Similarities and Differences in How Supervisors at Canadian and UK Institutions Understand Doctoral Supervision

Q2 Social Sciences International Journal of Doctoral Studies Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.28945/4870
Carolin Kreber, Cyril Wealer, Heather A Kanuka
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A few studies with small samples sought to better understand supervisors’ views on supervision and also identified qualitatively different ways of understanding supervision. The present study with a larger sample builds on and extends this work by looking specifically at the concrete intentions by which supervisors engage, in particular supervisory activities they consider important, differentiating the findings by policy context and discipline. Methodology: Participants included full-time faculty members with extensive PhD supervision experience from UK and Canadian institutions, thirty from each country with ten each from History, Biology, and Engineering. The study was comparative in that a data set generated in a previous study of the same design the researchers carried out with thirty supervisors from the UK (Kreber & Wealer, 2021) was drawn upon and compared to the new Canadian data set. The study was primarily qualitative and relied on two rounds of face-to-face interviews with each participant. In the introductory phase supervisors in each sample identified their views on the purposes of PhD study in their field and the goals of their supervision, and in the main research phase they articulated the concrete intentions by which they engage in supervisory activities with particular students. Data from both phases were subjected to inductive thematic analysis, facilitated by NVivo and Excel software respectively. The thematic analysis of statements of intent, the main data source, revealed six qualitatively different understandings of supervision, in each sample, which then were further examined for differences across policy contexts and disciplines. Contribution: Policy context did not appear to make a difference in the self-reported intentions by which supervisors engage in distinct supervisory activities. Six qualitatively different ways of understanding PhD supervision emerged from a thematic analysis of intentions within each of the samples: ‘Enculturation’, ‘Functional’, ‘Emancipation’, ‘Critical Thinking’, ‘Care/relationship building’ and ‘Preparation for career/life’. Given that the first five ways of understanding doctoral supervision were also identified by Lee (2008), the study enhances confidence that supervisors tend to understand supervision in terms of this limited range of qualitatively different ways. The six concepts also allow us to identify, describe, and better understand supervisors’ personal conceptions of their supervision practice (which concepts feature strongly and which are in the background), which is helpful for encouraging supervisors to reflect on why they do what they do in their supervision practice. Findings: ‘Enculturation’ and ‘Functional’ appeared as the dominant concepts for supervisors, in relation to the supervisory activities they had identified, with the other four concepts being addressed less frequently in their statements of intent. When intentions were articulated, not in relation to specific activities but as underlying their supervision practice more generally, supervisors tend to espouse objectives that emphasize core academic values, rather than the ‘functional’ perspective. The comparative design employed pointed to more commonalities than variations across the two policy contexts and three disciplines. Identifying statements of intent and sorting them into qualitatively different understandings or ‘concepts’ of supervision allowed us to describe the personal and multidimensional conceptions of supervision held by individual supervisors and observe their idiosyncratic nature. Recommendations for Practitioners: Academic development professionals in universities charged with providing professional development on supervision are encouraged to make use of both the method employed in this study and its findings to encourage supervisors to become aware of the assumptions underpinning their supervision activities and to develop alternative conceptions and approaches to supervision that may be better suited to meet students’ needs. Recommendation for Researchers: The findings call for a deeper investigation into the reasons for observed small variations in intentions behind supervisory practices, beyond a focus on the particular disciplines and national contexts considered in this study. Impact on Society: Supervisors who are reflective practitioners and able to adapt their practices to the needs of particular students are likely to provide more effective supervision, which contributes to the completion of high-quality doctoral research and, by extension, to countries’ economic, social and cultural development. Future Research: New directions for research include a focus on development or changes in conceptions of supervision over time as well as on the linkages between conceptions of supervision, effective supervision practice, and positive student outcomes. We also strongly recommend that attention be paid to the concrete practical value of research on doctoral studies and encourage the pursuit of actionable and engaged scholarship on doctoral studies and supervision.","PeriodicalId":53524,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Doctoral Studies","volume":"21 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"2","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Doctoral Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.28945/4870","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 2

Abstract

Aim/Purpose: The study seeks to establish the potential role that policy and disciplinary contexts of doctoral education play in supervisors’ subjective understandings of PhD supervision. It also intends to show how research into the different ways in which supervision may be understood can help supervisors become more effective in their practice and additionally help institutions design more effective professional development opportunities for supervisors. Background: Previous research has highlighted the linkages between quality PhD supervision and positive student outcomes; nonetheless, why supervisors do what they do remains poorly understood. A few studies with small samples sought to better understand supervisors’ views on supervision and also identified qualitatively different ways of understanding supervision. The present study with a larger sample builds on and extends this work by looking specifically at the concrete intentions by which supervisors engage, in particular supervisory activities they consider important, differentiating the findings by policy context and discipline. Methodology: Participants included full-time faculty members with extensive PhD supervision experience from UK and Canadian institutions, thirty from each country with ten each from History, Biology, and Engineering. The study was comparative in that a data set generated in a previous study of the same design the researchers carried out with thirty supervisors from the UK (Kreber & Wealer, 2021) was drawn upon and compared to the new Canadian data set. The study was primarily qualitative and relied on two rounds of face-to-face interviews with each participant. In the introductory phase supervisors in each sample identified their views on the purposes of PhD study in their field and the goals of their supervision, and in the main research phase they articulated the concrete intentions by which they engage in supervisory activities with particular students. Data from both phases were subjected to inductive thematic analysis, facilitated by NVivo and Excel software respectively. The thematic analysis of statements of intent, the main data source, revealed six qualitatively different understandings of supervision, in each sample, which then were further examined for differences across policy contexts and disciplines. Contribution: Policy context did not appear to make a difference in the self-reported intentions by which supervisors engage in distinct supervisory activities. Six qualitatively different ways of understanding PhD supervision emerged from a thematic analysis of intentions within each of the samples: ‘Enculturation’, ‘Functional’, ‘Emancipation’, ‘Critical Thinking’, ‘Care/relationship building’ and ‘Preparation for career/life’. Given that the first five ways of understanding doctoral supervision were also identified by Lee (2008), the study enhances confidence that supervisors tend to understand supervision in terms of this limited range of qualitatively different ways. The six concepts also allow us to identify, describe, and better understand supervisors’ personal conceptions of their supervision practice (which concepts feature strongly and which are in the background), which is helpful for encouraging supervisors to reflect on why they do what they do in their supervision practice. Findings: ‘Enculturation’ and ‘Functional’ appeared as the dominant concepts for supervisors, in relation to the supervisory activities they had identified, with the other four concepts being addressed less frequently in their statements of intent. When intentions were articulated, not in relation to specific activities but as underlying their supervision practice more generally, supervisors tend to espouse objectives that emphasize core academic values, rather than the ‘functional’ perspective. The comparative design employed pointed to more commonalities than variations across the two policy contexts and three disciplines. Identifying statements of intent and sorting them into qualitatively different understandings or ‘concepts’ of supervision allowed us to describe the personal and multidimensional conceptions of supervision held by individual supervisors and observe their idiosyncratic nature. Recommendations for Practitioners: Academic development professionals in universities charged with providing professional development on supervision are encouraged to make use of both the method employed in this study and its findings to encourage supervisors to become aware of the assumptions underpinning their supervision activities and to develop alternative conceptions and approaches to supervision that may be better suited to meet students’ needs. Recommendation for Researchers: The findings call for a deeper investigation into the reasons for observed small variations in intentions behind supervisory practices, beyond a focus on the particular disciplines and national contexts considered in this study. Impact on Society: Supervisors who are reflective practitioners and able to adapt their practices to the needs of particular students are likely to provide more effective supervision, which contributes to the completion of high-quality doctoral research and, by extension, to countries’ economic, social and cultural development. Future Research: New directions for research include a focus on development or changes in conceptions of supervision over time as well as on the linkages between conceptions of supervision, effective supervision practice, and positive student outcomes. We also strongly recommend that attention be paid to the concrete practical value of research on doctoral studies and encourage the pursuit of actionable and engaged scholarship on doctoral studies and supervision.
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加拿大和英国大学导师对博士生监督理解的异同
目的:本研究旨在建立博士生教育的政策和学科背景对导师对博士生指导的主观理解的潜在作用。它还打算展示如何研究不同的方式来理解监管可以帮助监管者在他们的实践中变得更有效,另外帮助机构为监管者设计更有效的专业发展机会。背景:先前的研究强调了高质量的博士指导与积极的学生成果之间的联系;尽管如此,人们对监管人员为何要这么做仍知之甚少。少数小样本研究试图更好地了解管理者对监管的看法,也确定了理解监管的定性不同方式。目前的研究以更大的样本为基础,通过特别关注监管者参与的具体意图,特别是他们认为重要的监管活动,来扩展这项工作,并根据政策背景和纪律区分研究结果。研究方法:参与者包括来自英国和加拿大机构具有丰富博士指导经验的全职教师,两国各30人,历史、生物和工程各10人。该研究具有可比性,因为研究人员与来自英国的30名主管(Kreber & Wealer, 2021)进行了相同设计的先前研究(Kreber & Wealer, 2021),并将其与新的加拿大数据集进行了比较。这项研究主要是定性的,依赖于对每个参与者的两轮面对面访谈。在入门阶段,每个样本的导师都确定了他们对所在领域博士学习目的和监督目标的看法,在主要研究阶段,他们阐明了他们与特定学生进行监督活动的具体意图。这两个阶段的数据分别通过NVivo和Excel软件进行归纳性专题分析。对意向声明(主要数据来源)的专题分析揭示了每个样本中对监管的六种定性不同理解,然后进一步检查了政策背景和学科之间的差异。贡献:政策背景似乎没有对监督者参与不同监督活动的自我报告意图产生影响。通过对每个样本的意向进行主题分析,我们得出了六种不同的理解博士监督的定性方式:“文化适应”、“功能”、“解放”、“批判性思维”、“关怀/关系建立”和“为职业/生活做准备”。鉴于Lee(2008)也确定了理解博士生监督的前五种方式,该研究增强了人们的信心,即导师倾向于从这有限的质量不同的方式来理解监督。这六个概念还使我们能够识别、描述和更好地理解主管对其监督实践的个人概念(哪些概念具有强烈的特征,哪些概念处于背景地位),这有助于鼓励主管反思他们在监督实践中为什么要做他们所做的事情。研究发现:“文化适应”和“功能性”是主管在他们所确定的管理活动中最主要的概念,而其他四个概念在他们的意向声明中较少提及。当意图明确时,不是与具体活动有关,而是作为其监督实践的基础,更普遍地,主管倾向于支持强调核心学术价值的目标,而不是“功能”观点。采用的比较设计指出了两种政策背景和三个学科之间的共同点,而不是差异。识别意图陈述并将其分类为对监管的不同理解或“概念”,使我们能够描述个别监管人员所持有的个人和多维监管概念,并观察其特质。对从业人员的建议:鼓励大学中负责提供监督专业发展的学术发展专业人员利用本研究中采用的方法及其发现,鼓励监督人员意识到支持其监督活动的假设,并开发更适合学生需求的替代监督概念和方法。对研究人员的建议:研究结果要求对监督实践背后观察到的微小变化的原因进行更深入的调查,而不仅仅是关注本研究中考虑的特定学科和国家背景。 对社会的影响:导师是反思的实践者,能够根据特定学生的需要调整自己的做法,可能会提供更有效的监督,这有助于完成高质量的博士研究,进而有助于国家的经济、社会和文化发展。未来研究:新的研究方向包括关注监督观念的发展或变化,以及监督观念、有效的监督实践和积极的学生成果之间的联系。我们还强烈建议关注博士研究的具体实用价值,并鼓励在博士研究和监督方面追求可操作性和参与性的奖学金。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Doctoral Studies
International Journal of Doctoral Studies Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
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发文量
16
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