Search for a command to run...
Background Doctoral students often rely heavily on digital tools to manage research demands while simultaneously fulfilling professional and family responsibilities, yet their work–life balance in this technologically driven scholarly landscape remains underexplored, particularly in the Philippine context. Methods This qualitative study employed a Husserlian descriptive-phenomenological design to explore the lived experiences of doctoral students enrolled in a private Christian university in Cebu City, Philippines. Data were generated through a focus group discussion, classroom observations, and follow-up conversations with eight Ph.D. English students who had completed at least six trimesters in the program were analyzed using Colaizzi’s method to derive significant statements, formulate meanings, and organize themes. Results The analysis yielded six interrelated themes: effective time management; road blockers; personal and technological strategies; confidence is something, but knowledge is everything; professional network; and what I need to know more. The analysis also showed that doctoral students used a range of technologies for information search, data management, writing, and communication while negotiating constraints related to digital skills, institutional infrastructure, and competing professional and family roles. They drew on personal time management strategies, evolving knowledge of research technologies, and support from mentors, peers, and online communities to address these work–life and technology-related challenges while navigating constraints such as unstable internet connectivity, information overload, financial limitations, and non–user–friendly software. Findings The findings underscore the need for explicit instructional support on research technologies, stronger professional and peer networks, and institutional policies that address infrastructural and curricular gaps affecting doctoral students’ work–life balance and research productivity. Graduate programs are encouraged to integrate technology-focused linguistics courses, enhance online library services, and design research-based learning experiences that are responsive to doctoral students’ multiple roles. Recommendation Graduate programs may systematically integrate up-to-date technological tools, scaffold their use in linguistics and language education research, and cultivate supportive peer and supervisory networks to enhance doctoral students’ research experiences.