academy Funding 2)

  3. Studentship funding and consumables (Faculty Doctoral Academy Funding 2)

  4. Progression and assessment (including eProg support) (Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1)

  5. Change of circumstances (including interruptions and withdrawals) (Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1)

  6. Placements and fieldwork (Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1)

  7. Coordination and delivery of PGR events (Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1)

  8. Thesis examination (Faculty Doctoral Academy Examinations 3)

  9. Appeals, complaints and discipline procedures (Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1)

They can also advise on, or sign-post you (Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1) if you have questions about:

  1. Disability Advice Support Service (DASS) and counselling

  2. Access to facilities

  3. IT/Blackboard

  4. Booking travel

  5. Claiming expenses

  6. Mandatory training

  7. Researcher learning and development

  8. Visa support

  9. Graduation

Supervisors:

You have already been assigned a main supervisor, who is responsible for your research and training. There will usually be one or more co-supervisors; their role in the research should be clarified at an early stage. PGRs should have regular contact with their supervisor(s), typically in the form of weekly meetings, although different supervisors may have different approaches. Important point: The relationship between the PGR and supervisor is crucial to the success of the doctorate. If anything goes wrong with that, you should get help to get it resolved.

Cohorts:

When you arrive you’ll be assigned a cohort. You’ll keep this cohort for your entire time here in Manchester. And have regular meetings with your Cohort Advisor. The cohort is there to provide peer support to each other, to maintain a group dynamic as you progress in your work, to get help and advice on technical aspects which you may not be familiar with but others in your cohort are, and for your pastoral care.

Advisor:

Each PGR (and cohort) will be assigned an advisor. The advisor is not an expert on your research. Their role is largely to be an independent person to turn to when you are having difficulties you don’t want to discuss with your supervisor. They can also provide general advice.

Mentors:

We have a team of peer mentors. They are PGRs like you that, having progressed beyond the first year, volunteer to be available to you in order to share with you their experience of what it felt like to be through the stages you will be going through. They are there as another point of help for you. They will promote social activities and, most important of all, only they can give you a feel for how it feels like, as a PGR, to be going through the several stages in your work. The Mentors also have a PGR Discord Server 17 you can join.

The University Of Manchester Library:

The University of Manchester Library, a designated National Research Library, offers a range of services that directly underpin research at Manchester. This includes the provision of research support facilities across campus, access to an unparalleled range of electronic resources including over 40,000 e-journals and a comprehensive range of research datasets. You will need your student card to access all library sites around campus, and your central university username and password to access the electronic resources. The Library’s Get Started guide provides helpful videos on how to use the Library plus information on how to navigate and find support: Get Started

ResLife:

The University recruits for the role of Reslife Advisors in its various halls of residence. To apply, one must be either a postgraduate student, a staff member or an undergraduate student who has completed 3 years of full time undergraduate study of the same degree program at the same institution. As a Reslife advisor, you would be responsible for being the first point of contact for students in the halls. This would include providing support to students experiencing difficulties and proactively helping in building the hall community. Benefits include gaining a wide range of skills in communication, conflict resolution and safeguarding in addition to single occupancy accommodation in halls at no charge. More information.

Accounts & Passes

Identity Cards:

Everyone will be issued with a photographic University identity card (swipe card). You should have this card on you at all times whilst on University premises. It is used to access various restricted areas, as well as acting as your library entry/borrowing card for the central university library. On the back of this card is the number for campus security.

Extended hours passes:

Entry to the Kilburn Building outside of normal hours (before 08.00 and after 18.00 Monday to Friday, plus all day at weekends and bank holidays) requires an extended hours pass which can be obtained from the Student Support Office. You will need to bring your University ID card and a printout of the confirmation email indicating that you have passed the on-line Extended Hours Health and Safety test required by the Department, a University one, and a Department one.

To take the Health and Safety course, go to myManchester 7 and log in using your University credentials. Find Blackboard and log into that. Click on the “Health and Safety Course and Extended-Hours Pass Information” folder. Complete the test called “Part 1: University of Manchester Health & Safety” and the test called “Part 2: Health & Safety within the Department of Computer Science”. WHEN YOU HAVE PASSED BOTH TESTS and have confirmed that you have completed them, the “Extended Hours Access” folder will appear. Click on the “Extended Hours Access” folder, read through the guidance document, and complete the “Extended-Hours-Pass Test”: you need to score 100% to successfully complete it. When you have scored 100% on the Extended-Hours Pass Test, a link called “Extended-Hours Completion Confirmation” will appear. Click on this “Extended-Hours Completion Confirmation” link, and a confirmation screen will appear. Email confirmation screen (either print it out, or show it on an electronic device) to Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1 who will issue an Extended-Hours Pass for the Kilburn Building. You will then receive a confirmation email which shows the times during which you are allowed extended-hours access to the Kilburn Building. Passes can ONLY be issued from SSO between 10.00am and 4.00pm Monday – Friday. Extended-Hours access is only available with a valid University of Manchester ID card during the times listed in the confirmation email which you receive when your Pass has been issued. Read the document and then take the test. You can take the test as many times as you need to, until you get all questions correct.

Computer Accounts:

You will need to set up a University account. A central username and password allows you to access various university-wide systems, as well as giving you access (via the Central Authentication System (CAS)) to online journal content to which the University Library has a subscription. It also serves as your username and password for your teaching domain account. You can sign-up for your account by visiting: Computer Accounts 8 . You will need your personal details and University ID number (the number on your swipe card) to sign-up.

Warning

There is a delay of one working day before you can use your ID card for swipe access to the Kilburn Building outside normal hours; however, during this period you can still gain extended-hours access by showing your ID card to a staff member on duty at the Kilburn Building side entrance.

Communications

Email:

You will have a a University email account usually of the form: <user>@postgrad.manchester.ac.uk - detailed instructions on how to send and receive emails, both locally and remotely, for both Linux based and windows based systems, are to be found on the Wiki at the StudentFAQ/IT pages mentioned above, as well as this University site: PGR email 9. *Read your email frequently!* There may be important messages from the staff or from the Department or University. There may even be offers of free pizza. If you use other (external) email accounts (e.g. gmail or hotmail), you may wish to set up a forwarding to automatically forward mail from your Department mail account to your external account. If your Department account becomes over quota, then mail will not be received and you may miss important messages. Always ensure that you clean up your account regularly, deleting large files and junk (especially in your email box and web browser caches). Or periodically archive your mailbox.

Internal Telephone System:

External phone numbers for the University are usually of the form 0161-275****. From an internal phone, you just have to dial the extension number, which is 5 followed by the last four digits of the external phone number. Some internal phones also allow you to make external calls, you dial 9 to get an external line, followed by the usual external phone number.

Emergency Phone Numbers:

In the event of any emergency, medical or otherwise, please contact the emergency services by calling 9999 internal or 999 external line. The University Security Office must also be informed once the emergency services have been alerted by calling 69966 internal or 0161 306 9966 external line. This number is on the back of your University Identity Card.

Resources & Facilities

Programme Handbook (this document) CS PGR Handbook 6:

This describes what is expected of you as a PGR in the Department of Computer Science, and should also serve as a useful reference. You are expected to consult it. Further information can be found on the Department of Computer Science PGR web-site CS PGR information 5. This handbook also contains some other information that is hopefully useful to doctoral candidates especially when they are new to the University of Manchester.

Important Dates:

Induction Week (Week 0) A number of induction events and social events run during this week. Do take part! You will have opportunities to learn what is expected of you, as meet and make friends with staff and other PGRs, and familiarise yourself with the layout of the Department and of the University. Within Computer Science, undergraduate and MSc teaching occurs in 12-week semesters, although MSc teaching occurs in 6-week blocks which divide the semesters. You will have the opportunity to get involved in many activities of the Department including UG or PGT laboratory teaching by becoming a Teaching Assistant. More at Important Dates 10.

IT Services:

IT Services look after much of the technology that powers The University of Manchester, and the support services which come with it. We have all the services you’d expect, such as campus-wide Wi-Fi, email, printing, file storage, walk-up support desks and online learning, and there are also other services you may not expect, such as our 24/7 telephone support line, halls-based support, and our lecture podcast service which automatically records most lectures to help students replay, revisit and revise. More information can be found at: IT Instruction leaflets 16.

Computing Facilities:

Each PGR will be given a desk and a computer in the PGR Home and then in the appropriate research group lab. Most machines in PGR Home are set up to run Linux and MS Windows. Depending on the conventions of your research group, you may need to be familiar with either. There is an introductory Linux lab for those who need to familiarise themselves with our local setup during welcome week. Machines provided via IT Services will typically come configured by IT Services to meet general security and other policies (for example, whole disk encryption). Any machines not configured by IT Services must meet similar standards for security. Non-Mac hardware may be configured with Windows or Linux or, occasionally, as dual boot Windows and Linux. Note that it is not wise to request dual unless it is strictly necessary as it significantly increases configuration complex and may result in a delay in delivery. In particular, do not request dual boot “just in case.” If routine access to both OSs is required, the recommended approach is to request Windows and use a virtual image for Linux.

The University Of Manchester Library:

The University of Manchester Library operates across a number of sites. The Main Library offers group study rooms, individual study spaces and computer clusters. WiFi is available throughout the building. The Alan Gilbert Learning Commons provides a state of the art learning environment, offering flexible open learning spaces, multimedia facilities, computer clusters and bookable group study rooms as well as running a wide range of study skills workshops throughout the academic year. In addition to the main sites, there are a number of specialist libraries located throughout the campus. For further information, see: Library locations and opening hours and Library study spaces

Computer Science Information Systems (CSIS):

The University has an IT services section. The group who work within our Department are called CSIS. They are very helpful. However, if there is some fault with your equipment or with your CS account, you should “raise a ticket” with the IT service desk. Follow the link on the IT Services 11 page. Other useful places to get information are are on the CS Student Intranet 12.

Intranet:

There is a Department Intranet which is divided in sections for students (CS Student Intranet 12) and for staff (CS Staff Intranet 13).

eProg:

The University has developed an online system for post-graduate researchers which is called eProg. This enables PGRs to plan and track their progression, and provides online listing of various skills training courses. You will need to use eProg as part of your assessment.

Student Societies:

The University of Manchester Students’ Union (UMSU 14) is an organisation, independent of the University, to which all students automatically belong. As well as the facilities within the Student Union building itself, UMSU also supports an enormous range of student societies, where you can meet students with similar interests.

International Students & English Language Courses:

If English is not your first language, you may need to further develop your skills throughout the course of the programme. Further English language courses are available during the course of the PhD programme, to enable students to fulfil their full potential as they progress with their study and research. Further information about these courses will be provided at registration. International students may also find it useful to participate in activities arranged by the International Society which has more than 6000 members representing more than 120 nationalities. The university’s International Advice Team offers help and advice to international students on a wide range of issues.

Welbeing

PhD study is a very difficult, stressful and often lonely endeavour in many ways by necessity, because if successful, at the end of your work you will be the world expert on your particular research topic. Because of these characteristics our work may sometimes cause us to be stressed, anxious, depressed or generally unhappy. The first thing you should realise is that you are not alone, these feelings are not just experienced by you, many people have these feelings and experience these situations (at some point in our careers - probably all of us). As a Department (and wider University) we realise that many people are confronting loneliness, pressure and are questioning their ability to complete their PhD. Join up to the PGR Discord Server 17 to hang-out with others who are doing a PhD. And get further help as a New PGR from our starting resources

Help and Advice

Starting a new course - and settling in - can be daunting for anyone. In many cases, PGRs will have moved from a familiar university and course, where they were seen as an experienced and knowledgeable PGRs, someone who others came to for advice. Compared to this, being a new PGR, at an unfamiliar university, in what may also be an unfamiliar city or country, can be a big change that isn’t always that easy to deal with. If you do experience difficulties, remember that even if all the other PGRs in your cohort seem to be having a wonderful time, with no problems at all with the course or anything else, things aren’t always exactly as they may seem, and many other people may be having similar problems to yourself!

It is important that if you are experiencing any difficulties, whether they be academic, personal, or university related, that you seek advice at the earliest opportunity. Any matter whatever that affects your work and progress can and should be brought to the attention of the Oliver Rhodes (HoPGR) 4 or other suitable member of staff, or to the Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1 Office. We are all here to help you succeed.

In general, if your difficulties involve carrying out your research you need to make this clear to your supervisors, who are here to help you and train you on how to be a researcher. Other members of your research group can also be very helpful. Issues concerning resources required to do your research also must be resolved with your supervisors, who are authorised to decide what resources are appropriate.

If you are having difficulties communicating with your supervisors, or are having other problems with your relationship with your supervisors, you should discuss this with your advisor, or Oliver Rhodes (HoPGR) 4. The mentors may also be able to offer advice. Any information will be treated as strictly confidential if you request it.

If you need help with an administrative issue, such as registration, payment of funds, or form filling, Faculty Doctoral Academy Support 1 should be your first port of call.

Members of university staff (whether administrative or academic) have a wealth of experience in dealing with the issues that effect you, and if they can’t help you themselves, can often assist you in finding the help you need. Academic staff will be able to advise on management of work, and in many cases, any problems or disruptions you may have had can be taken into account when it comes to assessment of your work and progress.

The Faculty of Science and Engineering also supports your study and runs short courses, events, provides advice, and links to the Faculty and University policies relevant to PGRs.