Graduating without a thesis: meet the people getting ‘practical’ PhDs in China
Skip to main content
Thank you for visiting nature.com. You are using a browser version with limited support for CSS. To obtain<br>the best experience, we recommend you use a more up to date browser (or turn off compatibility mode in<br>Internet Explorer). In the meantime, to ensure continued support, we are displaying the site without styles<br>and JavaScript.
Advertisement
Bluesky
Find a new job
The rail manufacturer Qingdao CRRC Sifang Rolling Stock worked with a Chinese PhD student to improve manufacturing techniques for its Cetrovo subway trains.Credit: Zhang Jingang/Feature China/Future Publishing via Getty<br>For most postgraduate students, a written thesis is a requirement for completing their studies. But in China, a law passed in 2024 is allowing some people to graduate with a practical achievement, such as an innovative product, technique or project, instead of following the conventional PhD route.<br>Since the law came into effect in January last year, more than 60 doctoral candidates have graduated with practical achievements, according to China’s Ministry of Education. The pathway is currently available only to people studying engineering courses, and it is part of China’s broad campaign to increase the numbers of ‘elite engineers’ in the nation, with the hope of overcoming technological bottlenecks. Around 50 postgraduate colleges have been established by universities across the nation since 2021 to support the elite-engineer campaign.<br>At these institutions, each student completes their training at both university and a company. They also have two supervisors — one in charge of their academic studies and the other helping them to gain hands-on experience. The engineering colleges offer both product-based and thesis-based graduation options, and students can choose which route to take.<br>First ‘practical PhDs’ awarded in China — for products rather than papers
Although universities in other nations also offer ‘industrial PhDs’, in which students work closely with a company, many of these degrees still require a written thesis. The product-based graduation route is expected to help train workers who are capable of solving real-life problems, says Zong Yingying, the dean of the College of Elite Engineers at the Harbin Institute of Technology in China.<br>A university and its partner company will agree on who owns the intellectual property for each resulting product, Zong explains. “But even if the university doesn’t get the intellectual property, it still benefits a lot from such a collaboration because it will get research funding and industry experts from the company, and the right to use their production lines.”<br>Nature spoke to three PhD graduates about their experiences taking part in the programme.<br>WU XIANGYANG: Railway engineer<br>Earned a PhD on intelligent manufacturing in rail transit systems at Southwest Jiaotong University in Chengdu, China.<br>Growing up in a small town on China’s east coast, I was obsessed with heavy machinery. My father worked for a company that made fish feed and he took many business trips to source machines. He often brought me with him on those trips. The memories of parts being welded together, the noise and smell of a busy workshop and the sight of machines being put together by a production line stuck with me.<br>I received a double bachelor’s degree in welding and software engineering in 2008. After that, I started working at the company Qingdao CRRC Sifang Rolling Stock, a manufacturer of rail vehicles based in Qingdao, China, at which I investigated ways to improve manufacturing techniques. But over the years, I began to feel the need to return to my studies to enhance my professional knowledge. That was why I started a master’s course in vehicle engineering in 2014, and then a PhD programme in mechanical engineering in 2022.<br>Wu Xiangyang was one of the first people to graduate with a practical PhD.Credit: Wu Xiangyang<br>My PhD course was provided jointly by Southwest Jiaotong University and Qingdao CRRC, which allowed me to pursue the PhD without resigning from my job. China’s railway manufacturing sector doesn’t lack advanced machines or skilled workers. What it lacks are processes that can coordinate the various machines in a system into the same production schedule so that it’s possible to build products safely and efficiently. That was what I set out to solve with my PhD project: a system of software and hardware that can plan, monitor and adjust production processes in rail-vehicle factories in real time.<br>I can’t share the exact details of my product owing to the confidentiality requirements of my course. But to develop it, I spent a lot of time on the factory floor to collect data from every step of the manufacturing process. Then, I built computer models on the basis of those data to find techniques that can solve specific problems. Finally, I...