Your progress: Formal Progression Reviews
On this page you will find information about Formal Progression Reviews, the mechanism used to help you stay on track with your research degree.
What is a Formal Progression Review?
You are admitted to a research degree on the basis of an assessment of your potential at the admissions stage. Remaining on the level of study for which you were admitted is conditional on you making satisfactory progress with respect to your research project and the other elements of your research degree. The purpose of Formal Progression Reviews, therefore, is to: ensure that you are making satisfactory progress; to give you a clear sense of the progress you are making; and to provide reassurance and/or advice and support, depending on your progress.
When are Formal Progression Reviews?
If you are full-time PGR, you will have an annual Formal Progression Review between months 9-12 of each complete year of your registration. If you are part-time, your Formal Progression Review will take place between months 9-12 of the second year of each two year period. Some Faculties/Schools may ask part-time PGRs to complete an Interim Progression Review in intermediate years, to ensure you stay on track. These are less formal and cannot lead to a decision about your continued registration as a PGR at Sussex. Please refer to your Faculty's/School's PGR handbook (or equivalent resource) for more specific information about the timings of reviews.
Exceptionally, and where there are concerns about a PGR, it is possible to convene a Formal Progression Review outside the above stated timings. This may be at the request of the PGR, their supervisor(s). or the Associate Dean (Research and Innovation) or nominee(s). The timing of any subsequent reviews (where relevant) will resume as per the above schedule.
How do I prepare for my Formal Progression Review?
Your Faculty/School will define the academic work that is required to be produced for your Formal Progression Review, and how it should be formatted. This will vary by discipline, and by your year of registration. The work required may include draft thesis chapters, a literature review, an advanced plan of research, presentation of data and findings and/or a draft paper for publication.
In addition to your academic work your supervisor will submit a report summarising your progress to date against the criteria for the relevant stage of progression (see below).
What happens during the Formal Progression Review meeting?
You will be required to attend a Formal Progression Review meeting. This meeting will be with at least one senior academic member of the same or a cognate department, who has experience of successful PGR supervision in the broad disciplinary area within which you are based (the ‘Assessor’). Your Assessor(s) will be independent of your supervisory team.
The Assessor(s) primary role is to determine, on the basis of the evidence you've submitted and the report from your main supervisor, whether you have met the University criteria for progression relevant to your stage of registration (see below).
During your Review meeting, you will discuss your academic progress with your Assessor(s). Depending on the specific requirements of your Faculty/School, you may be asked to give a presentation, or you may be asked to undertake a 'mini viva' (an academic defence of the subject matter of your thesis). For more information about what to expect during your Review meeting, refer to your Faculty's/School's PGR handbook (or equivalent resource).
How is my progress assessed?
In coming to a recommendation, your Assessor(s) will refer to both your written submission and your performance during your the Formal Progression Review meeting, and consider these against the relevant institutional progression criteria:
- Progression into Year 2 (or part-time equivalent)
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For progression into year 2 of a full-time research degree (or equivalent stage for a part-time PGR), you must demonstrate that you:
- can articulate the direction their research is taking and the research questions it addresses;
- have planned in a realistic fashion the second year (or part-time equivalent) of their research, indicating any risks and how these will be mitigated;
- have sufficient acquaintance with the relevant field of knowledge to place their research into context;
- have sufficient proficiency in the relevant research methods, techniques and theoretical approaches to move their research to the next stage;
- have undertaken all training required to date;
- have considered ethical issues (including data management and authorship) where applicable and have in place an appropriate data management plan.
- Progression into Year 3 (or part-time equivalent)
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For progression into year 3 of a full-time research degree (or equivalent stage for a part-time PGR), you must demonstrate that you:
- can articulate the direction their research is taking and the research questions it addresses and how this will lead to a substantial original contribution to knowledge or understanding;
- have planned in a realistic fashion the third year (or part-time equivalent) of their research, based on the expectation that the project will be completed and the thesis submitted within the maximum period of registration, indicating any risks and how these will be mitigated;
- have the ability to write up their research in an appropriate academic format for it to be critically assessed by peer reviewers and examiners;
- have begun to acquire the wider background knowledge of their research field required for the degree of PhD;
- can apply the relevant research methods, techniques and theoretical approaches required to make an original contribution to knowledge;
- have undertaken all training required to date;
- have considered ethical issues (including data management and authorship) where applicable and have in place an appropriate data management plan.
- Progression into Year 4 (or part-time equivalent) - PhDs, only
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For progression into year 4 of a full-time research degree (or equivalent stage for a part-time PGR), you must demonstrate that you:
- have planned in a realistic fashion the final year (or equivalent) of their research, based on the expectation that the project will be completed and the thesis submitted on time, indicating any risks and how these will be mitigated;
- have started to write up their research (or able to demonstrate that they have started to plan to write up their research) in an appropriate academic format for it to be critically assessed by peer reviewers and examiners;
- have acquired much of the wider background knowledge of their research field required for the degree of PhD;
- can apply the relevant research methods, techniques and theoretical approaches required to make an original contribution to knowledge or understanding;
- have undertaken all required training to date;
- have considered ethical issues (including data management and authorship) where applicable and have in place an appropriate data management plan.
Please note:
- All PGRs commencing their registration on or after 01 August 2025 are required to complete mandatory training in Research Ethics and Integrity and in Research Data Management. These online modules, which can be found on Canvas (see and ), must be completed by the time you submit your Research Plan (see the webpage on Getting started on your research degree) and completion forms a condition of progression into Year 2 (or part-time equivalent).
What are the possible outcomes from a Formal Progression Review?
Following a first attempt at a Formal Progression Review, one of the following recommendations will be made to the Associate Dean (Research and Innovation), or nominee(s):
- that you have satisfied the criteria for the relevant stage of registration and you may progress on to the next stage*;
- that you have not yet satisfied the criteria for the relevant stage of registration and that you should be given a second opportunity to meet the criteria within three months of the date of the formal notification of the outcome.
*If you are registered on an MPhil and are making satisfactory progress, it may be recommended that you progress on to the next stage at the PhD level (‘upgraded’).
Unsatisfactory progress
If after your first attempt you are given a second attempt to meet the critiera, you will be provided with appropriate written feedback in order to address the elements of your progress considered unsatisfactory. You will be asked to attend a second Formal Progression Review meeting within three months of receiving the formal notification of the outcome of your first attempt from Student Data and Records.
Following a second attempt at a Formal Progression Review, one of the following recommendations will be made to the Associate Dean (Research and Innovation), or nominee(s):
- that you have satisfied the criteria for the relevant stage of registration and you may progress on to the next stage*;
- that you have not satisfied the criteria for the relevant stage of registration and that you should either be:
- Transferred to an MPhil (applies only to those registered on a PhD); or
- That you be withdrawn from your research degree.
*If you are registered on an MPhil and are making satisfactory progress, it may be recommended that you progress on to the next stage at the PhD level (‘upgraded’).
Can I appeal the outcome of my Formal Progression Review?
If you are transferred to an MPhil or withdrawn from your research degree, or your request to be transferred from MPhil to PhD is refused, and you consider that the decision was based on inadequate evidence or taken in an improper manner, you have the right to appeal against that decision. Your right to appeal, and the timeframe for doing so, will be set out in the letter formally notifying you of the outcome of your Review. You can also refer to the Appeals process on the Student Hub pages.