促进博士生指导计划:来自循证实践的见解

Q2 Social Sciences International Journal of Doctoral Studies Pub Date : 2020-07-08 DOI:10.28945/4594
Joanna Szen-Ziemiańska
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引用次数: 1

摘要

目的/目的:帮助博士生应对他们面临的许多挑战的一种方法是提供结构化的指导计划,以补充更传统的博士课程和导师关系。本文报告了在波兰的一所非公立大学推行的指导方案,其中包括个人咨询和同侪指导讲习班等活动,并讨论了支助模式的发展。在开发模型的过程中,进行了两项评估研究,试图发现参与者如何看待指导计划,指导计划需要解决什么问题,以及它为博士生提供了什么好处。背景:参照Kram和Higgins提出的新范式,师徒关系出现在许多发展网络的背景下,在这些网络中,更多的初级导师和同侪导师共同发现博士教育中涉及的新角色。方法:案例研究方法用于收集博士指导计划的看法。提出了两部分方案的概念框架,并报告了使用混合方法联机进行的两项评价研究的结果。共有42名博士生参与了研究,分别来自社会科学和人文学科。贡献:本文讨论了一种新颖的博士指导计划,该计划在循证实践中找到了基础。这项研究超越了以往的研究,对博士生的需求进行了分析,然后考虑了这些需求之间的关系,并构建了一个满足这些需求的项目。研究发现:研究结果显示博士生的需求主要有三个方面:大学社会互动的需求;博士之旅中对结构的需求,以及对心理支持的需求。与会者区分了影响方案活动评估的两种观点:(a)指导方案对个人的意义;(b)导师的态度,包括会议期间团队合作的总体气氛。所提出的干预模型支持所提出的结果。对实践者的建议:提出的模型可能会激励其他大学实施类似的方法来支持他们自己的博士生。研究人员还提供了与研讨会主题、会议时间表和项目组织有关的策略。对从业人员的主要建议是对学生的心理社会需求敏感。对研究人员的建议:对博士生的需求和支持方式感兴趣的研究人员可以利用所提出的模型进行战略规划。建议进一步研究指导博士生的领域,使用混合方法的方法。这种方法认识到现象学的紧急情况,因为它们与个人意义制造有关。对社会的影响:支持博士生的有效性是重要的,因为失败会给博士生带来巨大的专业和个人成本。在教师的幻想破灭和对大学声誉的影响方面,也有潜在的成本。如果博士生不能毕业,国家的经济利益也会丧失。未来研究:本研究的价值在于验证本模型的有效性,并通过开发一份指导支持量表来扩展该模型,该量表可以识别更线性的博士生需求。还需要进行纵向研究,以核实方案的长期影响。
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Facilitating a Mentoring Programme for Doctoral Students: Insights from Evidence-Based Practice
Aim/Purpose: One approach to helping doctoral students deal with the many challenges they face is the provision of a structured mentoring programme to complement the more traditional doctoral curriculum and supervisor relationship. This paper reports a mentoring programme containing such activities as individual consultations and peer-mentoring workshops, introduced at one of the non-public universities in Poland and discusses the development of a model of support. In developing the model, two evaluation studies were conducted seeking to discover how participants perceived the mentoring programme, what needs the mentoring programme addressed, and what benefits it provided for doctoral students. Background: With reference to a new paradigm proposed by Kram and Higgins, mentoring emerges in the context of many developmental networks, where the more junior mentors and peer-mentors together discover new roles involved in doctoral education. Methodology: Case study methodology is utilized to gather perceptions of a doctoral mentoring programme. The conceptual framework for a two-part programme is presented and the results of two evaluation studies conducted on-line using a mix-method approach are reported. In total, 42 doctoral students participated in the studies, representing social sciences and the humanities disciplines. Contribution: This paper discusses a novel doctoral mentoring programme which finds its basis in evidence-based practice. This research goes beyond previous studies by undertaking an analysis of doctoral students’ needs, then considering relationships between those needs and structuring a programme to meet them. Findings: Findings showed three main areas of need for doctoral students: the need for social interaction at university; the need for structure in the doctoral journey, and the need for psychological support. Participants distinguished two perspectives that influenced the assessment of programme activities: (a) the meaningfulness of the mentoring programme to the individual; (b) the mentor’s attitude including the general atmosphere of collegiality during meetings. Results presented are supported by a proposed intervention model. Recommendations for Practitioners: The model presented may inspire other universities to implement similar approaches for supporting their own doctoral students. Researcher enablers are also offered as strategies relating to workshop topics, meeting schedules, and programme organization. The main recommendation for practitioners is to be sensitive to the psychosocial needs of students. Recommendation for Researchers: Researchers interested in doctoral students’ needs and ways of supporting them can utilize the proposed model for strategically planning such support. It is recommended that further research into the area of mentoring doctoral students makes use of the mixed-method approach. Such an approach takes cognizance of phenomenological exigencies as they pertain to individual meaning-making. Impact on Society: Supporting the effectiveness of doctoral students is significant as failure comes at great professional and personal cost to the doctoral student. There are also potential costs in terms of faculty disillusionment and impacts on university reputation. Economic benefits to the nation may also be forfeited when doctoral students fail to graduate. Future Research: It would be valuable to corroborate the model presented and extend it through the development of a mentoring support scale which identifies more linearly specific doctoral students’ needs. Longitudinal studies are also required to verify long-term effects of the programme.
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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
0.00%
发文量
16
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