World-Leading Scholarship in Computer Science and Modern Languages
- Application period opens
- Monday 15 December 2025
- Application period closes
- Tuesday 31 March 2026
- Notification date
- The week commencing Sunday 31 May 2026
- Entry
- 2026
The University of St Andrews is pleased to offer a full scholarship funded by St Leonard's Postgraduate College, to support an exceptional student undertaking doctoral research in the following project:
Designing Techno-Cultural Ecologies: Prototyping Critical and Creative Interactions with Biodiversity.
Accepted start dates:
- September 2026
- October 2026
- January 2027
Doctoral Research at St Andrews
As a doctoral student at the University of St Andrews you will be part of a growing, vibrant, and intellectually stimulating postgraduate community. St Andrews is one of the leading research-intensive universities in the world and offers a postgraduate experience of remarkable richness.
According to the latest UK Research Excellence Framework (REF) 2021, more than 88% of research carried out by the University of St Andrews is world-leading or internationally excellent. St Andrews offers research students an intensive research environment, which is a vital step in their journey to a career in research and academia. Pursuing a specialism is a fulfilling path to undertake, and our research degrees are fully supervised and integrated into the research interests of our academic staff. At St Andrews research students will be contributing to the ground-breaking research we produce and making a significant contribution to the development of the respective academic field.
St Leonard’s Postgraduate College is at the heart of the postgraduate community of St Andrews. The College supports all postgraduates and aims to provide opportunities for postgraduates to come together, socially and intellectually, and make new connections.
In addition to the research training that doctoral students complete in their home School, doctoral students at St Andrews have access to a range of research skills development and training opportunities, which are designed to help them make the most of their postgraduate experience. These opportunities range from skills sessions that increase research capabilities to employability workshops and online resources. These support and development opportunities are available to all research students through the University’s GRADskills programme, a free, comprehensive training programme to support their academic, professional, and personal development.
St Leonard’s College and the University’s Careers Centre support all postgraduate students in identifying and achieving their career ambitions. The Careers Centre has dedicated staff and has developed extensive resources and offerings specifically for postgraduate students. Our research graduates go on to further studies and academic positions around the world or a range of professions outside of academia.
Project
This interdisciplinary PhD project investigates how digital technologies can be reconfigured to explore new frameworks for engaging with biodiversity. At a time of ecological crisis, when biodiversity loss remains less publicly understood and less culturally visible than climate change, the research seeks to rethink how knowledge of the natural world is produced, mediated, and shared. It offers an original contribution by integrating environmental humanities, design research, and digital fabrication to prototype new forms of technological engagement that do not merely represent biodiversity but recompose our ways of knowing and relating to it.
The research centres on the herbarium at the St Andrews Botanic Garden (SABG), an internationally significant but currently inaccessible archive of preserved plant, algal, and fungal specimens. This collection encapsulates both scientific data and socio-ecological histories, yet its epistemic potential has lain dormant for over four decades. The project aims to reactivate the herbarium as a “techno-cultural ecology,” a hybrid site where biological archives, digital systems, and human perception intersect to produce new forms of understanding. By creating tangible, embodied, and embedded digital interactions, the student will explore how technology can mediate encounters between people, archives, and living ecosystems, thus transforming the herbarium from a passive collection into a generative knowledge environment.
The research is motivated by three interlinked observations. First, public engagement with biodiversity remains limited, in part because conventional scientific and digital representations abstract ecological knowledge from lived experience. Second, the epistemological division between nature and culture continues to restrict how biodiversity is valued and studied. Third, while interactive technologies have advanced rapidly, they often reinforce distance from the physical world rather than facilitating sensory and material engagement. This PhD will move beyond these limitations by using Tangible, Embodied, and Embedded Interaction (TEI) to create digital artefacts and installations that operate as experimental epistemic tools: objects through which new ways of sensing and conceptualising biodiversity can emerge.
The project’s epistemological innovation lies in reconceiving the role of digital technology not simply as a representational medium, but as an epistemic partner in ecological inquiry. By designing systems that operate through touch, movement, and spatial interaction, the research will develop alternative modes of knowing that are embodied, participatory, and situated. These prototypes will serve as research probes to explore how digital infrastructures might support sustainable, relational understandings of biodiversity in both scientific and cultural domains.
The supervisory team – spanning digital interaction design, environmental humanities, and botany – provides the ideal environment for this work. The student will benefit from guidance in both critical theory and technical practice, gaining the intellectual independence required to bridge multiple disciplinary methodologies. Regular supervision meetings, joint workshops at SABG, and participation in interdisciplinary research networks at the University will ensure robust academic support and opportunities for collaboration. The anticipated outcomes include digital artefacts, exhibitions, and scholarly publications that demonstrate how technological design can contribute to epistemological renewal in environmental research.
The research is grounded in an accessible and well-documented collection, supported by institutional expertise and facilities in both Schools. The research plan proposes iterative prototyping, field testing, and dissemination, drawing on established research methodologies, ensuring a manageable and coherent doctoral trajectory.
Aligned with the University’s strategic themes of Sustainability, Cultural Understanding, and Evolution, Behaviour, and Environment, the project will contribute to building institutional capacity in interdisciplinary ecological research and digital innovation. In sum, this PhD will make a distinctive world leading contribution through theoretical and practical knowledge at the intersection of technology, biodiversity, and culture, thus helping to reimagine how universities, heritage institutions, and communities engage with the living world in the twenty-first century.
Value of award (per year)
The scholarship will comprise a full tuition fee award and an annual stipend paid at a rate set by the University of St Andrews. For 2025-2026, the stipend is £19,775 p.a., with an annual uplift published by the University each academic year.
The stipend will be paid pro-rata to part-time students.
The scholarships do not cover any continuation, extension, or resubmission period/fees, Visa fees, Immigration Health Surcharge, IELTS fees, costs for travel to and from the UK or research training grant or another equivalent award for research expenses.
Duration of award
Up to 3.5 years (full-time) or 7.0 years (part-time). Scholarship holders will be expected to have submitted their thesis for examination by the end of that period. The award term excludes the continuation period and any extension periods.
At what stage of my course application can I apply for this scholarship?
Please apply for the scholarship after you have submitted your application for a place at St Andrews. You do not need to wait until you have received an offer of a place before applying for the scholarship.
Application restrictions
Study level
Available to students studying at:
Subjects
Available to students studying:
Domicile for fee status
Schools
Available to students in the following Schools and Departments:
Application assessment
Available to
Mode of study
Geographical criteria
Additional criteria
You must have applied for a PhD programme at St Andrews.
You must be located in St Andrews for the duration of your doctoral studies.
You must not already (i) hold a doctoral degree; or (ii) be matriculated for a doctoral degree at the University of St Andrews or another institution.
As part of the scholarship application you will be required to upload a personal statement. This should serve as a cover letter for the research project application as a whole, and should include:
- An outline of your suitability for the project (project criteria can be found in the "Eligibility" and "Project Description" sections above).
- Why the project interests you.
- What you would bring to the project in terms of previous skills and expertise.
- Any ideas that you may have for the realisation of the project.
How to apply
- Apply for your chosen course at the University St Andrews: Postgraduate research. Select the School of Computer Science as the academic school. After submitting your course application, you must allow up to three working days to receive login details for the My Application portal.
- When you have received your login details, apply for the scholarship:
- Log into My Application and follow the links to Scholarships and Funding
- Select 2026/7 as the Academic Year and click Refresh list.
- Find the specific World-Leading St Andrews Doctoral Scholarship that you wish to apply for in the list of scholarships (using the filter box if necessary), click Apply and complete the application form.
You can also use the catalogue to search and apply for other scholarships for which you are eligible.
Scholarship application form guidance
If you are a current student at St Andrews, you can access Scholarships and Funding through MySaint. However, you should wait until after you have applied for your intended postgraduate programme before doing so, to ensure that the scholarship application is linked to that course.
Terms and conditions
Please read the University of St Andrews scholarships terms and conditions (opens in new tab)
If you apply to this scholarship, details from your course application may be passed to the selection panel solely for the purpose of merit-based assessment.
When will I know the outcome?
The outcome of your scholarship application will be available on View or continue my funding applications in the Scholarships and Funding section of My Application within two months of the application deadline.
- Contact
Please contact pgscholarships@st-andrews.ac.uk with any enquiries about the scholarship application process.
Informal enquiries regarding this scholarship may be addressed to Dr Loraine Clarke lec24@st-andrews.ac.uk (School of Computer Science) and Dr Damiano Benvegnù db307@st-andrews.ac.uk (School of Modern Languages).