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Supervising UG and Taught Masters Projects

Supervising UG and Taught Masters Projects. Dr. Marita Grimwood SFHEA FSEDA. Key learning outcomes. To be able to identify and adapt your supervisory style To be able to design, critique and/or modify an effective project brief

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Supervising UG and Taught Masters Projects

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  1. Supervising UG and Taught Masters Projects Dr. Marita Grimwood SFHEA FSEDA

  2. Key learning outcomes • To be able to identify and adapt your supervisory style • To be able to design, critique and/or modify an effective project brief • To identify and pre-empt issues in managing projects & dissertations

  3. In trios… Imagine a student of yours has just finished their project. How many ways can you think of to evaluate your success as a supervisor?

  4. Possible measures of the effectiveness of supervision • Student satisfaction • Student learning • An interesting project • Good project quality to time ratio • Student’s personal development • Publications for you! • Student progresses to higher degree • Main supervisor’s view

  5. Approaches to supervision 1. Functional – ‘the issue is one of project management’ 2. Enculturation – ‘encouraged to become a member of the disciplinary community’ 3. Critical thinking – ‘student is encouraged to question and analyse their work’ 4. Emancipation – ‘student is encouraged to question and develop themselves’ 5. Developing a quality relationship – ‘student is enthused, inspired and cared for’ Lee (2008) ‘How are doctoral students supervised?’ Studies in Higher Education 33:3, 267-281)

  6. Factors in determining supervisory style • How you were supervised • The norms of your discipline • Individual factors - personality, background, gender… • Beliefs or philosophy about learning and teaching What are your strengths as a supervisor? What might be areas to think about?

  7. Problems in supervision (Dysthe, Samara and Westhrei, 2007) • Student too dependent on the supervisor, lack of ownership of project • Poor personality match between student and supervisor • Balancing supervisor’s authority and student’s independence. • Problems to do with authority and power HOW CAN YOUR ROLE BE HELPFUL HERE?

  8. Why are PhD students important to taught project supervision? • The time they are able to offer • More approachable than the academic lead of the project The Undergraduate-Postgraduate-Faculty Triad cellbioed 1 December 2010: 543-553.

  9. Giving Feedback • Put yourself in the student’s shoes • Start by eliciting from them • Be clear about the positives • Depersonalise the negatives - relate feedback to standards and objectives • Always consider privacy • Make it timely!

  10. Cultural sensitivity • Avoid preconceptions – be ready to learn! • Read body language and reactions • Don’t assume a student’s experience is similar to yours… …or to another student from the ‘same’ culture • Be clear about availability and welcoming questions See Manathunga (2011) ‘Moments of transculturation and assimilation: post-colonial explorations of supervision and culture’ Innovations in Education and Teaching International

  11. Student expectations • To be supervised • To be given feedback • Supervisor to be available when needed • Supervisor to be friendly and supportive • Supervisor to be knowledgeable • Supervisor to be interested (research and careers) Adapted from “How to get a PhD” Phillips and Pugh

  12. The Perfect Project Brief List 6 features of a perfect project brief. You could think about • Ambition vs. time constraints • Support and expertise available • Skills required • Resources

  13. Meetings and record keeping Meetings can be used to feed back, motivate, guide, plan, check work or progress, suggest readings and references, monitor safety, develop skills, assess… … so they need planning and record-keeping! (By whom?)

  14. Case study 1. Read the case study and, as a small group, tease out the issues in project supervision raised by it. 2. Using your thoughts, prepare a poster with bullet points showing what students have a right to expect of supervision

  15. What will you do differently as a result of this session? Think of one key point, before sharing with the group.

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