Practice Explorer

Use the form below to search for the best practices that will help you achieve the selected goals, address problems of the different target groups in different categories.

All practices

There are 65 found practices.
To read more about the the practices in this table, click on Description tab above. To review the personnel efforts, time and cost for implementation of the found practices, click on Implementation tab above. To find out all details of the selected practice, click on its title.
Title Category Target group
Customised assistance: social integration and daily life issues (accommodation, health care providers, childcare, etc.) Social Integration & Daily Life Accommodation Safety, Healthcare & Wellbeing Language Support, Language Policy Family Matters PhD student/Early career researcher R2 - R4 researchers Lecturers (incl. Language Teachers) Internationals spouses/family members
Welcome event for new international PhDs/academics Social Integration & Daily Life Profesional & Academic Development Networking Promotion & Visibility PhD student/Early career researcher R2 - R4 researchers Lecturers (incl. Language Teachers)
Newsletter for international PhDs/academic staff about university life Networking Institutional Processes Promotion & Visibility Social Integration & Daily Life Family Matters Safety, Healthcare & Wellbeing PhD student/Early career researcher R2 - R4 researchers Lecturers (incl. Language Teachers)
Open positions promoted publicly in English via well established international platforms (e.g. for free EURAXESS Jobs) Promotion & Visibility PhD student/Early career researcher R2 - R4 researchers Lecturers (incl. Language Teachers)
FAQs collection for support staff to share cases internally Capacity Building of Support & Management Staff Institutional Processes Administrative staff Management staff
There are 65 found practices.
To review the personnel efforts, time and cost for implementation of the found practices, click on Implementation tab above. To find out all details of the selected practice, click on its title.
Title Description
Customised assistance: social integration and daily life issues (accommodation, health care providers, childcare, etc.)

Customised assistance regarding social integration and daily life of incoming international PhD students, academics and their families helps to make a better experience of settling-in in a new place, whether it is finding housing, opening a bank account, finding a suitable health care provider (s), securing childcare, building a new social network, learning a foreign language and generally, getting accustomed to a new culture and way of life. It can also include information on local/regional public transportation, host city parking policy, waste collection, registering a car, bringing in a pet, etc. Various levels/intensities of service provision might be opted for based on specific needs and available resources. The service might also be helped to deliver by a trained buddy/guide.

 

Welcome event for new international PhDs/academics

This is an opportunity to welcome the international PhD students, academics and researchers, distribute information and meet hosting HEI’s staff in person. It can also be a way to promote HEI research and didactic work among international PhD students and academics. HEI’s external partners can enrich the sessions with their presentations and other events as a way of popularising their work. Social events accompanying the welcome event are an important way of establishing social and professional networks. 

 

Newsletter for international PhDs/academic staff about university life

A regular newsletter can be a nice-to-have instrument for sharing knowledge and improving the visibility of research activities and supporting services, organised at your institution.

This newsletter can be a very useful tool especially for doctoral/post-doctoral students and the junior/project engaged research staff, appointed for specific research tasks. The newsletter can also be used to inform the local community and partner institutions about the activities at your university, strenghtening industry-academia links and opportunities for collaboration.

Benefits of initiating a regular Research newsletter:

  • Improved visibility of the research/teaching activities of the university;
  • Improved visibility of the events, conferences, invited lectures, etc.;
  • Improved collaboration between departments and faculties within the university
  • Improved visibility and enhanced opportunities for cooperation with local HEI/ institutions/ industry partners
  • Strenghtened local community
  • Improved visibility of the university in an international perspective - for this reason it should be either bilingual or issued only in English and available online/shared with relevant international bodies and partners.

 

Open positions promoted publicly in English via well established international platforms (e.g. for free EURAXESS Jobs)

EURAXESS portal is the unique, single point of access to content and online tools, related to relocation of researchers and their families and career development. It hosts an online marketplace of CVs, jobs, funding, and hosting ads, connecting PhD students, academics, and researchers with their employers. It is one of the top science job platforms in Europe - with over a million visits per month, 80000 job ads published annualy, 65000+ registered organizations, and 18000+ researchers. In this video you will find out all you need to know about registering on the EURAXESS portal and start posting your first job vacancies. Publishing job ads on the EURAXESS portal is FREE. It helps HEIs and R&D organizations get unprecedented visibility and reach at no cost, and thus facilitate access to the best talents for the newly open positions. The ads, submitted by the organisations awarded with HR Excellence in Research logo will be flagged with the logo to highlight the highest standards in HR practices in that organisation.

FAQs collection for support staff to share cases internally

The FAQs platform is a practical tool for storage of practical information and good practices for processing the agenda of incoming PhD students and academics. It´s a database of standardized responses/solutions to recurring questions helping thus the support staff members efficiently navigate through administrative processes/issues they typically encounter. It is particularly useful for newcomer support staff as well as for situations occurring just sporadically. It could be part of an internal knowledge-sharing platform or any other type of intranet. 

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