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Postgraduate research success: communities of practice involving cohorts, guardian supervisors and online communities.

Authors :
Wisker, Gina
Robinson, Gillian
Shacham, Miri
Source :
Innovations in Education & Teaching International. Aug2007, Vol. 44 Issue 3, p301-320. 20p.
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Traditionally, supervisors work with students on an individual basis and postgraduate development programmes are run on site. However, with increasing numbers of part-time and international students, supervisory relationships are likely to be conducted at a distance as students study alongside other commitments. Isolation can often be a key feature for many postgraduates, whether based in the same institution as the supervisor and more particularly for international students or those studying at a distance. It can also be an issue for their supervisors. However, in this age of electronic communication, interactions at a distance should be able to be at least as robust as many of those conducted face to face. More broadly, the international research community is something generally cited as the context for research work, supervision, study and publication more generally. Entry firstly into the university academic community, and then into the larger global research community can be enabled, we would argue, by the support of communities of practice from the outset of postgraduate students' and supervisors' interactions. In this context, considerable numbers of international postgraduates at Anglia Ruskin University (UK) and their supervisors are being effectively supported through three innovations which build institutionally related communities of practice: (1) Guardian supervisors work with the students on research development programmes, with accompanying meetings organised during and round programme workshops, which focus throughout on strategies of meta-learning. Subsequently they support students' work at a distance with emails, and webcam correspondence. (2) PhD students are empowered to develop mutual, critically focused support for each other's work through the enhanced use of the cohort in the compulsory research development workshops and through ongoing discussion lists, self-help groups and symposia. (3) Supervisors of international postgraduates are supported as a community of practice through the revision of online supervisory discussion and development. This paper is based on action research carried out with current and graduate students, guardian supervisors and supervisors as collaborators to explore the rationale, problems, practices and the richness of the experience of working with a system which fosters communities of practice, involving guardian supervisors, distance supervisors and postgraduate cohorts. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14703297
Volume :
44
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Innovations in Education & Teaching International
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25902185
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/14703290701486720