Programme Structure
Trinity Business School offers PhDs on a fulltime basis with students enrolling in September.
Learning Goals
The PhD programme is informed by a number of key objectives:
- Education focused on careers and business performance
- A set of values – “put in more than you take out"
- The personal development and well-being of our students
- A real-business educational environment.
- Rigorous research that serves and critically evaluates business
And aim to achieve five key learning objectives: - Identifying and developing the critical knowledge, skill, and expertise required to thrive in an international research and teaching environment that is intensive, collaborative, enjoyable, and results-oriented
- Appreciating and critiquing the philosophical foundations, theories, and practices of social science research
- Identifying, critiquing, and justifying the key elements of an integrated programme of research leading to the award of a higher degree by research;
- Effectively planning, conducting, and communicating rigorous, valid, and ethical research;
- Critically examining and evaluating ongoing or completed research projects.
Academic Supervision
Each student is assigned a principal supervisor with whom they will work closely with and are expected to maintain regular contact. If it is deemed academically useful a co-supervisor may also be appointed. All principal supervisors are appointed from within Trinity Business School while co-supervisors may be appointed from other Schools throughout the University. In certain circumstances, co-supervisors may be appointed from other Universities or industry partners depending on the nature of the research being undertaken.
Each candidate is also assigned a Thesis Committee which contains a domain expert and one other person. This committee will oversee the annual confirmation and transfer process and to act as an additional resource.
Structured Elements of the PhD programme
Students take the structured elements in the first three or four semesters of their degree.
Every student takes the modules outlined below, each module accounts for 5 credits. All must be passed at a level of 60% of above within the first 4 semesters to allow the student to present their confirmation report at the end of Semester 4. Confirmation of PhD status must be undertaken by end of Year 2.
- CA7000 - Research Integrity and Impact in an Open Scholarship Era, delivered online and must be completed before confirmation.
- Core modules BU8005 - Introduction to Management Research and BU8019 - Theorising Management.
- At least one qualitative module (BU8022 – Introduction to Qualitative Method or BU8013 – Advanced Qualitative Methods) and at least one quantitative module (BU8014 – Quantitative Data 1 or BU8015 – Quantitative Data 2) – the level of the modules is agreed in advance with the supervisor.
- 2 optional modules, which may include quantitative/qualitative modules not already passed. Students can take additional “overload” modules if they desire, for which no credit but a certificate of completion will be given.
Below please see a broad outline of the modules. Full syllabi, learning objectives etc. are available on the module Blackboard page:
Introduction to Management Research BU8005: PhD expectations and the journey, supervisor management, assessment of novelty and contribution, global v local in research, impact, dissemination channels.
Publishing and Professional Practice in Management Research BU8007: types of scholarly output (journals, books etc); journal ecosystems; good paper design; effective communication of research findings; reviewing ; conferences and workshops.
Introduction to Qualitative Method BU8022: introduction to qualitative research paradigms and the choices of data collection and analysis methods in the delivery of successful business research projects. Topics include research design, sampling, interviewing, data preparation and analysis.
Advanced Qualitative Methods BU8013 phenomenology and case research; archival text analysis, observations, triangulation with multiple sources, exploring mixed methods.
Quantitative Methods 1/ Quantitative Methods 2 BU8014-BU8015: Introduction to statistical methods and reasoning in management research; measuring and the nature of data; exploratory data analysis; measuring relationships between variables; multivariate statistics; nonparametric statistics; Bayesian reasoning; effective graphical communication.
Theorizing management BU8019: Theorizing management, limits to present management theories across selected domains, testing management theories in practice.
Optional courses. Students may with permission take a module in TCD or elsewhere for credit. In addition, any more advanced quantitative or qualitative module may be taken as an optional course for credit.
Causal Inferential and Structural Equation Modelling BU8008: field experiments; discontinuity designs; directed and undirected graphs; mediation, moderation; Structured equation models; linear and nonlinear causality models.
Optional courses from the M.Sc. roster are also available, subject to space and timetable availability. Examples of these modules might include Private Equity Finance, Enterprise Risk Management, International Finance, Alternative Investments, Energy Finance & Trading, Decision and Risk Analysis, Global Procurement, Supply Chain Science, Operations Analytics, Researching HRM, HR Digitalization & Analytics, Leading Change in a Complex World.
To be confirmed on the PhD register, students must:
- Have satisfactorily completed the Core Modules in the structured PhD programme;
- Have designed and delivered a Research Seminar;
- Have completed REAMS ethics training;
- Have regularly attend the School Seminar Series;
- Have prepared and submitted a formal Confirmation Report, made a formal Confirmation Presentation, participated in a formal Confirmation Interview, and satisfactorily met any other requirements associated with the Confirmation Process.
In years 3 and 4 of the programme students are expected to participate in the intellectual life of the School, to attend and present at conferences, and to engage with the scholarly aspects of their discipline, such as reviewing papers and mentoring junior students.
Additional programme Requirements
By agreement with the Director of Doctoral Studies and the Academic Supervisor, a PhD student may be encouraged to participate in one or more additional modules to compensate for deficiencies in their knowledge deemed essential to the proposed programme of research. Such modules may be drawn from, but not limited to, the options outlined below:
- Modules offered as part of the suite of taught postgraduate programmes within Trinity Business School.
- Modules offered by Business Schools in partner institutions as part of the Dublin Region Higher Education Alliance (TCD, UCD, DCU, NUIM, TUD).
- Modules offered in the areas of research philosophy, methodology and methods offered by other Schools within the Faculty of Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences.
Enrolment in research modules offered by other Schools is subject to both the availability of places and permission to enrol.