Researcher-Led Mental Health and Wellbeing Initiatives
Informed by focus groups held with Sussex postgraduate researchers (PGRs) in May 2018 as part of the Understanding the mental health of PGRs project, we are pleased to announce the launch of our Researcher-Led Mental Health and Wellbeing Initiatives funding scheme. The scheme is open to all PGRs currently registered for a research degree at the ÈÕº«ÎÞÂë.
Researchers are invited to submit proposals for initiatives/interventions designed to benefit the mental health and wellbeing of Sussex PGRs, aligned to one or more of five themes. There are also opportunities to get involved without submitting your own proposal, by suggesting an idea for an initiative, or expressing your interest in helping other researchers to deliver a proposal. For individuals submitting a full proposal, a maximum of £750 is available per project.
Please see our Researcher-Led Initiatives webpages for details on when the next round of applications will open
So far, we are delighted to be funding initiatves involving wellbeing workshops as well as in person and online peer suport for different groups of PGRs at Sussex. We also welcome innovative initiatives which may be delivered using other formats - the funding can be used in various ways.
Read an example of an initiative led by former PGR Sophie Valeix (IDS) here.
Ways to get involved
1. Submit a full proposal for your own mental health and wellbeing initiative.
PGRs who would like to make a proposal for organising their own mental health and wellbeing initiative are asked to read the Researcher-Led Mental Health and Wellbeing Initiatives application guidance and to complete our .
2. Suggest an idea for a mental health and wellbeing initiative (which you do not wish to be involved in organising).
If you have an idea for a mental health and wellbeing initiative for PGRs but do not wish to organise this yourself, please complete our short .
3. Submit your interest in being involved in organising any mental health and wellbeing initiative.
If you don’t have an idea for a mental health and wellbeing initiative but are interested in getting involved in organising an initiative proposed by other PGRs, please complete our short .
Guidance for submitting a full proposal for your own mental health and wellbeing initiative
- Guidance for applications
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Applications are invited from Sussex PGRs for funding to support initiatives and interventions in relation to PGR mental health and wellbeing. The funding scheme is one of several outcomes relating to Understanding the Mental Health of PGRs project.
You may seek funding for any activity that promotes awareness of, supports or improves PGR mental health and wellbeing, which aligns with one or more of the five broad themes detailed below. These themes reflect the suggestions for interventions made by Sussex PGRs attending focus groups.
The activity may be designed initially for the departmental or School level, or for a broader range of researchers across Schools. It will be essential for applications for smaller scale (departmental or School level) initiatives to describe how their proposal could potentially be scaled up to benefit larger groups of researchers.
Funding will not be granted retrospectively to cover initiatives which have already started.
Applicants are encouraged to consider how they will evaluate their activity.
You can read an example of an initiative led by former PGR Sophie Valeix (IDS) here.
Theme 1: Creating and maintaining community belonging
“And then you’re not isolated, you know someone who knows what you’re going through”
PGRs emphasised the importance of community in terms of obtaining and providing support and experiencing a sense of belonging and mattering. Community could include immediate (for example lab or School) and broader university-level communities. PGRs suggested that initiatives to create community can often have mainly temporary effects. Some groups were thought to be potentially more vulnerable to isolation (for example, part-time researchers, researchers with extensive fieldwork or without dedicated offices and working spaces, parents and carers, and international students) but all PGRs identified a risk of feeling isolated and a desire for an increased sense of community belonging.
Theme 2: Cultivating time to breathe
"Actually take a breather and have it as a routine", "having a kind of rhythm to your work day that everybody is participating in"
PGRs wanted initiatives that would help them cultivate and maintain wellbeing within the working day, emphasising the need to prioritise regularly 'taking a breather' but also the struggle to find the time and motivation to do so. Examples of 'take-a-breather' activities included creative, sport and physical activities, being in nature, walking and running around campus and surrounding parkland, and interacting with others. PGRs also mentioned the value of perceiving a sense of having a shared rhythm to the work day with other PGRs - something that engaging in collective 'take-a-breather' activities provide.
Theme 3: Celebrating self and successes
"There needs to be a focus on that, enjoying the process", "you can kind of trick yourself into thinking that it was really all down to chance, any person could have done it"
PGRs talked about finding it challenging to recognise, own and celebrate their own successes - sometimes feeling that researchers have a tendency to undermine, ignore or write-off their successes as chance. There was an interest in developing an increased sense of self-confidence and self-efficacy and helping other PGRs to do the same. PGRs also spoke of the desire to have increased positive conversations with colleagues more generally; sharing hopefulness, optimism and positive aspects of the postgraduate research process and academia more broadly.
Theme 4: Constructing "other groups, other routes, other ways to be free"
PGRs emphasised the power of 'outside' interests to create a feeling of 'headspace', giving a sense of separation from the PhD and of a healthy work-life balance. Researchers also emphasised the potential to feel constrained - mentally and physically-during the PhD process and their interest in finding ways to experience an increased sense of freedom. 'Other groups, other routes, other ways to be free' included, therefore, finding activities and groups which were either actually separate to the university or provided a sense of separation from the postgraduate research and process.
Theme 5: Curating experiences of research process - seminars and events "with more of a focus on the people rather than the publications" and that “allow people to express how their time is going, structured in a more focused way to build healthy working practices”
PGRss emphasised a desire to share their own and learn about others' experiences of the research process - contrasting this to resources and training packages which may focus on more specific research skills, software, or techniques. The desire to share and learn included wanting to engage in discussing shared experiences of the PhD process with other PGRs including sharing experiences around managing the PhD and personal lives. Researchers also emphasised an interest in hearing PhD completers and researchers that are more senior talk about their experiences of the research process - including the journey, struggles, successes, and tips and tricks for managing the experience.
- Budget
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The maximum total amount available to any single project is £750.
A clear budget is required in your application and successful applicants are expected to provide a final statement of expenditure after the initiative. The deadline for the final statement of expenditure is 6 weeks after your initiative has taken place. Any unspent funds should be returned to the Sussex Researcher School (SRS).
Please note that funds cannot be used to cover the applicant’s time or for travel, course or conference attendance, or staffing costs, and research projects are beyond the scope of this funding stream.
Projects are expected to deliver value for money, and funds can only be used for items that are required for the initiative.
Award recipients should make themselves familiar with the University's purchasing policy.
If your application is successful, you will be required to identify a School/department budget code to which the funds will be transferred.
- Selection Process
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In addition to overall quality, the panel will judge applications against the following criteria:
- Alignment of the proposed initiative or intervention with themes proposed by focus group participants
- Potential for the proposed initiative/intervention to promote awareness of, support or improve PGR mental health
- Detailed and appropriate budget
- Scalability of the proposed initiative/intervention
- Strong evaluation plans to measure the success of the proposed initiative/intervention
The panel reserves the right to offer partial funding for applications and may seek expert advice on any aspect of the application. Applicants may be asked for further information, or to amend their application.
In the event that there are multiple applications proposing very similar initiatives, you may be invited to work with other PGRs to deliver the proposed initiative collaboratively. This will ensure that the funds available are able to support a diverse range of projects.
We aim to inform you of the decision within three weeks of receiving your application.