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Excellence in doctoral supervision: an examination of authoritative sources across four countries in search of performance higher than competence
Authors:Alistair McCulloch  Vijay Kumar  Susan van Schalkwyk  Gina Wisker
Institution:1. Teaching Innovation Unit, University of South Australia, Adelaide, Australia;2. Higher Education Development Centre, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand;3. Centre for Health Professions Education (CHPE) – Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, Stellenbosch University, Cape Town, South Africa;4. Centre for Learning and Teaching, Education Research Centre, University of Brighton, Falmer, UK
Abstract:Supervision is generally recognised as playing a crucial role in the quality of a research student’s doctoral experience and their academic outcomes and, in common with most areas of higher education, there is an oft-stated desire to pursue excellence in this important area. Excellence in research degree supervision is, however, an elusive concept and on close scrutiny most of the discussions of high-quality supervision, even those that purport to be identifying excellence, refer to competence rather than excellence. This paper examines two potentially national authoritative perspectives from which excellence in research degree supervision might be explicated (codes of practice and learning and teaching awards) from Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and the United Kingdom but concludes that the complex nature of the activity and the complexity of the concept itself mean that rather than identifying excellence in supervision we can only respond to claims for excellence.
Keywords:Research degree supervision  doctoral education  research degree supervisors  awards for supervision  learning and teaching awards  codes of practice  quality code
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