Early career faculty colleagues may only recently have completed their own doctoral studies, and what knowledge they have of supervising doctoral candidates may be limited. Supervising Doctoral Candidates provides support for new and young academics who, from the beginning of their academic career, may be expected to support doctoral candidates with little or no prior training. Each chapter draws on the more extensive experience of international authors, providing encouragement and gentle advice on the role of the supervisor and the relationships with the student and co-supervisors as the doctoral study progresses. The structure of the book follows the student’s journey – from selecting an appropriate topic of study, through the support needed to develop research skills and begin writing, to publications and the final defence of the thesis. Understanding the needs of doctoral candidates, developing relationships with other supervisors, and how to work with non-academic members of the supervising team are covered in this collection, with consideration given to different types of students including those with disabilities and those who join from abroad. Delivering practical and useful mentorship advice grounded in lived experience, Supervising Doctoral Candidates assists early-career academics and addresses the challenges of supervision.
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Supervising Doctoral Candidates provides support for new and young academics who, from the beginning of their academic career, may be expected to support doctoral candidates with little or no prior training.
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Introduction; Chris Rolph Chapter 1.Identifying the topic at the start of the research journey; Ivana Restović Chapter 2. Funnelling: how to focus the research problem; Lucian Ciolan Chapter 3. A needs assessment of doctoral candidates; Aparna Chakravorty, Mousumi Mukherjee, and Krishan Kumar Pandey Chapter 4. Supporting pedagogical relationships and needs in doctoral supervision; Melanie Nash and Rucelle Hughes Chapter 5. Navigating co-supervision: Creating supportive relationships between peers in supervision teams; Sherran Clarence and Kirstin Wilmot Chapter 6. Working with non-academic collaborators; Rebekah Smith McGloin and Matthew J Young Chapter 7. Supervising international students; Yuhanis Mhd Bakri and Annie Gorgey Chapter 8. Amplifying candidates’ voices: Using feedback conversations to develop doctoral identity and writing; Martina van Heerden and Sherran Clarence Chapter 9. Joys, challenges, and responsibilities of the doctoral supervision relationship: Perspectives from three countries; Anamika Srivastava, Charity Meki-Kombe, and Maresi Nerad Chapter 10. Supporting wider development of doctoral candidates; Mumbi Maria Wachira, Ismail Ateya, and Mary Omingo Chapter 11. Co-authorship with doctoral students; Damary Sikalieh Chapter 12. Promoting Justice for Disabled Graduate Students; Laura Yvonne Bulk and Corin Parsons Chapter 13. The end of the road and start of the journey: defending the thesis in a viva; Chris Rolph
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781837970513
Publisert
2024-03-26
Utgiver
Vendor
Emerald Publishing Limited
Vekt
248 gr
Høyde
198 mm
Bredde
129 mm
Dybde
12 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
232

Redaktør

Om bidragsyterne

Chris Rolph is Associate Professor of Education Policy and Practice and Director of Nottingham Institute of Education within Nottingham Trent University’s School of Social Sciences, UK. He teaches on a variety of undergraduate and postgraduate courses, from foundation degrees to doctoral programmes, as well as initial teacher training. His doctoral students’ work covers education policy, Higher Education pedagogy, student experience and teacher education and development.