This summary provides an overview of a longitudinal case study on the roles adopted by a master's dissertation supervisor over time. The study analyzed interviews with the supervisor and supervisee, feedback from the supervisor on draft chapters, and departmental guidelines. The supervisor adopted different roles at different stages of supervision for different purposes, showing an adaptive approach. However, the supervisor's feedback indicated a more directive style than described in the interview, highlighting the need for multiple data sources. The dangers of homogenized supervisory practices are illustrated, as supervisors need flexibility to adapt their roles to individual students' needs.
Action learning dissertations structure, supervision and examination.pdfMandy Brown
This article discusses the structure, supervision, and examination of action learning dissertations for qualification programs. It argues that action learning dissertations differ from traditional research dissertations in that they begin with an experienced problem in an organizational setting and involve taking actions to resolve the problem through an action learning process. The article proposes a blueprint for an action learning dissertation that incorporates: (1) engagement with work and organization, (2) learning through an action learning set, (3) literature that informed thinking, and (4) personal and professional learning. It aims to provide guidance for supervising and assessing action learning dissertations within institutional requirements.
A Situative Metaphor For Teacher Learning The Case Of University Tutors Lear...Sabrina Green
This document summarizes a research study that developed a new metaphor for understanding how university tutors learn to grade student coursework and maintain academic standards. The researchers observed tutors grading coursework while thinking aloud, then interviewed them. They analyzed the data to develop a metaphor that positions tutors' learning as an "interplay between vertical, public knowledge and horizontal, practical wisdom knowledge domains." This metaphor aims to better capture tutors' complex, situated learning than the common "theory-practice gap" metaphor. It views tutors as developing professional knowing through negotiating their practice and identities within communities.
This document discusses critical reflection in the context of cooperative education programs. It begins by noting that while critical reflection is seen as important for learning, there is a lack of consensus around its definition and how to facilitate it. The document then explores some common models of critical reflection and frameworks that have been used to guide the reflective process. It acknowledges that critical reflection is difficult to define and apply in practice. The document concludes by emphasizing the importance of critical reflection for cooperative education programs and the need for structured support and feedback to help students develop reflective skills.
A Phenomenological Study Of Attrition From A Doctoral Cohort Program Changes...Lori Mitchell
This document summarizes a study that examined why Ed.D students left their doctoral programs during the dissertation stage. The study interviewed 7 students who did not complete their dissertations. It found that during the transition from coursework to dissertation writing, students experienced changes in their feelings of autonomy and relatedness. This made it difficult for them to persist through the dissertation stage. Changes in advisors, careers, or family responsibilities also contributed to students leaving their programs before finishing. The study incorporated suggestions from prior research, like using a cohort model and ensuring students' needs for autonomy, relatedness and competence are met. However, attrition still occurred even within cohort programs.
This presentation is part of a workshop I run on Approaches to Doctoral Supervision as part of a Research Supervision Module for new doctoral supervisors.
Published. spillane, healey. conceptualizing school leadershipdabneyluang
This document discusses conceptualizing school leadership and management from a distributed perspective. It argues that more research is needed on study operations and measures before making causal claims. It explores studying the formal and informal organization and relations between them. Several study operations are proposed and measures are discussed to capture aspects of leadership distribution, such as responsibilities of different leadership roles and alignment of leadership functions. The strengths and weaknesses of proposed measures are critically examined using school data. More work on conceptualization, study operations, and instrument development is urged to advance research from a distributed perspective.
This document is a reflection by Su-Tuan Lulee on their course EDDE 804 Leadership & Project Management in Distance Education. Su-Tuan discusses what they learned in four areas - knowledge, methods, purposes, and forms of understanding. In the knowledge dimension, Su-Tuan surveyed various leadership theories and found transformational and complexity leadership theories most applicable. Through assignments like papers and projects, Su-Tuan practiced methodologies. Su-Tuan recognized the importance of leadership for success and how theories can impact student achievement. Finally, Su-Tuan improved communication skills and can now discuss leadership using proper terminology.
Action learning dissertations structure, supervision and examination.pdfMandy Brown
This article discusses the structure, supervision, and examination of action learning dissertations for qualification programs. It argues that action learning dissertations differ from traditional research dissertations in that they begin with an experienced problem in an organizational setting and involve taking actions to resolve the problem through an action learning process. The article proposes a blueprint for an action learning dissertation that incorporates: (1) engagement with work and organization, (2) learning through an action learning set, (3) literature that informed thinking, and (4) personal and professional learning. It aims to provide guidance for supervising and assessing action learning dissertations within institutional requirements.
A Situative Metaphor For Teacher Learning The Case Of University Tutors Lear...Sabrina Green
This document summarizes a research study that developed a new metaphor for understanding how university tutors learn to grade student coursework and maintain academic standards. The researchers observed tutors grading coursework while thinking aloud, then interviewed them. They analyzed the data to develop a metaphor that positions tutors' learning as an "interplay between vertical, public knowledge and horizontal, practical wisdom knowledge domains." This metaphor aims to better capture tutors' complex, situated learning than the common "theory-practice gap" metaphor. It views tutors as developing professional knowing through negotiating their practice and identities within communities.
This document discusses critical reflection in the context of cooperative education programs. It begins by noting that while critical reflection is seen as important for learning, there is a lack of consensus around its definition and how to facilitate it. The document then explores some common models of critical reflection and frameworks that have been used to guide the reflective process. It acknowledges that critical reflection is difficult to define and apply in practice. The document concludes by emphasizing the importance of critical reflection for cooperative education programs and the need for structured support and feedback to help students develop reflective skills.
A Phenomenological Study Of Attrition From A Doctoral Cohort Program Changes...Lori Mitchell
This document summarizes a study that examined why Ed.D students left their doctoral programs during the dissertation stage. The study interviewed 7 students who did not complete their dissertations. It found that during the transition from coursework to dissertation writing, students experienced changes in their feelings of autonomy and relatedness. This made it difficult for them to persist through the dissertation stage. Changes in advisors, careers, or family responsibilities also contributed to students leaving their programs before finishing. The study incorporated suggestions from prior research, like using a cohort model and ensuring students' needs for autonomy, relatedness and competence are met. However, attrition still occurred even within cohort programs.
This presentation is part of a workshop I run on Approaches to Doctoral Supervision as part of a Research Supervision Module for new doctoral supervisors.
Published. spillane, healey. conceptualizing school leadershipdabneyluang
This document discusses conceptualizing school leadership and management from a distributed perspective. It argues that more research is needed on study operations and measures before making causal claims. It explores studying the formal and informal organization and relations between them. Several study operations are proposed and measures are discussed to capture aspects of leadership distribution, such as responsibilities of different leadership roles and alignment of leadership functions. The strengths and weaknesses of proposed measures are critically examined using school data. More work on conceptualization, study operations, and instrument development is urged to advance research from a distributed perspective.
This document is a reflection by Su-Tuan Lulee on their course EDDE 804 Leadership & Project Management in Distance Education. Su-Tuan discusses what they learned in four areas - knowledge, methods, purposes, and forms of understanding. In the knowledge dimension, Su-Tuan surveyed various leadership theories and found transformational and complexity leadership theories most applicable. Through assignments like papers and projects, Su-Tuan practiced methodologies. Su-Tuan recognized the importance of leadership for success and how theories can impact student achievement. Finally, Su-Tuan improved communication skills and can now discuss leadership using proper terminology.
Running head: EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH 1
EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH 2
Translating Educational Research into Practice
Problem
For a long time, education research has not been able to impact classroom instructional practices and educational policies. Educational based researchers argue that their primary work is to research the various aspects of learning and teaching to then present their findings at various conferences and publishing them in different educational journals. Their busy schedule does not allow them to train practitioners (Powney & Watts, 2018). On the other hand, practitioners are busy concentrating on there, and they do not have time to review new literature. This brings up the question as to who is responsible for this gap. In the real sense, there should be a connection between the two, and both parties should play a role in bridging this gap.
Practices, Policies, and Procedures That Have Led to the Problem
There are various reasons for this persistent gap between the teaching practices that teachers use and the guidance that educational research provides. However, three of them stand out. They include the trustworthiness issue, teacher preparation issues, and the research practice issue. The trustworthiness issue comes in because much of the published educational research and disseminated to teachers, policymakers and researchers are often not good and of uneven quality. Research is incredibly demanding, and it is not always possible to choose the most appropriate methodological approach. It is essential that the methodology is applied rigorously whether it is for qualitative or quantitative research (Suter, 2012).
Teachers, on the other hand, want to provide quality education to their children. When they turn into research to aid in teaching, their main expectation is that the information they get is trustworthy. If the information is not trustworthy both the teacher and the student will fail terribly. The teachers also have to be prepared. The applicability and relevance of a research finding will be minimal if the administrators and teachers are unable to access the data, unable to develop strategies for implementing the research findings and do not understand or are unable to interpret the research findings in a meaningful and accurate manner (Fenwick, Edwards, & Sawchuk, 2012).
While teacher preparation and research trustworthiness play significant roles in determining the extent to which research informs instructional practices and educational policies, a fundamental problem is our inability to understand and identify an environment where the research findings can be applied in complex school systems as well as classrooms. While specific strategies, instructional models and approaches may be useful in a setting that is controlled, there is scanty information about the factors that impede or foster application of these modalities under varying contexts and among diverse teachers and students' pop.
A participant research for learning methodology on education doctorial traini...Aziz Ahmad
This document outlines a participatory research methodology used in a doctoral training program. Key points:
1. Doctoral students formed research dyads to study what influenced their decisions to pursue doctoral studies. They wrote narratives, interviewed each other, and discussed their educational trajectories.
2. The collaborative approach aimed to give students hands-on experience with research methods while reflecting on their own doctoral journeys. Project meetings and data provided opportunities to learn about methodology.
3. The methodology was intended to provide an alternative to more common forms of doctoral training like lectures. By actively participating in their own research, students could gain deep reflections on what brought them to doctoral study while learning research skills.
The University Archives must decide whether to upgrade its existing information management system or purchase new software. It has two weeks to submit a funding proposal to take advantage of upcoming available funds, or it will have to wait two years for more money. The Archives developed its current Paradox-based system in 1988 but has found it inflexible and problematic over time. It now aims to expand the system's capabilities but faces the upcoming retirement of a key staff member familiar with the existing software.
This document summarizes a doctoral summer school held in 2007 on fundamentals of management research. Over the course of 5 days, 17 doctoral students participated in sessions covering various aspects of the research process. Topics included orienting to research, philosophy and practice of management research, the hypothetico-deductive research model, identifying research topics, qualitative research methods, and the human side of research including ethics and publishing. The summer school aimed to improve doctoral education by introducing students to research concepts, skills, and challenges through workshops, exercises, and demonstrations.
Rethinking the dissertation: avoiding throwing the baby out with the bathwater.Simon Haslett
Handout to accompany the keynote workshop by Professor Mick Healey (University of Gloucestershire) at the Research-Teaching Practice in Wales Conference, 9th September 2013, at the University of Wales, Gregynog Hall. The accompanying slidecast presentation may be found at http://www.slideshare.net/stemwales/rethinking-the-dissertation
By Hazel SmithThe Doctoral IdentityEssential QuestionsTawnaDelatorrejs
By Hazel Smith
The Doctoral Identity
Essential Questions
What are some common reasons that individuals choose to seek a doctoral degree?
What academic and professional dispositions should doctoral learners embrace and demonstrate?
How are expectations for learners different at a master’s level than the doctoral level?
In reviewing one’s weekly commitments, how much time and rigor will the dissertation journey require?
What is the role of the scholar versus the practitioner?
What is scholarly writing and what does this mean for the doctoral learner?
Introduction
Individuals embarking on a doctoral journey are novice researchers. Novice researchers encounter multiple
academic demands couched in an intensive scholarly culture (Baker & Pifer, 2011). The ease with which
doctoral learners adapt to these changes and demands is predictive of their completion rates. In essence, the
doctoral journey is much more intense than prior academic programs. Therefore, learners can expect multiple
personal, emotional, and academic challenges. This chapter focuses on developing and internalizing the
doctoral identity that emerges from being a novice doctoral learner at the beginning of a program, to becoming
an in�uential scholar who actively contributes to a specialized discipline upon graduation.
Reasons for Pursuing a Doctorate
According to Ivankova and Stick (2007), a con�uence of elements motivate learners to pursue a doctoral
degree. For some, motivators may be intrinsic, such as the desire to acquire additional academic skills or to
engage in the thrill of authentic research. The desire to deepen already acquired knowledge coupled with the
drive to research unchartered areas in a given �eld underpins these intrinsic elements. Extrinsic reasons such
as the desire to embark on a new career cause others to pursue a doctorate. According to Ivankova and Stick
(2007), here are some of the common reasons for pursuing a doctorate:
To increase earning potential
To enhance professional self-esteem and con�dence
To earn respect from peers and colleagues
To expand scholarly writing skills couched in peer reviews and feedback
To hone research and publishing expertise
To acquire professional collaboration skills in higher education
To improve interpersonal communication skills
To �nd one’s purpose and thirst for knowledge
To contribute original research to the knowledge based in one’s �eld of interest
To demonstrate intellectual potential
To achieve long-term professional goals.
In sum, learners have many intrinsic and extrinsic reasons for pursuing a doctorate. While the reason differs
for each individual, keeping the reason in focus helps retain momentum as the program moves along.
Professional Dispositions of Doctoral Learners
The College of Doctoral Studies (CDS) at Grand Canyon University (GCU) has laid out comprehensive
dispositions, or characteristics, for learners to adopt as they embark on and undertake their doctoral deg ...
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publicati.docxkaylee7wsfdubill
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272758407
Leadership and Decision-making: A Study on Reflexive Relationship Between
Leadership Style and Decision-making Approach
Article · January 2014
DOI: 10.9734/BJESBS/2014/5514
CITATIONS
3
READS
9,938
1 author:
Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects:
Exploring the role of distance learning administrators in facilitating communication between instructors and learners in digital age View project
Imam Al-Ghazali Project View project
Bakare Kazeem Kayode
Al-Madinah International University
21 PUBLICATIONS 69 CITATIONS
SEE PROFILE
All content following this page was uploaded by Bakare Kazeem Kayode on 04 October 2016.
The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272758407_Leadership_and_Decision-making_A_Study_on_Reflexive_Relationship_Between_Leadership_Style_and_Decision-making_Approach?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_2&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272758407_Leadership_and_Decision-making_A_Study_on_Reflexive_Relationship_Between_Leadership_Style_and_Decision-making_Approach?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_3&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/project/Exploring-the-role-of-distance-learning-administrators-in-facilitating-communication-between-instructors-and-learners-in-digital-age?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_9&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/project/Imam-Al-Ghazali-Project?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_9&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_1&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Bakare_Kazeem_Kayode?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_4&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Bakare_Kazeem_Kayode?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_5&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/institution/Al-Madinah_International_University?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNT.
This document provides an overview of how reading research can enhance professional development for educators. It discusses that research has value in addressing practical problems, challenging assumptions, and suggesting new strategies, though it cannot be the sole guide for practice. The document outlines different types of research purposes, including basic, applied, evaluation and action research. It also contrasts quantitative and qualitative research methods. The overall message is that critically reading research fosters reflection on practice and supports professional growth, even if published research has limitations.
The document discusses strategies for success in doctoral programs. It begins by outlining learning experiences prior to doctoral studies, including undergraduate education, research experience, and work experience. It then explains that doctoral learning requires autonomy and self-direction. A literature review identifies key strategies such as time management, effective communication, mentorship, self-care, and goal-setting. The document concludes by recommending students develop a plan that incorporates prioritizing tasks, communicating, seeking guidance, maintaining work-life balance, and setting goals.
Workplace Engagement, Generational Considerations, and Cultural .docxambersalomon88660
This document discusses several topics related to workplace engagement and culture, including:
1) Research shows engaged employees are happier and more committed to their organizations, leading to lower stress and turnover. However, employees want meaningful work and flexible schedules to feel committed.
2) There are currently five generations in the global workforce with different needs, making it difficult to please all employees. Younger generations are moving into leadership roles.
3) Cultural differences between individualistic and collectivist societies, communication styles, and other factors present both opportunities and challenges for global companies.
This document summarizes a presentation given by Dr. Merilyn Childs about redesigning a Higher Degree Research (HDR) Supervision Enhancement Program from a training model to a model focused on lifelong learning. The presentation discusses limitations of the traditional training approach and proposes a more balanced approach incorporating self-directed, interest-driven learning and redesigning learning policies and practices. The goal is to better connect strategies for HDR supervisor development to theories of institutional change and digital literacies needed in today's academic environment. Feedback so far on the redesign has been positive and the program aims to further progress and evaluate changes in 2017.
From “training” to “learning in a digital age” in an HDR Supervision Enhance...Merilyn Childs
This document summarizes a presentation given by Dr. Merilyn Childs about redesigning a Higher Degree Research (HDR) Supervision Enhancement Program from a training model to a model focused on lifelong learning. The presentation discusses limitations of the traditional training approach and proposes a more balanced approach incorporating self-directed, interest-driven learning and redesigning learning policies and practices. The goal is to better connect strategies for HDR supervisor development to theories of institutional change and digital literacies needed in today's academic environment. Feedback so far on initial stages of redesign has been positive.
Running head IDENTITY AND DEFEND1DOCTORAL IDENTITY 4.docxwlynn1
Running head: IDENTITY AND DEFEND 1
DOCTORAL IDENTITY 4
The Transition of Doctoral student into independent scholar
Grand Canyon University
RES 850
January 20, 2020.
Pifer, M. J., & Baker, V. L. (2016). Stage-based challenges and strategies for support in doctoral education: A practical guide for students, faculty members, and program administrators. International Journal of Doctoral Studies, 11(1), 15-34.
The current article, which appears in, International Journal of Doctoral Studies, is authored by experienced doctoral authors, Meghan J. Pifer and Vicki L. Baker. The authors synthesize a research concerning doctoral studies by systematically considering how the research on doctoral studies can best inform the scholars and their supporters in the doctoral journey. (Pifer and Baker, 2016)
In their findings, these authors bring out three primary phases of doctoral education: Knowledge consumption (first-years joining school and cultivating their identities as doctoral learners); knowledge creation (the candidacy exams, coursework completion and development of the proposal, defense and dissertation); and knowledge enactment (learners endorse the sociocultural and technical knowledge they gained to engross scholar roles).
These authors assert that program effectiveness and success of the student in the doctoral journey would be promoted and elevated through effective communication of policies and guidelines, acceptance and support of culture, resource investment, and regular and frequent feedbacks by faculty administrators and members concluded by reminding those in the doctoral process on the importance of comprehending the three stages and therefore creating awareness of the potential challenges through their transition in the doctoral journey. (Pifer and Baker, 2016)
They encourage proactive responses to the challenges. However, this stage model research and experiences are analyzed from the authors’ own perspective and therefore influenced by their academic biases. (Pifer and Baker, 2016)
Smith, A. E., & Hatmaker, D. M. (2014). Knowing, doing, and becoming: professional identity construction among public affairs doctoral students. Journal of Public Affairs Education, 20(4), 545-564.
This article, found in the Journal of Public Affairs Education, has been authored by Amy E. Smith and Deneen M. Hatmaker, who are prominent leaders in public universities. They examine the process of training and preparing doctoral scholars to become researchers in public domains. The article highlights the construction processes of professional identity and socialization as the primary elements in this public domain doctoral process. It asserts that professional socialization enhances the development of knowledge and the skills which brace the doctoral students for a better understanding of the expectations, behavior, and cultural norms. As a result, the students become fit for carrying out research.
Prof.
This is a North Central University paper about analyzing emperimental research designs. It is written in APA format, includes references, and is graded an instructor.
DetailsBefore beginning the synthesis process, it is important .docxsimonithomas47935
Details:
Before beginning the synthesis process, it is important to become acquainted with the analysis and comparison of empirical articles. In the previous assignment, you engaged with the Comparison Matrix, a tool for analysis and comparison of empirical articles. In this assignment, you will take the next step toward synthesis and write about your observations of the articles you compared using the Comparison Matrix.
General Requirements:
Use the following information to ensure successful completion of the assignment:
· Refer to the Comparison Matrix you completed
· Review: Weidman, J. C., & Stein, E. L. (2003). Socialization of doctoral students to academic norms. Research in Higher Education, 44(6), 641-656.
· Review: Baker, V., & Lattuca, L. R. (2010). Developmental networks and learning: toward an interdisciplinary perspective on identity development during doctoral study. Studies in Higher Education, 35(7), 807-827.
· Review: Visser, L., Visser, Y. L., & Schlosser, C. (2003). Critical thinking distance education and traditional education. Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 4(4), 401-407.
· Doctoral learners are required to use APA style for their writing assignments.
Directions:
Locate the Comparison Matrix you completed in the Module 2 assignment. Using the outline you developed, the information from the Comparison Matrix. Write a paper (1,000 words) that compares all three of the articles. Do that by including the following:
1. A statement of common elements and themes addressed in each of the three articles.
2. A statement of the conclusions that can be drawn when the articles are taken together as a single entity. What is the overall message of the group of articles?
WRITING ASSIGNMENT
The paper should include the following:
WORD COUNT: 1500 words max.
Introduction. The introduction should engage the reader with a strong opening statement. It should also provide context for the paper, introduce the researchers and their studies (including the purpose of the studies), and include a thesis statement that serves as a roadmap for the reader.
Comparison of Research Questions. Open the section with a sentence that engages the reader and gives a peak into your analysis. Please discuss the main ideas behind the research questions, as well as the researcher’s approach to exploring these questions. Did they use mixed methods, quantitative, or qualitative methods? Mention the number of hypotheses (quantitative) or research questions (qualitative), but do not list the research questions. Remember to compare the approaches and discuss similarities and differences.
Comparison of Literature Reviews. This section should analyze the research the authors use to support their studies. Do not take this section lightly. You want to point out the theory and/or main research the author’s used to set up their study, and if possible mention why. Did all the studies take the same approach, such as using similar authors for support? Do they al.
EBPby Anqi ZhengSubmission dat e 13- Mar- 2019 1238PMEvonCanales257
EBP
by Anqi Zheng
Submission dat e : 13- Mar- 2019 12:38PM (UT C+1100)
Submission ID: 109236554 6
File name : 2328228_Anqi_Z heng_EBP_2110903_1884 3357 81.do cx
Word count : 3650
Charact e r count : 20395
1
2
3
Awk.
4
5
6
Awk.
FINAL GRADE
7/20
EBP
GRADEMARK REPORT
GENERAL COMMENTS
Instructor
Erica,
Your assignme nt has be e n awarde d t he mark of 7 /20 , which t ranslat e s t o a
Fail.
Your Evide nce - Base d Pract ice Asse ssme nt has be e n marke d using t he
crit e ria se t out in t he course out line . Ple ase re ad and t ake not e of t he
spe cif ic comme nt s include d wit hin t he body of your work, and t he f ollowing,
more ge ne ral, comme nt s base d on t he assignme nt crit e ria.
An unde rst anding of t he t ask and it s re lat ionship t o t he t he ory, re se arch and
pract ice of classroom manage me nt , was not we ll de monst rat e d.
T he art icle s you chose f or t he asse ssme nt we re not appropriat e , as t he y
we re not art icle s de scribing re se arch st udie s t hat support t he use of t he
e vide nce base d pract ice s on t he list provide d. T his made it ne arly impossible
f or you t o addre ss t he prompt s in t he mat rix corre ct ly and e f f e ct ive ly.
T he submission was above t he 3,0 0 0 word le ngt h re quire me nt by 10 %.
Your use of ke y t e rms and conce pt s lacke d clarit y and accuracy at t ime s.
Your unde rst anding of ke y classroom manage me nt principle s and issue s was
not cle arly e vide nt .
You subst ant iat e d t he use of e vide nce base d pract ice s in part t wo of t he
asse ssme nt , and but f aile d t o provide an e xplanat ion of how t e ache rs could
de t e rmine if a pract ice had an e vide nce base t o support it s use . You also re -
summarise d some of t he mat e rial f rom part 1, which was inappropriat e .
Your re sponse was support e d by a range of pe e r re vie we d lit e rat ure .
Your assignme nt was ade quat e ly st ruct ure d, but t he product lacke d bot h
clarit y and cohe re nce . T his was cause d by e rrors in se nt e nce st ruct ure ,
vocabulary, spe lling and punct uat ion.
As pe r t he S cho o l o f Educat io n asse ssm e nt po licy, yo u m ay re subm it t his asse ssm e nt
f o r a m ark no gre at e r t han a 10 /20 . Yo u will subm it t his re subm issio n t o t he
re subm issio n bo x o n t he co urse ’s Mo o dle sit e . Yo u have t wo we e ks t o subm it , so yo u
m ay want t o m ake an appo int m e nt t o se e m e t o go o ve r yo ur asse ssm e nt .
QM
PAGE 1
PAGE 2
Comment 1
T his article describes mo re than o ne EBP, so yo ur answers to the pro mpts f o r this EBP lack clarity and co herence.
PAGE 3
Comment 2
T his is no t an appro priate article f o r this assessment as it do es no t describe a study used to pro vide evidence to suppo rt the
use o f ...
The Decision Making Skills of Principals and the Teacher Turnover A Qualitati...ijtsrd
The study dealt on the decision making skills of the principals and their related behaviors as perceived by the teachers pertaining to teacher turnover as documented in the qualitative or mixed methods studies. This study used qualitative analysis implementing the SPIDER framework. The goal of this framework was to locate related research articles that reported empirical findings on the principal leadership and decision making skills to the teachers’ turnover. It was heavily dependent on the researcher’s analytic and integrative skills and personal knowledge of the social context where the data was collected. Through a systematic review, the heterogeneity between the studies was minimized which included study regions, authorship collaboration, databases and their uniform resource locator URL , design, and participants and sample size. The examined studies suggested that principals need to understand, that in order to retain qualified teachers, they need to appreciate, respect, empower, and support them in a positive school culture. It was noted that principals have to focus well on creating a positive, supportive environment in their schools as people oriented leaders. The study highlighted teachers’ perceptions of the principals based on their leadership behavior and decision making skills that impacted their position to remain or leave the institution. Cherrie N. Paniamogan "The Decision Making Skills of Principals and the Teacher Turnover: A Qualitative Systematic Review" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-7 | Issue-1 , February 2023, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd52727.pdf Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/humanities-and-the-arts/education/52727/the-decision-making-skills-of-principals-and-the-teacher-turnover-a-qualitative-systematic-review/cherrie-n-paniamogan
How To Write A Conclusion Paragraph Examples - BobbyDaniel Wachtel
The document discusses isolation as a major theme in Shakespeare's play Othello. It states that while jealousy is the most important defining theme, isolation also plays a significant role. It explores how Shakespeare uses various literary techniques to examine the themes of jealousy and isolation in Othello and how these themes take on different forms in Othello compared to the other text being discussed due to their differing contexts.
The Great Importance Of Custom Research Paper WritiDaniel Wachtel
Venezuela is a South American country with natural beauty but economic challenges. It has varied landscapes from beaches to mountains. However, the country has experienced high inflation and shortages of basic goods in recent years under its socialist government.
Contenu connexe
Similaire à Adaptive Master S Dissertation Supervision A Longitudinal Case Study
Running head: EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH 1
EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH 2
Translating Educational Research into Practice
Problem
For a long time, education research has not been able to impact classroom instructional practices and educational policies. Educational based researchers argue that their primary work is to research the various aspects of learning and teaching to then present their findings at various conferences and publishing them in different educational journals. Their busy schedule does not allow them to train practitioners (Powney & Watts, 2018). On the other hand, practitioners are busy concentrating on there, and they do not have time to review new literature. This brings up the question as to who is responsible for this gap. In the real sense, there should be a connection between the two, and both parties should play a role in bridging this gap.
Practices, Policies, and Procedures That Have Led to the Problem
There are various reasons for this persistent gap between the teaching practices that teachers use and the guidance that educational research provides. However, three of them stand out. They include the trustworthiness issue, teacher preparation issues, and the research practice issue. The trustworthiness issue comes in because much of the published educational research and disseminated to teachers, policymakers and researchers are often not good and of uneven quality. Research is incredibly demanding, and it is not always possible to choose the most appropriate methodological approach. It is essential that the methodology is applied rigorously whether it is for qualitative or quantitative research (Suter, 2012).
Teachers, on the other hand, want to provide quality education to their children. When they turn into research to aid in teaching, their main expectation is that the information they get is trustworthy. If the information is not trustworthy both the teacher and the student will fail terribly. The teachers also have to be prepared. The applicability and relevance of a research finding will be minimal if the administrators and teachers are unable to access the data, unable to develop strategies for implementing the research findings and do not understand or are unable to interpret the research findings in a meaningful and accurate manner (Fenwick, Edwards, & Sawchuk, 2012).
While teacher preparation and research trustworthiness play significant roles in determining the extent to which research informs instructional practices and educational policies, a fundamental problem is our inability to understand and identify an environment where the research findings can be applied in complex school systems as well as classrooms. While specific strategies, instructional models and approaches may be useful in a setting that is controlled, there is scanty information about the factors that impede or foster application of these modalities under varying contexts and among diverse teachers and students' pop.
A participant research for learning methodology on education doctorial traini...Aziz Ahmad
This document outlines a participatory research methodology used in a doctoral training program. Key points:
1. Doctoral students formed research dyads to study what influenced their decisions to pursue doctoral studies. They wrote narratives, interviewed each other, and discussed their educational trajectories.
2. The collaborative approach aimed to give students hands-on experience with research methods while reflecting on their own doctoral journeys. Project meetings and data provided opportunities to learn about methodology.
3. The methodology was intended to provide an alternative to more common forms of doctoral training like lectures. By actively participating in their own research, students could gain deep reflections on what brought them to doctoral study while learning research skills.
The University Archives must decide whether to upgrade its existing information management system or purchase new software. It has two weeks to submit a funding proposal to take advantage of upcoming available funds, or it will have to wait two years for more money. The Archives developed its current Paradox-based system in 1988 but has found it inflexible and problematic over time. It now aims to expand the system's capabilities but faces the upcoming retirement of a key staff member familiar with the existing software.
This document summarizes a doctoral summer school held in 2007 on fundamentals of management research. Over the course of 5 days, 17 doctoral students participated in sessions covering various aspects of the research process. Topics included orienting to research, philosophy and practice of management research, the hypothetico-deductive research model, identifying research topics, qualitative research methods, and the human side of research including ethics and publishing. The summer school aimed to improve doctoral education by introducing students to research concepts, skills, and challenges through workshops, exercises, and demonstrations.
Rethinking the dissertation: avoiding throwing the baby out with the bathwater.Simon Haslett
Handout to accompany the keynote workshop by Professor Mick Healey (University of Gloucestershire) at the Research-Teaching Practice in Wales Conference, 9th September 2013, at the University of Wales, Gregynog Hall. The accompanying slidecast presentation may be found at http://www.slideshare.net/stemwales/rethinking-the-dissertation
By Hazel SmithThe Doctoral IdentityEssential QuestionsTawnaDelatorrejs
By Hazel Smith
The Doctoral Identity
Essential Questions
What are some common reasons that individuals choose to seek a doctoral degree?
What academic and professional dispositions should doctoral learners embrace and demonstrate?
How are expectations for learners different at a master’s level than the doctoral level?
In reviewing one’s weekly commitments, how much time and rigor will the dissertation journey require?
What is the role of the scholar versus the practitioner?
What is scholarly writing and what does this mean for the doctoral learner?
Introduction
Individuals embarking on a doctoral journey are novice researchers. Novice researchers encounter multiple
academic demands couched in an intensive scholarly culture (Baker & Pifer, 2011). The ease with which
doctoral learners adapt to these changes and demands is predictive of their completion rates. In essence, the
doctoral journey is much more intense than prior academic programs. Therefore, learners can expect multiple
personal, emotional, and academic challenges. This chapter focuses on developing and internalizing the
doctoral identity that emerges from being a novice doctoral learner at the beginning of a program, to becoming
an in�uential scholar who actively contributes to a specialized discipline upon graduation.
Reasons for Pursuing a Doctorate
According to Ivankova and Stick (2007), a con�uence of elements motivate learners to pursue a doctoral
degree. For some, motivators may be intrinsic, such as the desire to acquire additional academic skills or to
engage in the thrill of authentic research. The desire to deepen already acquired knowledge coupled with the
drive to research unchartered areas in a given �eld underpins these intrinsic elements. Extrinsic reasons such
as the desire to embark on a new career cause others to pursue a doctorate. According to Ivankova and Stick
(2007), here are some of the common reasons for pursuing a doctorate:
To increase earning potential
To enhance professional self-esteem and con�dence
To earn respect from peers and colleagues
To expand scholarly writing skills couched in peer reviews and feedback
To hone research and publishing expertise
To acquire professional collaboration skills in higher education
To improve interpersonal communication skills
To �nd one’s purpose and thirst for knowledge
To contribute original research to the knowledge based in one’s �eld of interest
To demonstrate intellectual potential
To achieve long-term professional goals.
In sum, learners have many intrinsic and extrinsic reasons for pursuing a doctorate. While the reason differs
for each individual, keeping the reason in focus helps retain momentum as the program moves along.
Professional Dispositions of Doctoral Learners
The College of Doctoral Studies (CDS) at Grand Canyon University (GCU) has laid out comprehensive
dispositions, or characteristics, for learners to adopt as they embark on and undertake their doctoral deg ...
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publicati.docxkaylee7wsfdubill
See discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272758407
Leadership and Decision-making: A Study on Reflexive Relationship Between
Leadership Style and Decision-making Approach
Article · January 2014
DOI: 10.9734/BJESBS/2014/5514
CITATIONS
3
READS
9,938
1 author:
Some of the authors of this publication are also working on these related projects:
Exploring the role of distance learning administrators in facilitating communication between instructors and learners in digital age View project
Imam Al-Ghazali Project View project
Bakare Kazeem Kayode
Al-Madinah International University
21 PUBLICATIONS 69 CITATIONS
SEE PROFILE
All content following this page was uploaded by Bakare Kazeem Kayode on 04 October 2016.
The user has requested enhancement of the downloaded file.
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272758407_Leadership_and_Decision-making_A_Study_on_Reflexive_Relationship_Between_Leadership_Style_and_Decision-making_Approach?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_2&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/272758407_Leadership_and_Decision-making_A_Study_on_Reflexive_Relationship_Between_Leadership_Style_and_Decision-making_Approach?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_3&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/project/Exploring-the-role-of-distance-learning-administrators-in-facilitating-communication-between-instructors-and-learners-in-digital-age?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_9&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/project/Imam-Al-Ghazali-Project?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_9&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_1&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Bakare_Kazeem_Kayode?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_4&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Bakare_Kazeem_Kayode?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNTA4NTIxMDNAMTQ3NTU4Nzc1MTkwOQ%3D%3D&el=1_x_5&_esc=publicationCoverPdf
https://www.researchgate.net/institution/Al-Madinah_International_University?enrichId=rgreq-48fae9502435ab873ef499b80a44acc1-XXX&enrichSource=Y292ZXJQYWdlOzI3Mjc1ODQwNztBUzo0MTM0NTkxNT.
This document provides an overview of how reading research can enhance professional development for educators. It discusses that research has value in addressing practical problems, challenging assumptions, and suggesting new strategies, though it cannot be the sole guide for practice. The document outlines different types of research purposes, including basic, applied, evaluation and action research. It also contrasts quantitative and qualitative research methods. The overall message is that critically reading research fosters reflection on practice and supports professional growth, even if published research has limitations.
The document discusses strategies for success in doctoral programs. It begins by outlining learning experiences prior to doctoral studies, including undergraduate education, research experience, and work experience. It then explains that doctoral learning requires autonomy and self-direction. A literature review identifies key strategies such as time management, effective communication, mentorship, self-care, and goal-setting. The document concludes by recommending students develop a plan that incorporates prioritizing tasks, communicating, seeking guidance, maintaining work-life balance, and setting goals.
Workplace Engagement, Generational Considerations, and Cultural .docxambersalomon88660
This document discusses several topics related to workplace engagement and culture, including:
1) Research shows engaged employees are happier and more committed to their organizations, leading to lower stress and turnover. However, employees want meaningful work and flexible schedules to feel committed.
2) There are currently five generations in the global workforce with different needs, making it difficult to please all employees. Younger generations are moving into leadership roles.
3) Cultural differences between individualistic and collectivist societies, communication styles, and other factors present both opportunities and challenges for global companies.
This document summarizes a presentation given by Dr. Merilyn Childs about redesigning a Higher Degree Research (HDR) Supervision Enhancement Program from a training model to a model focused on lifelong learning. The presentation discusses limitations of the traditional training approach and proposes a more balanced approach incorporating self-directed, interest-driven learning and redesigning learning policies and practices. The goal is to better connect strategies for HDR supervisor development to theories of institutional change and digital literacies needed in today's academic environment. Feedback so far on the redesign has been positive and the program aims to further progress and evaluate changes in 2017.
From “training” to “learning in a digital age” in an HDR Supervision Enhance...Merilyn Childs
This document summarizes a presentation given by Dr. Merilyn Childs about redesigning a Higher Degree Research (HDR) Supervision Enhancement Program from a training model to a model focused on lifelong learning. The presentation discusses limitations of the traditional training approach and proposes a more balanced approach incorporating self-directed, interest-driven learning and redesigning learning policies and practices. The goal is to better connect strategies for HDR supervisor development to theories of institutional change and digital literacies needed in today's academic environment. Feedback so far on initial stages of redesign has been positive.
Running head IDENTITY AND DEFEND1DOCTORAL IDENTITY 4.docxwlynn1
Running head: IDENTITY AND DEFEND 1
DOCTORAL IDENTITY 4
The Transition of Doctoral student into independent scholar
Grand Canyon University
RES 850
January 20, 2020.
Pifer, M. J., & Baker, V. L. (2016). Stage-based challenges and strategies for support in doctoral education: A practical guide for students, faculty members, and program administrators. International Journal of Doctoral Studies, 11(1), 15-34.
The current article, which appears in, International Journal of Doctoral Studies, is authored by experienced doctoral authors, Meghan J. Pifer and Vicki L. Baker. The authors synthesize a research concerning doctoral studies by systematically considering how the research on doctoral studies can best inform the scholars and their supporters in the doctoral journey. (Pifer and Baker, 2016)
In their findings, these authors bring out three primary phases of doctoral education: Knowledge consumption (first-years joining school and cultivating their identities as doctoral learners); knowledge creation (the candidacy exams, coursework completion and development of the proposal, defense and dissertation); and knowledge enactment (learners endorse the sociocultural and technical knowledge they gained to engross scholar roles).
These authors assert that program effectiveness and success of the student in the doctoral journey would be promoted and elevated through effective communication of policies and guidelines, acceptance and support of culture, resource investment, and regular and frequent feedbacks by faculty administrators and members concluded by reminding those in the doctoral process on the importance of comprehending the three stages and therefore creating awareness of the potential challenges through their transition in the doctoral journey. (Pifer and Baker, 2016)
They encourage proactive responses to the challenges. However, this stage model research and experiences are analyzed from the authors’ own perspective and therefore influenced by their academic biases. (Pifer and Baker, 2016)
Smith, A. E., & Hatmaker, D. M. (2014). Knowing, doing, and becoming: professional identity construction among public affairs doctoral students. Journal of Public Affairs Education, 20(4), 545-564.
This article, found in the Journal of Public Affairs Education, has been authored by Amy E. Smith and Deneen M. Hatmaker, who are prominent leaders in public universities. They examine the process of training and preparing doctoral scholars to become researchers in public domains. The article highlights the construction processes of professional identity and socialization as the primary elements in this public domain doctoral process. It asserts that professional socialization enhances the development of knowledge and the skills which brace the doctoral students for a better understanding of the expectations, behavior, and cultural norms. As a result, the students become fit for carrying out research.
Prof.
This is a North Central University paper about analyzing emperimental research designs. It is written in APA format, includes references, and is graded an instructor.
DetailsBefore beginning the synthesis process, it is important .docxsimonithomas47935
Details:
Before beginning the synthesis process, it is important to become acquainted with the analysis and comparison of empirical articles. In the previous assignment, you engaged with the Comparison Matrix, a tool for analysis and comparison of empirical articles. In this assignment, you will take the next step toward synthesis and write about your observations of the articles you compared using the Comparison Matrix.
General Requirements:
Use the following information to ensure successful completion of the assignment:
· Refer to the Comparison Matrix you completed
· Review: Weidman, J. C., & Stein, E. L. (2003). Socialization of doctoral students to academic norms. Research in Higher Education, 44(6), 641-656.
· Review: Baker, V., & Lattuca, L. R. (2010). Developmental networks and learning: toward an interdisciplinary perspective on identity development during doctoral study. Studies in Higher Education, 35(7), 807-827.
· Review: Visser, L., Visser, Y. L., & Schlosser, C. (2003). Critical thinking distance education and traditional education. Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 4(4), 401-407.
· Doctoral learners are required to use APA style for their writing assignments.
Directions:
Locate the Comparison Matrix you completed in the Module 2 assignment. Using the outline you developed, the information from the Comparison Matrix. Write a paper (1,000 words) that compares all three of the articles. Do that by including the following:
1. A statement of common elements and themes addressed in each of the three articles.
2. A statement of the conclusions that can be drawn when the articles are taken together as a single entity. What is the overall message of the group of articles?
WRITING ASSIGNMENT
The paper should include the following:
WORD COUNT: 1500 words max.
Introduction. The introduction should engage the reader with a strong opening statement. It should also provide context for the paper, introduce the researchers and their studies (including the purpose of the studies), and include a thesis statement that serves as a roadmap for the reader.
Comparison of Research Questions. Open the section with a sentence that engages the reader and gives a peak into your analysis. Please discuss the main ideas behind the research questions, as well as the researcher’s approach to exploring these questions. Did they use mixed methods, quantitative, or qualitative methods? Mention the number of hypotheses (quantitative) or research questions (qualitative), but do not list the research questions. Remember to compare the approaches and discuss similarities and differences.
Comparison of Literature Reviews. This section should analyze the research the authors use to support their studies. Do not take this section lightly. You want to point out the theory and/or main research the author’s used to set up their study, and if possible mention why. Did all the studies take the same approach, such as using similar authors for support? Do they al.
EBPby Anqi ZhengSubmission dat e 13- Mar- 2019 1238PMEvonCanales257
EBP
by Anqi Zheng
Submission dat e : 13- Mar- 2019 12:38PM (UT C+1100)
Submission ID: 109236554 6
File name : 2328228_Anqi_Z heng_EBP_2110903_1884 3357 81.do cx
Word count : 3650
Charact e r count : 20395
1
2
3
Awk.
4
5
6
Awk.
FINAL GRADE
7/20
EBP
GRADEMARK REPORT
GENERAL COMMENTS
Instructor
Erica,
Your assignme nt has be e n awarde d t he mark of 7 /20 , which t ranslat e s t o a
Fail.
Your Evide nce - Base d Pract ice Asse ssme nt has be e n marke d using t he
crit e ria se t out in t he course out line . Ple ase re ad and t ake not e of t he
spe cif ic comme nt s include d wit hin t he body of your work, and t he f ollowing,
more ge ne ral, comme nt s base d on t he assignme nt crit e ria.
An unde rst anding of t he t ask and it s re lat ionship t o t he t he ory, re se arch and
pract ice of classroom manage me nt , was not we ll de monst rat e d.
T he art icle s you chose f or t he asse ssme nt we re not appropriat e , as t he y
we re not art icle s de scribing re se arch st udie s t hat support t he use of t he
e vide nce base d pract ice s on t he list provide d. T his made it ne arly impossible
f or you t o addre ss t he prompt s in t he mat rix corre ct ly and e f f e ct ive ly.
T he submission was above t he 3,0 0 0 word le ngt h re quire me nt by 10 %.
Your use of ke y t e rms and conce pt s lacke d clarit y and accuracy at t ime s.
Your unde rst anding of ke y classroom manage me nt principle s and issue s was
not cle arly e vide nt .
You subst ant iat e d t he use of e vide nce base d pract ice s in part t wo of t he
asse ssme nt , and but f aile d t o provide an e xplanat ion of how t e ache rs could
de t e rmine if a pract ice had an e vide nce base t o support it s use . You also re -
summarise d some of t he mat e rial f rom part 1, which was inappropriat e .
Your re sponse was support e d by a range of pe e r re vie we d lit e rat ure .
Your assignme nt was ade quat e ly st ruct ure d, but t he product lacke d bot h
clarit y and cohe re nce . T his was cause d by e rrors in se nt e nce st ruct ure ,
vocabulary, spe lling and punct uat ion.
As pe r t he S cho o l o f Educat io n asse ssm e nt po licy, yo u m ay re subm it t his asse ssm e nt
f o r a m ark no gre at e r t han a 10 /20 . Yo u will subm it t his re subm issio n t o t he
re subm issio n bo x o n t he co urse ’s Mo o dle sit e . Yo u have t wo we e ks t o subm it , so yo u
m ay want t o m ake an appo int m e nt t o se e m e t o go o ve r yo ur asse ssm e nt .
QM
PAGE 1
PAGE 2
Comment 1
T his article describes mo re than o ne EBP, so yo ur answers to the pro mpts f o r this EBP lack clarity and co herence.
PAGE 3
Comment 2
T his is no t an appro priate article f o r this assessment as it do es no t describe a study used to pro vide evidence to suppo rt the
use o f ...
The Decision Making Skills of Principals and the Teacher Turnover A Qualitati...ijtsrd
The study dealt on the decision making skills of the principals and their related behaviors as perceived by the teachers pertaining to teacher turnover as documented in the qualitative or mixed methods studies. This study used qualitative analysis implementing the SPIDER framework. The goal of this framework was to locate related research articles that reported empirical findings on the principal leadership and decision making skills to the teachers’ turnover. It was heavily dependent on the researcher’s analytic and integrative skills and personal knowledge of the social context where the data was collected. Through a systematic review, the heterogeneity between the studies was minimized which included study regions, authorship collaboration, databases and their uniform resource locator URL , design, and participants and sample size. The examined studies suggested that principals need to understand, that in order to retain qualified teachers, they need to appreciate, respect, empower, and support them in a positive school culture. It was noted that principals have to focus well on creating a positive, supportive environment in their schools as people oriented leaders. The study highlighted teachers’ perceptions of the principals based on their leadership behavior and decision making skills that impacted their position to remain or leave the institution. Cherrie N. Paniamogan "The Decision Making Skills of Principals and the Teacher Turnover: A Qualitative Systematic Review" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-7 | Issue-1 , February 2023, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd52727.pdf Paper URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/humanities-and-the-arts/education/52727/the-decision-making-skills-of-principals-and-the-teacher-turnover-a-qualitative-systematic-review/cherrie-n-paniamogan
How To Write A Conclusion Paragraph Examples - BobbyDaniel Wachtel
The document discusses isolation as a major theme in Shakespeare's play Othello. It states that while jealousy is the most important defining theme, isolation also plays a significant role. It explores how Shakespeare uses various literary techniques to examine the themes of jealousy and isolation in Othello and how these themes take on different forms in Othello compared to the other text being discussed due to their differing contexts.
The Great Importance Of Custom Research Paper WritiDaniel Wachtel
Venezuela is a South American country with natural beauty but economic challenges. It has varied landscapes from beaches to mountains. However, the country has experienced high inflation and shortages of basic goods in recent years under its socialist government.
Free Writing Paper Template With Bo. Online assignment writing service.Daniel Wachtel
Here are the key points regarding ethics and morality in vegetarianism:
- Vegetarianism is based on the belief that animals have moral worth and we should not cause them unnecessary harm and suffering. Meat consumption and animal agriculture involve treating sentient beings in ways that most would not consider ethical.
- Eating meat when alternatives are available is seen by some as an unnecessary taking of animal life. Vegetarians argue we should avoid killing animals or supporting industries involved in animal exploitation when we can reasonably do otherwise.
- Some view animal agriculture as inherently cruel and believe it is unethical to confine, transport, and slaughter animals against their will. The conditions animals are often subjected to on factory farms are considered inhumane by
How To Write A 5 Page Essay - Capitalize My TitleDaniel Wachtel
The nursing assistant student was shadowing an anesthesiologist during a knee surgery where the patient was given Halothane. After two hours, the patient began showing signs of distress with an elevated temperature of 105°F, increased pulse of 120 bpm, and lowered blood pressure of 60/56 mmHg. This triggered the monitor alarms. The doctors quickly assessed the situation and it is possible the Halothane triggered a genetically predisposed condition in the patient.
Sample Transfer College Essay Templates At AllbuDaniel Wachtel
This document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment. 5) Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, with a full refund option for plagiarism. The goal is to match clients with qualified writers and deliver high-quality, original content through a transparent process.
White Pen To Write On Black Paper. Online assignment writing service.Daniel Wachtel
The document discusses the influence of ancient Egyptian religion on modern religions such as Judaism and Christianity. It notes that Egypt is considered the birthplace of many world religions due to its early religious artifacts, texts, and art that can be traced back to modern faiths. Scholars have studied the development of ancient Egyptian religion over centuries and its direct correlation with and possible conscious adaptation influencing the origins of Judaism. Elements of Egyptian pagan beliefs and deity legends were also unconsciously transferred and reformed in stories of Christianity in its early centuries.
Thanksgiving Writing Paper By Catherine S TeachersDaniel Wachtel
The document discusses the debate around whether violent video games have negative effects on teenagers. Some research has found links between violent video game exposure and increased aggressive behavior. However, others argue that as video game sales have increased, juvenile crime rates have decreased, suggesting video games may provide a safe outlet for aggression. The debate remains ongoing about the real impact of violent video games on teenagers.
The document outlines a 5-step process for requesting and receiving writing help from the site HelpWriting.net. Students must first create an account, then submit a request form providing instructions and deadlines. Writers will bid on the request and students can choose a writer, make a deposit, and receive the completed paper which can then be revised if needed.
Who Can Help Me Write An Essay - HelpcoachS DiaryDaniel Wachtel
The document provides instructions for getting help writing an essay through the HelpWriting.net website. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with an email and password. 2) Complete a form with assignment details. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment. 5) Request revisions until satisfied. The website promises original, high-quality papers and refunds for plagiarized work.
Persuasive Writing Essays - The Oscillation BandDaniel Wachtel
Western Oregon University is a medium-sized public university located in Monmouth, Oregon. It has around 83 majors and an estimated total annual cost of $21,838 for students living on campus. The university offers intramural sports, clubs, and activities. It prides itself on small class sizes that allow for one-on-one time with professors. Graduation rates are around 33-43% within 4-5 years.
Write Essay On An Ideal Teacher Essay Writing English - YouTubeDaniel Wachtel
The document provides instructions for submitting a paper writing request to the website HelpWriting.net, including creating an account, completing an order form with instructions and sources, and reviewing writer bids before selecting a writer and placing a deposit to start the assignment. It notes that customers can request revisions until satisfied and will receive a full refund if the paper is plagiarized.
How To Exploit Your ProfessorS Marking GuiDaniel Wachtel
The document discusses themes of imperfection in Nathaniel Hawthorne's novel The Scarlet Letter. It notes how all the main characters are flawed in some way, from Hester Prynne's adultery to Reverend Dimmesdale's secrecy and guilt. The minister struggles with his sin and imperfect nature, hiding his role in Hester's punishment for years until revealing the truth on the scaffold. The novel explores how humans are imperfect and explores themes of sin, guilt, and the struggle between outward morality and inward nature.
Word Essay Professional Writ. Online assignment writing service.Daniel Wachtel
The document summarizes Katsu Kokichi's autobiography "Musui's Story", which documents the life of a samurai in late Tokugawa period Japan. It describes how Katsu struggled to find purpose as the power of samurai decayed. Throughout the story, Katsu is impacted by the interconnected systems of imperial, shogunate, and economic power that shaped his life and society at the time. The challenges of economic power are also depicted through temptations like drinking, gambling, and prostitution that plagued men during that period.
How To Write A Thesis And Outline. How To Write A ThDaniel Wachtel
1. 3D printing is a process that creates three-dimensional solid objects from digital designs. It works by laying down successive layers of material until the entire object is constructed.
2. There are different types of 3D printing that can be useful for businesses, education, and home use. As technology advances and costs decrease, 3D printing is becoming more common.
3. While 3D printing brings advantages like reduced errors, it may also impact jobs as some tasks become automated. Overall, 3D printing has many applications and its use is expected to continue growing over time.
Write My Essay Cheap Order Cu. Online assignment writing service.Daniel Wachtel
This study examined the effects of high hydrostatic pressure processing on the chemical characteristics of different cuts of lamb meat. Samples of lamb shoulder, leg and loin were subjected to pressures of 200, 400 and 600 MPa for 3, 5 and 10 minutes. The processed meat was then analyzed to determine changes in pH, moisture content, fat content and protein solubility compared to untreated controls. The results showed that high pressure processing led to increases in protein solubility and decreases in fat content, with more pronounced effects at higher pressures and longer times. The changes varied between the different lamb cuts.
Importance Of English Language Essay Essay On Importance Of EnDaniel Wachtel
Here are a few key steps to help build trust and gain support for the transition to standards-based grading in the Fine Arts department:
1. Gather and share data from other schools that have successfully implemented SBG. Showing concrete examples of how it has benefited students and teachers can help alleviate concerns.
2. Collaborate extensively with teachers. Get regular feedback on the transition process. Address challenges early and be open to suggestions. Working as a team will build trust in the leadership.
3. Provide opportunities for peer training and observation. Allowing teachers to learn from each other and see SBG in action firsthand will reassure them and create department unity in supporting the change.
4. Communicate regularly about
The document provides instructions for requesting and receiving a paper writing assignment through the HelpWriting.net website. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a form with assignment details. 3) Review writer bids and choose one. 4) Review the completed paper. 5) Request revisions if needed, as HelpWriting.net provides free revisions.
Essay Writing Service Recommendation WebsitesDaniel Wachtel
The poem describes the emotions of a defendant as they await the jury's verdict, their heart sinking as the judge pounds the gavel to announce the verdict of "Guilty." Though proclaiming their innocence and wanting a chance to tell their side of the story, the defendant has their fate accepted as the justice system has seemingly failed them by convicting without truly proving the evidence against them.
Critical Essay Personal Philosophy Of Nursing EssaDaniel Wachtel
The document discusses the process for requesting an assignment writing service from HelpWriting.net. It outlines 5 steps: 1) Create an account, 2) Complete an order form providing instructions and deadline, 3) Review bids from writers and select one, 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment, 5) Request revisions to ensure satisfaction. It emphasizes HelpWriting.net's commitment to original, high-quality work and full refunds for plagiarized content.
Terrorism Essay In English For Students (400 Easy Words)Daniel Wachtel
The document discusses the steps to request writing assistance from HelpWriting.net. It involves creating an account, completing an order form providing instructions and deadline, and reviewing writer bids before choosing one and placing a deposit to start the assignment. Customers can request revisions until satisfied with the final paper and receive a refund if the paper is plagiarized.
How to Make a Field Mandatory in Odoo 17Celine George
In Odoo, making a field required can be done through both Python code and XML views. When you set the required attribute to True in Python code, it makes the field required across all views where it's used. Conversely, when you set the required attribute in XML views, it makes the field required only in the context of that particular view.
Temple of Asclepius in Thrace. Excavation resultsKrassimira Luka
The temple and the sanctuary around were dedicated to Asklepios Zmidrenus. This name has been known since 1875 when an inscription dedicated to him was discovered in Rome. The inscription is dated in 227 AD and was left by soldiers originating from the city of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv).
This document provides an overview of wound healing, its functions, stages, mechanisms, factors affecting it, and complications.
A wound is a break in the integrity of the skin or tissues, which may be associated with disruption of the structure and function.
Healing is the body’s response to injury in an attempt to restore normal structure and functions.
Healing can occur in two ways: Regeneration and Repair
There are 4 phases of wound healing: hemostasis, inflammation, proliferation, and remodeling. This document also describes the mechanism of wound healing. Factors that affect healing include infection, uncontrolled diabetes, poor nutrition, age, anemia, the presence of foreign bodies, etc.
Complications of wound healing like infection, hyperpigmentation of scar, contractures, and keloid formation.
ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, and GDPR: Best Practices for Implementation and...PECB
Denis is a dynamic and results-driven Chief Information Officer (CIO) with a distinguished career spanning information systems analysis and technical project management. With a proven track record of spearheading the design and delivery of cutting-edge Information Management solutions, he has consistently elevated business operations, streamlined reporting functions, and maximized process efficiency.
Certified as an ISO/IEC 27001: Information Security Management Systems (ISMS) Lead Implementer, Data Protection Officer, and Cyber Risks Analyst, Denis brings a heightened focus on data security, privacy, and cyber resilience to every endeavor.
His expertise extends across a diverse spectrum of reporting, database, and web development applications, underpinned by an exceptional grasp of data storage and virtualization technologies. His proficiency in application testing, database administration, and data cleansing ensures seamless execution of complex projects.
What sets Denis apart is his comprehensive understanding of Business and Systems Analysis technologies, honed through involvement in all phases of the Software Development Lifecycle (SDLC). From meticulous requirements gathering to precise analysis, innovative design, rigorous development, thorough testing, and successful implementation, he has consistently delivered exceptional results.
Throughout his career, he has taken on multifaceted roles, from leading technical project management teams to owning solutions that drive operational excellence. His conscientious and proactive approach is unwavering, whether he is working independently or collaboratively within a team. His ability to connect with colleagues on a personal level underscores his commitment to fostering a harmonious and productive workplace environment.
Date: May 29, 2024
Tags: Information Security, ISO/IEC 27001, ISO/IEC 42001, Artificial Intelligence, GDPR
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Find out more about ISO training and certification services
Training: ISO/IEC 27001 Information Security Management System - EN | PECB
ISO/IEC 42001 Artificial Intelligence Management System - EN | PECB
General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) - Training Courses - EN | PECB
Webinars: https://pecb.com/webinars
Article: https://pecb.com/article
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For more information about PECB:
Website: https://pecb.com/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pecb/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PECBInternational/
Slideshare: http://www.slideshare.net/PECBCERTIFICATION
Strategies for Effective Upskilling is a presentation by Chinwendu Peace in a Your Skill Boost Masterclass organisation by the Excellence Foundation for South Sudan on 08th and 09th June 2024 from 1 PM to 3 PM on each day.
Communicating effectively and consistently with students can help them feel at ease during their learning experience and provide the instructor with a communication trail to track the course's progress. This workshop will take you through constructing an engaging course container to facilitate effective communication.
हिंदी वर्णमाला पीपीटी, hindi alphabet PPT presentation, hindi varnamala PPT, Hindi Varnamala pdf, हिंदी स्वर, हिंदी व्यंजन, sikhiye hindi varnmala, dr. mulla adam ali, hindi language and literature, hindi alphabet with drawing, hindi alphabet pdf, hindi varnamala for childrens, hindi language, hindi varnamala practice for kids, https://www.drmullaadamali.com
Adaptive Master S Dissertation Supervision A Longitudinal Case Study
1. This is a repository copy of Adaptive master's dissertation supervision: a longitudinal case
study.
White Rose Research Online URL for this paper:
http://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/116947/
Version: Accepted Version
Article:
Harwood, N. orcid.org/0000-0002-9474-4865 and Petric, B. (2020) Adaptive master's
dissertation supervision: a longitudinal case study. Teaching in Higher Education, 25 (1).
pp. 68-83. ISSN 1356-2517
https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2018.1541881
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Teaching in
Higher Education on 14/11/2018, available online:
http://www.tandfonline.com/10.1080/13562517.2018.1541881
eprints@whiterose.ac.uk
https://eprints.whiterose.ac.uk/
Reuse
Items deposited in White Rose Research Online are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved unless
indicated otherwise. They may be downloaded and/or printed for private study, or other acts as permitted by
national copyright laws. The publisher or other rights holders may allow further reproduction and re-use of
the full text version. This is indicated by the licence information on the White Rose Research Online record
for the item.
Takedown
If you consider content in White Rose Research Online to be in breach of UK law, please notify us by
emailing eprints@whiterose.ac.uk including the URL of the record and the reason for the withdrawal request.
2. 1
Adaptive master's dissertation supervision: a longitudinal case study
Nigel Harwood and Bojana Petrić
Dr Nigel Harwood [Corresponding author]
School of English
University of Sheffield
Jessop West
1 Upper Hanover Street
Sheffield S3 7RA
UK
Tel: +44 (0)114 222 8464
Fax: +44 (0)114 222 8481
Email: n.harwood@sheffield.ac.uk
Dr Bojana Petrić
Dept of Applied Linguistics and Communication
Birkbeck, University of London
26 Russell Square,
London WC1B 5DQ
UK
Tel: +44(0)207 631 6610
Email: b.petric@bbk.ac.uk
Funding:
This work was supported by a Language Learning Small Research Grant.
3. 2
Adaptive master's dissertation supervision: a longitudinal case study
Drawing on supervisor and supervisee interviews, analysis of supervisor feedback on
the supervisee’s draft chapters, and departmental supervisory guidelines, this study
focuses on the roles a master’s dissertation supervisor plays during the course of
supervision. These roles are discussed referring to models of supervisory pedagogy,
the teaching, partnership, apprenticeship, contractual, pastoral, and non-interfering
models. Supervisee and supervisor agreed that the supervisor aligned with different
roles at different times for different purposes, showing this was a case of adaptive
supervision. Nonetheless, the supervisor’s feedback indicated supervision was more
directive than his interview data suggested, illustrating the need to collect data from
multiple sources to capture the complexities of the supervisory dynamic. We conclude
that the dangers of departments attempting to formulate homogenized supervisory
practices are highlighted by our case.
What roles do master’s supervisors adopt? To what extent do these roles change?
When? Why? How? We address these questions against the backdrop of a rise of
master’s programmes worldwide, many of which feature a supervised dissertation
component, exploring the supervision of a master’s social science international
student at a UK university.
We focus on supervisory roles at master’s level for several reasons. While there is
much research looking at doctoral level supervision, there has been less focus on
master’s contexts generally and on elucidating supervisory roles specifically.
Furthermore, there is uncertainty about the appropriacy of various roles the
4. 3
supervisor/supervisee can adopt (Grant 2010). This uncertainty may partly stem from
the range of roles available (e.g., Barnes & Austin 2009; Brown & Atkins 1988;
Dysthe 2002; Gatfield 2005; Grant 2008; Hockey 1994, 1997; Lee 2012; Vilkinas
2005)—supervisors can intervene in different ways at various stages of the
dissertation journey, and different parties (i.e., supervisors, supervisees, university
policy makers) can have different ideas about which roles are legitimate. Indeed,
some accounts of supervisory roles are striking in their contrasts: consider the
difference in emphasis between Salmon’s (1992) belief that the supervisor should
grant supervisees the freedom to take charge of and discover the meaning of their
research for themselves and Vilkinas’ (2005) characterisation of the PhD supervisor
as a business manager ensuring speedy completion.
To complicate matters further, the literature suggests supervisees may require
different pedagogic approaches, also requiring their supervisor to occupy different
roles at different times. For instance, Brown & Atkins (1988) and Gatfield (2005)
describe scenarios where supervisors start supervision in a hands-off or directive
style, adjusting as appropriate. Thus, ‘adaptivity’ (de Kleijn et al 2015) and
‘principled responsiveness’ (Anderson et al 2006) are necessary supervisory qualities,
supervisors being required to maintain the ‘delicate balance’ between taking too
much/too little control of their supervisees’ work (Delamont et al 2000; also Ginn
2014; Rowarth & Cornforth 2005).
A seminal study describing the repertoire of supervisory roles via ‘models’ of
supervision is Dysthe (2002), particularly interesting for us because it focuses on the
master’s context, being an interview-based study of 10 supervisees and eight
5. 4
supervisors in three different fields. Dysthe identifies three models of supervisory
relationship: the teaching, partnership, and apprenticeship models. The teaching
model emphasizes ‘asymmetry, status difference, and dependency’ (p.518). The
supervisee ‘sees the supervisor as the authority and the expert whose primary job is to
correct the text’ (p.519). Supervision tends to be directive.
In contrast to the top-down teaching model, the partnership model
…is more symmetrical: the student’s thesis is seen as a joint project. […]
Feedback is presented in dialogue, and exploratory texts form a basis for
discussion. …the supervisor aims at fostering independent thinking. (p.519)
Dysthe reports partnership supervisors permitted students to take charge of their
dissertations, supervisors providing support as/when appropriate; thus supervisees
retained a sense of ownership of their work. Nonetheless, these supervisors
experienced difficulties ‘with students who prefer a teacher who tells them what to do
with their text’ (p.522).
Lastly, the apprenticeship model
…is characterized by the student’s learning by observing and performing tasks
in the company of the supervisor. […] It is distinguished from the teaching
model by its cooperative nature, often as part of a larger research team. […]
Tacit learning by being immersed in a culture and by observing and copying a
more experienced person is central…. (pp.519, 523)
Dysthe claims the three models are not mutually exclusive: a hybrid supervisory style
is possible, sometimes depending on the stage of the dissertation, although one model
tended to dominate. Supervisees differed regarding their preferred models, some
6. 5
requiring freedom to shape their project, others favouring a directive style. Additional
reasons for different supervisory approaches included disciplinary traditions,
departmental/institutional expectations (e.g., whether supervisees’ texts should be
grammatically flawless or not), and supervisors’ own preferences and beliefs about
appropriate supervisory pedagogy.
While Dysthe was interested in identifying dominant supervisory models across
departments and disciplines, our study focuses on the dynamics of a supervisory
relationship over time. We therefore adopt a longitudinal research design which
captures pedagogic changes at different stages of the journey. Our case study
approach draws on multiple data sources: hence, in addition to interviews, we analyse
the supervisor’s feedback and supervisory guidelines issued by his department. We
seek to describe supervisor and supervisee experiences in toto, our focus here of role
relationships being an important aspect of these experiences.
Methodology and Methods
Overview: A qualitative longitudinal case study approach
The data reported here is part of a larger dataset of case studies documenting the
supervisory journeys of international students and their supervisors at a UK university
(Harwood & Petrić 2017). Here we focus on the supervisory roles associated with one
of our richest cases involving ‘Billy’ (supervisor) and ‘Jay’ (supervisee,
pseudonyms). There are various interesting characteristics of the Jay/Billy case
relating to supervisory pedagogy in general and supervisory models in particular.
Billy had ‘sixteen or seventeen’ years’ supervision experience at the time of data
7. 6
collection. He had tried various supervisory approaches and is now confident in his
own practices, having strong views on appropriate pedagogy. Billy had just taken up
post at a new institution, and talked about its supervisory systems and the somewhat
contrasting expectations in his previous jobs. All of this added clarity and detail to his
narrative. Billy was also supervising outside his area of expertise, speaking of how he
knew little about Jay’s dissertation topic, a situation not uncommon in our experience
of UK dissertation supervision. Finally, in contrast to much of the literature focusing
on problematic cases of supervision, particularly where international students are
concerned, this case was particularly interesting because it illuminates how adaptive
supervision functions within a successful supervisory dyad, i.e., an experienced
supervisor and an academically strong student working in harmony.
Jay was studying a one-year master’s programme, spending five-six months on his
dissertation. We conducted regular semi-structured interviews with Jay, from the
initial stages of developing his research proposal to his final submission (see Table 1).
Qualitative semi-structured interviews can solicit in-depth accounts of participants’
‘knowledge, views, understandings, interpretations, experiences, and interactions’
(Mason 2002, p.63). Regular interviews meant the experiences Jay narrated to us were
more likely to be relatively fresh in his mind. Additionally, we examined Billy’s
feedback on Jay’s draft dissertation chapters, identifying the roles enacted. Further,
we also interviewed Billy, seeking the perspectives of both parties for a more valid
account. We also analysed departmental supervisory guidelines, asking Jay and Billy
whether their experiences aligned with the department’s regulations.
Supervisee interviews with Jay
8. 7
Given the semi-structured interview format, data about roles emerged even when Jay
was not asked about this directly. We also elicited responses by asking about
supervisory arrangements: Were these arrangements in line with his own expectations
and wishes? What responsibilities were shouldered by Billy and Jay? What happened
in supervisory meetings? What would/wouldn’t Billy help with? Which areas was
Billy willing/unwilling to comment on in feedback on drafts? We additionally
designed an interview prompt card focusing on different conceptualizations of the
supervisory role. It featured Dysthe’s (2002) teaching, partnership, and
apprenticeship supervisory models; and Gatfield’s (2005) contractual, pastoral, and
laissez-faire models1
, Jay being asked which model(s) most closely resembled the
supervision he received and would have preferred. Our prompt cards are reproduced
in Harwood & Petrić (2017); our model definitions are below.
Supervisor interview with Billy
Billy’s interview included similar questions about roles and responsibilities. We asked
about departmental supervisory regulations (e.g., permitted number of contact hours,
whether/how he was allowed to read/comment on draft chapters), and explored
whether Billy’s practices aligned with these regulations.
We used similar prompt cards to Jay’s to ask about model(s) of supervision adopted,
and pros/cons of alternative pedagogies. We also asked Billy to explain/justify the
kinds of feedback provided on draft chapters with his feedback in front of us at
interview, enabling Billy to refer to specific parts of it.
1
We preferred the term non-interfering rather than laissez-faire model as we felt its meaning would be
more transparent to interviewees. We added models from Gatfield to Dysthe’s descriptions in an
attempt to expose participants to a fuller range of potential supervisory models.
9. 8
Ethical issues
In the light of the sensitive information we uncovered, we were particularly conscious
of the need for anonymization. Hence we withhold information about participants’
discipline and department.
Data
Table 1 provides an overview of the data.
10. 9
[INSERT Table 1 HERE]
We interviewed Jay four times, collecting his drafts and Billy’s feedback, and
departmental supervisory guidelines Jay was given. We referred to these
drafts/documents during interview to help make our questions specific.
We only interviewed Billy once, at the end of supervision, but during a lengthy
interview covered a lot of ground, asking about his feedback, his department’s
supervisory guidelines, and his views on our supervisory model prompt cards.2
Coding and analysis of interview data
Both of us read and independently summarized Jay’s interview transcripts. We then
engaged in ‘collaborative coding’ (Smagorinsky 2008), comparing and contrasting
our summaries to create a code start list (see Miles & Huberman 1994). After refining
this start list by independently coding three other supervisee interviews, we
independently coded Jay and Billy’s interviews using NVivo, before conducting an
inter-rater reliability check using the Kappa coefficient test, which resulted in an
agreement rate of k=0.79 (p<0.0001) for Jay’s interview and k=0.76 for Billy’s,
considered a good level of agreement. We discussed remaining disagreements, made
further refinements, and finalized our list of codes. The repeated inter-reliability
check after these refinements showed an excellent agreement rate of k=0.97 for Jay’s
interview and k=0.95 for Billy’s.
2
Ideally, we would have interviewed Billy repeatedly like we interviewed Jay, thereby obtaining more
detailed accounts of the supervisory journey from the perspective of both. However, most supervisors
invited to participate in our study either declined or did not reply to our invitations to be interviewed,
suggesting we would have recruited even fewer supervisors had we insisted on multiple interviews.
11. 10
Because of space limitations, we cannot reproduce the codebooks here, but both are in
Harwood & Petrić (2017). Nevertheless, we highlight some pertinent codes. The SUP
ROLE and STU ROLE codes focus on how Billy and Jay see their own and each
other’s roles; and the MODEL code emerged from prompt card responses as Billy and
Jay related Dysthe and Gatfield’s conceptualizations of supervision to their own
experiences and beliefs.
Results
Billy’s supervisory pedagogy
We compare Jay and Billy’s views about which supervisory models were prominent
in Billy’s pedagogy, as well as analysing Billy’s feedback in relation to the models.
We include prompt card definitions of each model below.
Teaching Model
- Teaching Model: In this model, there is a traditional teacher—student relationship:
the supervisor is more powerful and in control, and the student is more dependent on
his/her supervisor. Feedback consists of the supervisor correcting the student’s work.
Billy stated that the teaching model typifies the kind of supervision style ‘I try to
avoid’, but concedes that total avoidance is unrealistic:
…the idea that in any supervisory relationship there isn’t a relationship of
power, of course there is. […] and I think the student at master’s level is in
many instances dependent on the supervisor. But I try to avoid it as much as
possible.
How far Billy can deviate from this model depends on the student’s capacity to take
12. 11
charge of his/her research. Billy decided early on that Jay was the ‘strongest’ of his
supervisees, and therefore allowed Jay the space to develop his own project.
However, with less able students, Billy is more directive—at least initially. Consider
his description of supervising one of Jay’s ‘very weak’ peers:
…the closest to a teaching model that I’ve had for a long time, which was
saying, ‘You can’t do this. This is not academic research…. This proposal is
unacceptable.’ And almost…formulating a research proposal for them, which
is something I usually resist doing.
Nonetheless, Billy ultimately expects even less able supervisees to produce ‘an
independent piece of work’.
Although Billy’s comments suggest that the teaching model was largely eschewed,
Jay associated this model with Billy’s feedback on his drafts, confirmed by our
textual analysis, as illustrated below.
Billy’s feedback.
Below we examine Billy’s feedback on the chapters he commented on most
extensively—Jay’s literature review and methodology.
Billy’s feedback on Jay’s literature review chapter. Billy provides teaching model-
style feedback in both literature review and methodology chapters. Recall that Jay’s
dissertation topic was outside Billy’s research expertise; nevertheless, the teaching
model predominated in Billy’s feedback. For the literature review, where Billy was
13. 12
unfamiliar with previous research, he focuses mainly on language, structure, and
argumentation rather than engaging at a deeper level of content and ideas.
Sometimes the power differences characteristic of the teaching model are manifest:
Billy uses imperative verbs (‘Cut this’) and exclamatives (‘Not an appropriate sub-
heading!’) stipulating changes Jay should make. Although other feedback is
ostensibly less directive, Billy nonetheless identifies weaknesses and signals Jay
should fix them (‘I’m not sure this reads well—it is not clear how one [phenomenon]
demonstrates the other’; ‘Okay I get this point, but I am not sure what you are arguing
overall. Is [this] a good or a bad thing?’). And where Billy leaves other decisions
about changes to Jay, Billy nonetheless stipulates what is needed. Hence in response
to Jay’s question in the draft: ‘Should I keep this statement?’, Billy writes: ‘If you
[do], you need to develop it’, the feedback being directive, evaluative.
Billy’s feedback on Jay’s methodology chapter. Jay’s project was qualitative, and
Billy’s own qualitative interests meant he could help with methodological issues.
Again, his interventions were closest to the teaching model. Early in the supervision,
Billy highlighted the parts of Jay’s previous research methods essay Jay could use for
his dissertation method chapter. Billy provided additional oral feedback at a follow-up
meeting, addressing Jay’s queries about his comments, and asked Jay to add more
sections to the chapter (e.g., about difficulties with data collection). Billy also
identified redundant content in Jay’s draft to help him reduce the chapter’s length.
14. 13
Also characteristic of a teaching model is Billy’s identification of conceptual errors,
such as Jay’s failure to properly distinguish between positivism and interpretivism;
and erroneous description of his interviews as unstructured rather than semi-
structured. As in Billy’s literature review feedback, even more indirect comments are
instructing Jay what to do and on where he has gone wrong (‘This is important stuff,
but raises the question why is this the chosen ontological position’; ‘Okay, this is fine
but it is really just a series of quotes. Why is it important and what questions does it
force you to ask?’).
Finally, there were also language-oriented comments (e.g., ‘Clarify! Do you mean
‘research design’?’; ‘Re-write’). Again the feedback is directive and closest to the
teaching model. It focuses on problems, flaws, and/or omissions, either providing Jay
with solutions or highlighting them for Jay to remedy.
We now examine the extent to which the other supervisory models were evident in
Billy’s pedagogy.
Partnership Model
- Partnership Model: In this model, the power/control differences between student and
supervisor are less than in the Teaching Model. The dissertation is seen as the joint
responsibility of the student and the supervisor: they both work together on it.
Feedback is more about discussion than correction: the supervisor listens to the
student, and the supervisor doesn’t necessarily insist his/her ideas are the right ones.
15. 14
There are lots of face-to-face meetings and/or emails which are genuine discussion,
not correction. The supervisor is aiming to make the student an independent thinker.
Jay recognised the partnership model in his supervision because of phases which
lacked top-down control by Billy. Jay described a model which was more collegial
initially, as Jay developed his project (‘we first discussed things when I was coming
up with outlines of the research’), which moved closer to the teaching model when
Jay was submitting draft chapters for comment (‘it was mostly about [Billy]
correcting’), before becoming less directive again, with Billy expecting Jay to direct
the research himself:
…once [Billy] had corrected it and once I had finished the majority of my
work then we had actually the discussion on how the research and what my
research question is and how the chapters are related to it…, but prior to that it
was mostly about correcting. …I chose the partnership model…because there
wasn’t too much power from his side in terms of him saying ‘I want this and
this’. He was flexible and he was working along with me on that rather than
just saying that ‘I want it by this time’, etc.
Billy also primarily identified with the partnership model, although he did not entirely
equate his practices with our prompt card description—he took issue with the
description of the dissertation as a ‘joint’ responsibility, arguing most responsibility
should fall on the supervisee. Similarly, he disputed partnership model feedback being
‘more about discussion than correction’ because, although this was so ‘most of the
time’, ‘there are times when you have to correct and you have to say, ‘This is
factually inaccurate or logically incoherent…’.’ (Indeed, we saw evidence of this
directive element in Billy’s feedback above.) However, Billy wholeheartedly shares
16. 15
the partnership model aim ‘to make the student an independent thinker’, preferring the
supervisee to come to their own conclusions after face-to-face discussion:
In social science, like [my discipline], every statement of fact is a statement of
interpretation, a statement of belief. […] It’s about evolution of ideas and our
understanding so it wouldn’t make sense for me to insist my ideas are the right
ones.
Hence Jay must shape his work, develop his own arguments, not take Billy’s views as
gospel. Billy seeks to build supervisees’ ‘critical capacity’ according to each student’s
abilities, and may hand over other decisions: Billy doesn’t insist on a set dissertation
structure, and previous supervisees have opted for an unconventional organization
which suited their needs. So the degree to which partnership aspects of the
supervision predominate depends on the supervisee’s aptitude and wishes.
Contractual Model
- Contractual Model: In this model, the supervisor asks the student at the beginning of
the supervision process how much/little help the student needs. The supervisor
adjusts his/her style to fit in with the needs of the student, and offers different
amounts and kinds of help depending on what his/her students want.
Jay said there was ‘a bit’ of this model in Billy’s approach, inasmuch as Billy
adjusted to some extent to how Jay was most comfortable working. Billy allowed Jay
brief, frequent meetings at short notice, which Jay claimed enabled him to quickly
resolve a question or problem, rather than having to make appointments for longer,
less frequent meetings well in advance (the departmental norm). Billy’s views on this
model initially appeared at odds with Jay’s as he disputed some of its tenets, such as
how the supervisor supposedly ‘asks the student at the beginning of the supervision
17. 16
process how much/little help the student needs’. Billy questioned whether the
supervisee is able to make this judgement (‘often the student doesn’t know how much
help they need at the beginning’). Billy also claimed that the supervisor’s power is
always greater than the supervisee’s, sitting uncomfortably with this model’s
evocation of two autonomous parties drawing up an agreement. Nonetheless, Billy
claimed to vary the control he exerts and the amount of help he provides, sometimes
in response to the student’s wishes. So Jay and Billy agreed there were a few aspects
of this model in Jay’s supervision.
Non-interfering Model
- Non-interfering Model: In this model, the supervisor assumes the student is able to do
his/her research and write his/her dissertation independently. The supervisor only
helps if asked to do so.
Jay felt this model didn’t align with Billy’s supervisory style. Although at times the
supervisory reins were quite loose, never did Jay feel Billy was laissez-faire:
It wasn’t exactly that case. He did let me work at my own pace and of course
if it was getting too late he would flag it up, “Okay this needs done
quicker”….
Billy agreed with Jay that this model didn’t feature. However, he acknowledged that
some students prefer to work without close supervision:
Non-interfering model… if a student disappears, I will chase them. If they
don’t reply, then I back off and let them get on with it and if they come back
and produce a piece of poor work, then I make the point that I offered to help
them. I arranged meetings. I would never see that as a model. I would see that
as a worst case fallback position.
Billy takes a dim view of supervisors who customarily adopt the non-interfering
18. 17
model, seeing this as driven by laziness rather than sensible beliefs about effective
pedagogy; these are the kind of supervisors he has argued with in the past for refusing
to read supervisees’ drafts:
[The supervisor had] refused to look at a draft chapter. And his line…was,
‘I’m not going to mark my own bloody work. If he hands that to me and I
make corrections, then it becomes my piece of work’. I said, ‘That’s absolute
nonsense. What do you do when you get the draft? Say, “Forget it”? You’re
going to contribute somewhere along the process.’.
Apprenticeship Model
- Apprenticeship Model: This model is often associated with laboratory or team project
work, where lots of students work with and learn from the supervisor and from more
experienced students. The student learns by observing and performing tasks in the
company of their supervisor. S/he may also give feedback to other students. Although
students and supervisor cooperate, the supervisor is in charge and in control.
Like the non-interfering model, Jay says this approach ‘wasn’t in play’. Similarly,
Billy felt the apprenticeship model ‘isn’t very relevant to what we do’ because his
students don’t work in a lab in teams or learn things from the supervisor or from more
experienced students in that setting.
Pastoral Model
- Pastoral Model: In this model, the supervisor offers help with non-academic matters,
like personal matters. S/he offers less help with academic matters unless asked to do
so.
Billy didn’t see this model ‘as a working model for a dissertation supervisor’:
‘academic matters’ are his primary concern. Nonetheless, if a supervisee wanted to
19. 18
talk about non-academic issues, Billy would listen and try to ‘advise…in terms of
where to go for help’. And although initially Jay claimed there was nothing about
Billy’s supervision style reminiscent of this model, he backtracked because of an
admission to Billy about his personal problems, concluding there was a small element
of the pastoral model in his supervision:
…the pastoral model…wasn’t there, although I did go and tell him that I was
having a bit of a problem and he said, ‘Okay, take your time…’.
However, Jay never volunteered the exact nature of the problem to Billy, and Billy
never asked; so the pastoral element of the supervision was minimal—limited to Billy
explaining Jay could apply for a submission deadline extension.
We also asked Jay and Billy their preferred approaches to supervision, thereby
eliciting more details about how supervision worked in general, and about Billy’s
supervisory pedagogy in particular. Below we describe their perspectives separately.
Jay and Billy’s preferred supervisory approaches
Jay’s preferred supervisory approach: a flexible teaching/partnership hybrid model
Some of Jay’s friends experienced more top-down, inflexible forms of supervision
than he did, their supervisors demanding strict adherence to timetables of work for
submitting draft chapters. Jay felt this approach was unhelpful because the
supervisees resorted to submitting drafts simply to meet deadlines:
…so they were under more pressure and they had to do things quicker…. In
my case…I took a longer period doing [my literature review], but once I was
20. 19
done…I covered what I had wanted to cover and I had covered what I told
Billy that I’d cover, so eventually I knew that I wouldn’t have to add more to
it; it would be about reducing it…. But for others who were working under
extremely tight deadlines sometimes…they were finishing it then they were
asked that ‘You have to go to your literature review again’ and so they were
doing it again or spending a considerable amount of time going through it and
making changes. I didn’t have to do that.
Overall, then, Jay felt Billy got the balance right between too much/too little control.
He appreciated Billy’s ‘flexibility’ which allowed him to submit work when he was
ready, and request meetings to discuss problems as they arose:
…overall [Billy] was very flexible and he let me do my work. …and…it
wasn’t ‘Let me know two weeks in advance when you want to come’, etc. If I
emailed him today and if I said ‘Will you be available on Tuesday?’, if he was
busy he’d say, ‘Why don’t you come the next day or the day before’ or
alternatively if he was he’d just say ‘Drop by’.
Jay’s preferred model was therefore close to what he experienced—a hybrid approach
mainly featuring the teaching and partnership models, with Billy ‘assuming
control…but not too much’.
Billy’s preferred supervisory approach: a student-sensitive partnership model
Billy’s preferred approach ‘whenever possible’ was closest to the partnership model,
reportedly predominant in the supervision of Jay. But Billy would vary his
supervisory style depending on the student’s ‘capacities’ and ‘abilities’. As Billy
memorably put it, ‘I’m an anti-Taylorist’, being resistant to a one-size-fits-all model:
21. 20
There is no one best way to supervise dissertation students….
This flexible approach was apparent in Billy’s views on the optimal number of
supervisory meetings. After a few initial meetings to start the supervisee off, Billy
then held meetings as often as needed—some more able students needing fewer
meetings than less capable supervisees:
And then I will have meetings as and when I think it’s appropriate. Some
students can go off and you won’t need to see them for three or four weeks;
and they’ll come back…with a methodology chapter, with access [to
participants, data].... Some students, you know you’re going to have to hold
their hand through the process a little more, and so [I say], ‘Okay, can I see
you in ten days, with A, with B?’ So flexibility is important.
In line with his flexible supervisory style, Billy doesn’t give specific supervision
guidelines to supervisees at the start, and doesn’t ‘really set down…hard and fast
expectations’. However, early on, he requires a short (2,500-word) literature review
and research questions for diagnostic purposes:
…I will always insist on them writing and presenting to me an initial literature
review chapter, because I want to find out: A, whether they can write, if I
haven’t seen their work previously; B, that they have, at least, a basic
grounding in the subject area in which they’re doing their research.
This exercise enables Billy to adopt a suitably rigid or less prescriptive supervision
pedagogy, depending upon his evaluation of supervisees’ needs.
Billy let Jay suggest his own work schedule, only intervening where necessary,
because there were parts of Jay’s plan that were clearly naïve—for instance, he
22. 21
anticipated finishing his dissertation in August, a month ahead of the deadline:
Int And at the beginning did Billy set the timetable? Did he say ‘By July you
must have done…’?
Jay […] He let me plan it but wherever he saw that there would be problems
he highlighted it. …I thought I’d do the interviews faster and he said ‘You’ll
need more time for the interviews’. […] he used to just tell me whenever I was
taking too much time or taking too less time for anything….
Billy’s expectation that supervisees take charge of their supervision means he declines
to specify a maximum number of meetings, or to dictate what gets done when:
I’ll say to them, ‘…ultimately, you direct the supervisory relationship in that
you see me, within reason, as many times as you feel you need to.’
Billy’s practices are therefore driven by his belief that supervisees are different and
want/require different degrees and types of supervision.
Billy was prepared to tighten or loosen supervision depending on changing
circumstances. Jay broke off contact for a month because of personal problems and
fell behind schedule; when he reestablished contact, Billy became more directive to
ensure Jay completed on time:
I put some pressure on, in terms of, ‘This is not acceptable, you’ve got to do
this, and I’m not going to be able to read as much now as I would have done,
and this is going to knock things back.’
Although Billy requires students to ‘direct the supervisory relationship’, he recognises
that students’ competence varies. So he allows better students to do their own thing
and meet less regularly, but ‘very carefully’ monitors less able supervisees, setting
23. 22
them regular deadlines, meetings, and tasks. Hence, although Billy strives to avoid the
teaching model, he will use it where necessary with weaker students initially—but
tries to wean them off supervisor dependence as early as possible as he sees this as an
inappropriate role, believing the supervisee should work independently.
In sum, then, Billy’s supervisory pedagogy depends on his ‘assessment of
[supervisees’] capacities, their abilities, their intellectual cultural capital, [and]
whether I feel they can deal with the rigours of independent research’. With stronger
students like Jay, Billy raises the bar. Jay told Billy he was considering applying for a
PhD after his master’s, and consequently Billy reported pushing him—to read
literature ‘beyond a particular level’, ‘to be writing regularly’, ‘to produce a sound
methodological framework’. Billy describes how Jay’s doctoral ambitions
…placed an onus on me to drive him…, to make sure that if that was his
ambition, that he had to…understand what was required of him and the kind
of grades he’d have to achieve.
Billy’s flexible philosophy means he sees a danger in prescriptive departmental
guidelines such as those issued by his own department. Supervisors should be
permitted to make supervisory choices on an ad hoc basis:
[Quoting from his department’s supervisory guidelines] ‘Supervisors are
recommended to accept only one full draft…’. I have on occasions read two
drafts. That sounds very generous, but...if…the student’s presenting me with a
draft that needs major work on it, then as long as I’ve got the time, then I feel
I’ve got a duty of care if they then revise that, to look at that, even if it’s only
fairly superficially; to say, ‘Well, you’ve done what needs to be done.’ So I
24. 23
think I would be worried a young or inexperienced academic member of staff
would wave [the departmental guidelines] and say, ‘I’m only looking at one
[draft].’ Well, actually, we have a bit of a duty of care with some students, to
say, ‘I’ve told you to do this; bring it back to me, I need to see that you’ve
done it.’
Billy sees flexibility as important because ‘students are different’ and ‘require
different degrees of help and assistance’. Furthermore, ‘academic freedom is
important’, and staff should be permitted to decide how best to teach and supervise on
a case-by-case basis:
And if I want to see two drafts of a dissertation, then I think that’s my right to
do so, and I think overly prescriptive requirements…merely stifle good
supervision most of the time. They very rarely produce good supervisors.
They stifle the best and work to a lowest common denominator model.
Billy’s flexible ‘anti-Taylorist’ supervision philosophy means that the best way to
supervise is the style aligned with his supervisees’ needs/preferences and his own
pedagogical beliefs.
Discussion
Our longitudinal approach, drawing on multiple sources of data and including the
perspectives of both parties, enabled us to gain a detailed understanding of the roles
Billy and Jay enacted and to describe an adaptive pedagogy. Four broad phases of the
journey can be identified: (i) a relatively unconstrained period during which Jay
explores his topic, closest to the partnership model; (ii) a more controlled period
25. 24
associated with Billy’s feedback, requiring Jay to make changes to his writing (and
thinking), closest to the teaching model; (iii) a second less controlled period, when
Jay and Billy discuss Jay’s findings and how to frame the emergent story of the
research, closest to the partnership model; and (iv) a final directive phase, closest to
the teaching model, after Jay’s lack of contact and failure to stay on schedule,
enabling him to get his dissertation completed on time.
We now discuss the implications of our case for drawing up supervisory guidelines.
We acknowledge HE contexts differ markedly both within the UK and internationally
in terms of programmatic, institutional, and disciplinary expectations. As such, the
issues below will require contextual sensitivity in the search for appropriate solutions.
The case for a flexible supervisory pedagogy
As an ‘anti-Taylorist’, Billy opposes regimented supervision policies, believing these
stymie academic freedom and efforts to tailor supervision to best meet students’
needs. Billy says he is intuitively aware of the best way to supervise different
students, meaning he can play ‘a little bit fast and loose’ with rigid/unhelpful aspects
of supervisory guidelines:
I’ve been doing this for 16, 17 years now…. My view is I know how to
supervise…; and generally speaking, I get it right. […] So perhaps I play a
little fast and loose with [the departmental supervisory guidelines]. But I’ve
never lost [a supervisee] yet…
Billy’s descriptions tie in with the idea of supervision as a craft acquired and honed
over time—he describes supervising ‘lots of students and making mistakes and
learning from them’ (cf. also Hockey 1997)—and therefore as something tricky to
26. 25
delimit and describe in formal rubrics. Indeed, Billy confessed he was not properly
acquainted with his department’s guidelines, being only ‘vaguely aware’ of them
before we asked him to read/comment on them at interview, as a relative newcomer to
his institution (but a highly experienced supervisor). And as he read the guidelines,
Billy took issue with some of its recommendations, giving us to understand that he
would have flouted them if he had deemed it necessary. He had evolved a supervisory
pedagogy he saw as effective and didn’t necessarily see the need to modify this to
align with departmental recommendations.
We agree with Billy that supervisors should be free to enact flexible supervisee-
responsive pedagogy, but recognize this runs counter to tendencies within higher
education in many contexts to try to homogenize systems and workflows.
Homogenized supervisory guidelines are often defended as equitable (e.g., they are
supposed to ensure all supervisees will have a certain amount of contact time, and to
minimize inconsistencies in supervision policies across a department, thus supposedly
resulting in greater ‘student satisfaction’). But our case also highlights the need to
prioritize the quality of supervision. Homogenized supervisory policies may allot
supervisees equal amounts of supervisory time; but where supervisees differ markedly
in terms of their competences and drive, and where dissertation research projects
differ in terms of their complexity, predictability, etc., the idea equal time spent
supervising will ensure equity of supervisory quality seems naïve. This suggests the
need for an anti-Taylorist approach.
However, the argument for permitting supervisors wide-ranging control over their
practice is more easily made with reference to supervisors like Billy, highly
27. 26
experienced supervisors happy to invest the time and effort required to supervise
diligently, and who change their approach if their preferred supervisory model isn’t
working. Billy was willing to go above and beyond his department’s expectations
regarding how much time and effort he invested in the supervision of Jay, but
unfortunately we found a very mixed picture across our wider dataset (Harwood &
Petrić 2017). Some supervisors gave more of themselves than they were required to,
but we encountered another case—in the same department as Billy—where the
supervisor was frankly negligent. Hence the need for supervisory guidelines to give
caring, diligent supervisors the freedom to supervise flexibly, but also to guard
against supervisory neglect. While departments will likely wish to stipulate minimum
requirements supervisors must fulfil regarding meetings, feedback on drafts, etc. to
guard against this neglect, we argue that supervisors should not be constrained by
such requirements and debarred from providing further help. Anti-Taylorism should
be acceptable; negligence should not. We recognize permitting such flexibility
probably makes it harder to formulate guidelines on what supervisors can/cannot do.
We don’t pretend writing supervisory guidelines is an easy job. But we believe our
case illustrates the need to provide (caring, competent) supervisors some latitude to
decide which role(s) they will perform during a supervision.
Implications for supervisor development
While Billy’s rich supervisory experience allows him to skilfully draw on different
styles at different stages of supervision, junior academics taking on the supervisory
role for the first time are likely to lack confidence and skills for adaptive supervision
(as illustrated by another case study in Harwood & Petrić 2017). Exposure to different
supervisory models could usefully raise faculty awareness of good practices, as per
28. 27
Lee’s (2012) suggestion (see also Lee (2018) for how these models can be integrated
into a supervisor training programme). Lecturers could consider the extent they
subscribe to each model, at which stages of the supervisory journey, and with which
supervisees. Our supervisory model prompt cards could engender pedagogical
reflections by new and old supervisors alike (and their supervisees). As Murphy
(2009) argues,
If supervisors (and candidates) were assisted to become explicitly aware of
their own and others’ orientations to supervision, practice might become more
deliberative and change more open to self-control. (p.305)
Furthermore, research on supervisor models and adaptive supervision should inform
departmental supervisory guidelines. Our results, together with previous work, could
underpin guidelines which recognize there are different supervisory models which
may be appropriate to deploy at different stages of supervision with different
supervisees, and which can be usefully adapted to different disciplinary, institutional,
and national contexts.
Coda: enhancing the quality of supervision research
Both parties, but especially Billy, took issue with parts of the model prompt card
descriptions. So were our prompt cards unfit for purpose? We think not; they
provided a springboard for discussion, both Jay and Billy recognizing aspects of the
model descriptions which applied in their case, supporting their reasoning with
reference to specific supervisory events. Nonetheless, in future studies we could draw
on other sources apart from Dysthe and Gatfield to redesign our model prompt cards,
attempting to better describe the range of roles available. Alternatively or in addition,
29. 28
rather than organizing the prompt cards around various proposed supervisory models,
we could instead identify the various actions of supervisor and supervisee which are
described in these models, or the stages through which supervision passes: it could be
argued that the various models lack the detail and specificity this would provide, and
that such a list of actions/stages would enhance the validity and depth of responses.
For instance, this list could include a much more detailed specification of the type of
feedback provided in terms of areas covered, and the role the supervisee is then
required to play in improving their draft in response to the feedback (e.g., reading of
additional sources, merely retyping the draft and inserting the supervisor’s
corrections, etc.). However, given the multiple roles and actions available to
supervisors and supervisees, we suggest no prompt cards will ever neatly map onto
participants’ experiences. An alternative approach is participants defining their own
models from scratch, thereby avoiding the requirement to map experiences onto pre-
existing models which may fail to adequately describe participants’ supervisory
relationships. But requiring a description of the supervisory model from scratch is
cognitively demanding, risking non-cooperation and non-completion of the task—or
at least inadequate reflection when participants are writing their descriptions. On
balance, we retain our preference for presenting supervisory models to participants
over the blank canvas approach. By emphasizing interviewees should not necessarily
choose a single model; that they justify their choices by referring to concrete
experiences; that they can align with some aspects of each model while rejecting
others; and/or that they may refine the model descriptions to better represent the
supervisory pedagogies they implement or experience, the model prompt card
approach seems to us the preferred methodological option.
30. 29
We also acknowledge our different data sources shed light on various aspects of
supervisory pedagogy. Billy claimed he strove to avoid the teaching model, but we
found this model best described some of his feedback to Jay. In line with
recommendations in the case study research methods literature (e.g., Duff 2008), we
need to triangulate multiple sources of data to establish whether/to what extent these
narratives are complete. Jay and Billy’s accounts each tell us much, but do not fully
describe all aspects of supervision; the complementary analysis of feedback samples
helps provide a more nuanced picture of enacted supervisory pedagogy. Furthermore,
our longitudinal research design, enabling us to collect Jay’s draft chapters over time
and examine Billy’s feedback on each, avoids the weaknesses of one-shot data
collection, helping obtain a rich, detailed understanding of dissertation supervision.
6801 words
References
Anderson, C., Day, K., & McLaughlin, P. 2006. Mastering the dissertation: lecturers’
representations of the purposes and processes of Master’s level dissertation
supervision. Studies in Higher Education 31: 149-168.
Barnes, B.J. & Austin, A.E. 2009. The role of doctoral advisors: a look at advising
from the advisor’s perspective. Innovative Higher Education 33: 297-315.
Brown, G. and Atkins, M. 1988. Effective Teaching in Higher Education. London:
Routledge.
Delamont, S., Atkinson, P., & Parry, O. 2000. The Doctoral Experience: Success and
Failure in Graduate School. London: Falmer Press.
Duff, P.A. 2008. Case Study Research in Applied Linguistics. New York: Lawrence
Erlbaum.
31. 30
Dysthe, O. 2002. Professors as mediators of academic text cultures: an interview
study with advisors and master’s degree students in three disciplines in a Norwegian
university. Written Communication 19: 493-544.
Gatfield, T. 2005. An investigation into PhD supervisory management styles:
development of a dynamic conceptual model and its managerial implications. Journal
of Higher Education Policy and Management 27: 311-325.
Ginn, F. 2014. “Being like a researcher”: supervising Masters dissertations in a
neoliberalizing university. Journal of Geography in Higher Education 38: 106-118.
Grant, B.M. 2008. Agonistic struggle: master—slave dialogues in humanities
supervision. Arts & Humanities in Higher Education 7: 9-27.
Grant, B.M. 2010. Fighting for space in supervision: fantasies, fairytales, fictions and
fallacies. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education 18(3): 337-354.
Harwood, N. & Petrić, B. (2017) Experiencing Master’s Supervision: Perspectives of
International Students and their Supervisors. Abingdon: Routledge.
Hockey, J. 1994. Establishing boundaries: problems and solutions in managing the
PhD supervisor’s role. Cambridge Journal of Education 24: 293-305.
Hockey, J. 1997. A complex craft: United Kingdom PhD supervision in the social
sciences. Research in Post-Compulsory Education 2: 45-70.
Kleijn, R.A.M., de, Meijer, P.C., Brekelmans, M., & Pilot, A. 2015. Adaptive
research supervision: exploring expert thesis supervisors’ practical knowledge.
Higher Education Research & Development 34: 117-130.
Lee, A. 2012. Successful Research Supervision: Advising Students Doing Research.
Abingdon: Routledge.
Lee, A. 2018. How can we develop supervisors for the modern doctorate? Studies in
Higher Education 43: 878-890.
32. 31
Mason, J. 2002. Qualitative Researching (2nd
ed.). London: Sage.
Miles, M.B. & Huberman, A.M. 1994. Qualitative Data Analysis: An Expanded
Sourcebook (2nd
ed.). Thousand Oaks: Sage.
Mkhabela, Z.L. and Frick, B.L. 2016. Student supervisor relationships in a complex
society: a dual narrative of scholarly becoming. In L. Frick, C. Motshoane, C.
McMaster, and C. Murphy (eds.). Postgraduate study in South Africa: Surviving and
Succeeding. Stellenbosch: SUN Press, pp.23-37.
Murphy, N. 2009. Research supervision: matches and mismatches. International
Journal of Electrical Engineering Education 46(3): 295-306.
Rowarth, J. and Cornforth, I. 2005. A fluid model for supervision. In P. Green (ed.),
Supervising Postgraduate Research: Contexts and Processes, Theories and Practices.
Melbourne: RMIT University Press, pp.154-162.
Salmon, P. 1992. Achieving A PhD—Ten Students’ Experience. Stoke-on-Trent:
Trentham Books.
Smagorinsky, P. 2008. The method section as conceptual epicenter in constructing
social science research reports. Written Communication 25: 389-411.
Vilkinas, T. 2005. The supervisor’s role as manager of the PhD journey. In P. Green
(ed.), Supervising Postgraduate Research: Contexts and Processes, Theories and
Practices. Melbourne: RMIT University Press, pp.163-177.