To enroll in doctoral studies in Midwifery at the Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery, students must have completed an MS in Midwifery or another qualification deemed equivalent by the research-based study committee.
Alongside work on the doctoral thesis, doctoral students shall take studies in accordance with their study and research plans.
A final project for a doctoral degree may either be in the form of a comprehensive thesis or a collection of scientific articles that have been published or submitted for publication in international peer-reviewed journals. In the case of a collection of articles, a detailed summary of the work must be included, as well as an overview of knowledge in the relevant field.
Doctoral theses must comply with requirements concerning academic methodology and comprise an independent contribution to the creation of knowledge in the field.
- CV
- Research project
- Reference 1, Name and email
- Reference 2, Name and email
- Supervisor/supervising teacher at the University of Iceland
- Certified copies of diplomas and transcripts
- Proof of English proficiency
Further information on supporting documents can be found here.
Note! The research proposal listed above may not apply to all applicants. Please use the relevant form for your application and follow the instructions closely.
Applicants must find a supervisor with an interesting project and well-defined research questions.
Before considering doctoral studies, applicants must have realised their field of interest.
When applying they must have an agreement with a supervisor, who is employed at the School of Health Sciences.
Applicants often find a research project after discussing it with teachers, scientists or experts at the University of Iceland or other institutions. If the project is led by an expert outside of UI, a tutor within the University is appointed.
Master's study research projects sometimes also extend into doctoral projects. When scientists receive grants for specific research projects they often advertise for doctoral students' participation.
To apply for PhD studies at the School of Health Sciences applicants must submit an electronic application form through the Application portal. Please contact the relevant Faculty Office if the application form is not accessible.
- The PhD applicant and the supervisor send the application with or without a detailed research proposal to the relevant faculty office, along with supporting documents.
- The faculty standing committee assesses whether the faculty can provide sufficient knowledge and facilities and whether the budget has been set and then reports to the faculty office.
- If an application with a detailed research proposal meets all the requirements, including the faculty´s admission requirements, and is correctly filled in, it is forwarded to the School of Health Sciences Doctoral Studies Committee (DSC). If an application without a detailed research proposal meets all the requirements, the faculty notifies the DSC that the application has been approved and the student is enrolled in doctoral studies. The student must then submit the research proposal (use “Application form with a detailed description of the research project”) within 6 months of enrolment which is then processed in the same way as an application with a detailed research proposal. Note: Applications to the Faculty of Medicine are only subject to the approval of the faculty’s standing committee.
- At the next DSC meeting, possible reviewers are discussed. After a reviewer has been nominated, the review usually takes 2-4 weeks.
- If the application is approved, the applicant is invited for an interview along with the prospective supervisor(s). In some cases, the applicant is given the opportunity to reply to the comments before the interview. If the reviewer makes significant comments on the research proposal the applicant has four weeks to turn in a revised proposal.
- During the interview, the applicant gets 10-15 minutes to present the project in their own words, without using any prepared slides. This is followed by 15-20 minutes of discussion. The supervisor is usually present at the interview along with the chairman and the secretary of DSC. After the interview, the review is finalized and sent to the faculty.
- The applicant receives the interview comments and an enrolment letter.
- Enrollment and collection of the student registration fee.
If the application is approved, a contract on the PhD studies is signed between the student and supervisor/supervisory teacher.
Programme structure
Check below to see how the programme is structured.
This programme does not offer specialisations.
- Year unspecified
- Fall
- Research Ethics
- Year unspecified
- Final project
- Final project
- Doctoral seminar
- Doctoral seminar
Research Ethics (HSP073F)
The intensive course is intended for PhD-students only. It is adapted to the needs of students from different fields of study and is taught in English as a three day seminar (9.10-15.40) Tuesday to Thursday in late August. The course is a concise version of HSP806F Ethics of Science and Research (6 ECTS), which is taught in February-March. The objective is to train students in reasoning about ethical controversies relating to science and research in contemporary society. At the end of the course they will have the necessary tool-kit to navigate the ethical part of the troubled waters of applying for licences and references, getting published and securing funding. No prior knowledge of ethical theory and any particular science will be assumed in the course. The instruction takes the form of short lectures, discussions and group work on case studies. The idea is to create an academic community where students are actively engaged in a focused dialogue about different questions on research ethics.
Taught:
Tue 20 August 9:10 am to 3:40 pm
Wed 21 August 9:10 am to 3:40 pm
Thu 22 August 9:10 am to 3:40 pm
Attn.: This course will be taught remotely (online)
Final project (LJÓ501L, LJÓ501L)
Final project for doctoral students in midwifery
Final project (LJÓ501L, LJÓ501L)
Final project for doctoral students in midwifery
Doctoral seminar (HJÚ507F, HJÚ507F)
The Doctoral seminar will be held 4 to 5 times each semester. The seminar will include both lectures on issues from the doctoral research at the Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery as well as presentation and discussion on methodology.
Doctoral seminar (HJÚ507F, HJÚ507F)
The Doctoral seminar will be held 4 times each semester. The seminar will include both lectures on issues from the doctoral research at the Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery as well as discussion on methodology in Nursing from faculty.
- Fall
- HSP073FResearch EthicsMandatory (required) course3A mandatory (required) course for the programme3 ECTS, creditsCourse Description
The intensive course is intended for PhD-students only. It is adapted to the needs of students from different fields of study and is taught in English as a three day seminar (9.10-15.40) Tuesday to Thursday in late August. The course is a concise version of HSP806F Ethics of Science and Research (6 ECTS), which is taught in February-March. The objective is to train students in reasoning about ethical controversies relating to science and research in contemporary society. At the end of the course they will have the necessary tool-kit to navigate the ethical part of the troubled waters of applying for licences and references, getting published and securing funding. No prior knowledge of ethical theory and any particular science will be assumed in the course. The instruction takes the form of short lectures, discussions and group work on case studies. The idea is to create an academic community where students are actively engaged in a focused dialogue about different questions on research ethics.
Taught:
Tue 20 August 9:10 am to 3:40 pm
Wed 21 August 9:10 am to 3:40 pm
Thu 22 August 9:10 am to 3:40 pmAttn.: This course will be taught remotely (online)
Distance learningPrerequisites- Year unspecified
LJÓ501L, LJÓ501LFinal projectMandatory (required) course180/180A mandatory (required) course for the programme180/180 ECTS, creditsCourse DescriptionFinal project for doctoral students in midwifery
PrerequisitesPart of the total project/thesis creditsLJÓ501L, LJÓ501LFinal projectMandatory (required) course180/180A mandatory (required) course for the programme180/180 ECTS, creditsCourse DescriptionFinal project for doctoral students in midwifery
PrerequisitesPart of the total project/thesis creditsHJÚ507F, HJÚ507FDoctoral seminarMandatory (required) course10/10A mandatory (required) course for the programme10/10 ECTS, creditsCourse DescriptionThe Doctoral seminar will be held 4 to 5 times each semester. The seminar will include both lectures on issues from the doctoral research at the Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery as well as presentation and discussion on methodology.
PrerequisitesAttendance required in classHJÚ507F, HJÚ507FDoctoral seminarMandatory (required) course10/10A mandatory (required) course for the programme10/10 ECTS, creditsCourse DescriptionThe Doctoral seminar will be held 4 times each semester. The seminar will include both lectures on issues from the doctoral research at the Faculty of Nursing and Midwifery as well as discussion on methodology in Nursing from faculty.
PrerequisitesAttendance required in class
If you still have questions, feel free to contact us.
Guðjón Ingi Guðjónsson
Postgraduate studies manager.