Welcome to the Degree Doctor blog - practical, honest support for qualitative PhD students.
If you’ve ever stared at your draft thinking “Is this critical enough?”
If you’ve read ten more articles but still don’t feel ready to write.
If you’re making progress… but somehow still feel behind.
You’re not doing anything “wrong”. You’re navigating the normal (and rarely explained) realities of doctoral research.
This blog is where we unpack the actual sticking points of a qualitative PhD - literature reviews that feel endless, discussion chapters that won’t click, methodology confusion, supervisor stress, guilt, burnout, imposter syndrome - and turn them into clear, manageable next steps.
You’ll find thoughtful guidance on:
Writing and structuring your thesis with confidence
Strengthening critical analysis and contribution
Clarifying conceptual and theoretical foundations
Conducting rigorous qualitative research
Managing the psychological weight of a doctorate
You can explore by category below, or scroll to the latest posts.
The goal isn’t perfection. It’s clarity, confidence, and steady progress.
Let’s make your PhD feel intellectually solid, and psychologically sustainable.
Dissertation topics - how to narrow down your social sciences PhD title
Is your PhD topic too broad? Need to narrow it down? Keep reading!
How to Recruit Research Participants: Top tips for social science PhD students
If you need to recruit more participants for your research study, read this before you design another leaflet or post anything else on social media!
Critical analysis for qualitative PhD students - moving beyond description
Struggling with “be more critical” feedback in your qualitative PhD? This post explains the five stages of doctoral-level critical analysis - from description to positioning - and how to move your literature review beyond summary into confident scholarly argument.