导航Co-supervision

Min Zou, Delin Kong
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引用次数: 0

摘要

共同监督(即两个或两个以上的监督者)是福还是祸?虽然共同指导使博士生能够拥有更广泛的专业知识,但在两个或更多导师的指导下学习也会令人沮丧,特别是当他们有不同的要求和期望时。共同监督有时就像生活在两个理论和范式“体系”的边缘。对于博士生来说,重要的是要在学术上、情感上和人际关系上做好准备,以最大限度地发挥共同监督的价值,这通常需要特殊的管理技能和技巧。本章将以香港博士生的经历和故事为基础,提供指导共同监督的实用技巧。“我刚和一个主管开完会,现在需要为另一个做准备!””“我可以从每个主管那里学到不同的东西。这很有帮助。“我很困惑!”我的上司在这个问题上的立场完全不同。”你对这些评论有印象吗?如果你曾在美国、英国、澳大利亚、新西兰或香港攻读或正在攻读博士学位,你很可能会发现自己处于类似的境地。随着高等教育分布式指导实践的发展和博士生数量的不断增加,越来越多的博士生可能受到两个或两个以上学者的指导,即共同指导。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Navigating Co-supervision
Abstract Is co-supervision (i.e., two or more supervisors) a blessing or a torture? While co-supervision enables doctoral students to embrace a greater breadth of expertise, studying under the supervision of two or more supervisors can also be frustrating, especially when they have different requirements and expectations. Co-supervision is sometimes like living on the edge of two “systems” of theories and paradigms. It is important for doctoral students to be academically, emotionally, and interpersonally prepared to maximize the value of co-supervision, which often requires special management skills and techniques. Based on the experiences and stories of doctoral students from Hong Kong, this chapter will provide practical tips to navigate co-supervision. “I just finished my meeting with one supervisor and need to prepare for the other now!” “I can learn different things from each supervisor. It is very helpful.” “I am quite confused! My supervisors have totally different stands on this issue.” Does any of the comments ring a bell with you? If you studied or are studying for a doctoral degree in the United States, United Kingdom, Australia, New Zealand, or Hong Kong, you are likely to find yourself in similar situations. With the development of distributed supervisory practice in higher education and the growing number of doctoral candidates, more and more doctoral students are likely to be supervised by two or more academics, that is, co-supervision.
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