Welcome to the Degree Doctor blog - structured, practical guidance for qualitative PhD researchers.
If you’ve ever looked at your work and thought, “This isn’t quite coming together…”
If you’ve done the reading, but still feel unsure how to translate it into clear, confident writing.
If you’re making progress, but not in a way that feels coherent or fully convincing.
You’re not lacking ability - you’re working within a process that is rarely made visible.
This blog focuses on the points where qualitative PhDs most often slow down - literature reviews that lose shape, discussion chapters that feel difficult to articulate, methodology decisions that are hard to justify, and the ongoing pressure of working at doctoral level without clear structure.
Each blogpost is designed to help you think more clearly, work more deliberately, and move your research forward with greater confidence.
You’ll find guidance on:
Structuring and writing your thesis with clarity
Developing stronger critical analysis and contribution
Refining your conceptual and theoretical foundations
Making sense of qualitative methodology and interpretation
Managing the intellectual and psychological demands of doctoral research
You can explore by category below, or start with the latest posts.
The aim is not to do more - it is to work with greater clarity, stronger reasoning, and a more structured approach - so your PhD becomes something you can explain, defend, and complete with confidence.
Critical analysis in a qualitative PhD: how to develop doctoral-level critique across your thesis
Struggling with feedback that your PhD “needs to be more critical”? This guide explains what doctoral-level critical analysis actually means and how to apply it across your entire qualitative thesis.
Conceptual vs theoretical frameworks in a qualitative PhD: when you need each one (and where they belong)
Conceptual and theoretical frameworks are often treated as interchangeable in PhD advice - but they do different jobs. This guide explains the difference, when you need each one in a qualitative PhD, and how they show up across your thesis without creating unnecessary confusion.
When to stop reading for your thematic literature review (and start writing)
If you’re writing a thematic or narrative literature review, endless reading can feel productive - but it often delays real progress. This post explains how to recognise when you’ve read enough and how to shift into structured, critical synthesis.
How to structure your thematic PhD literature review in three clear steps
If your PhD literature review feels overwhelming, it’s usually not a motivation problem - it’s a structure problem. This post explains how to organise a thematic or narrative literature review in three clear steps that move you from summary to synthesis.
How to structure your qualitative PhD discussion chapter in three clear steps
The qualitative PhD discussion chapter is where you move from reporting findings to articulating contribution. This guide explains a clear three-step structure that keeps your chapter focused, analytical, and convincingly positioned.