误入歧途:研究生导师缺席的经历

IF 0.5 Q4 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
W. Hall, S. Liva
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引用次数: 1

摘要

关于师徒关系应该如何运作,它的目标,以及是什么“让它运作”的理论是丰富的。当指导是一个问题时,很少遇到关于过程和含义的经验信息。研究生经历了重大的心理、身体、经济和人际关系方面的挑战,可能对导师的改善效果有期望。有限的定性文献描述了研究生对导师问题和学生成果的看法。描述性质的研究使用二次分析来描述学生对问题导师的看法。研究生研究助理进行了12次焦点小组访谈,并将其记录下来。作者运用归纳性内容分析法来展开主题。54名参与者被招募,包括硕士(n=19)、博士(n=34)和一名未在特定院系注册的研究生(n=1)。这些学生代表了多个学科。确定的主要主题是“从裂缝中跌落”。次级主题包括缺少指导、学生难以获得指导、大学结构破坏指导以及对学员的伤害。跌落在裂缝中突出了学生在获得指导时的挣扎,缺失指导的影响,以及学生修改阻碍指导的结构特征的解决方案。定量研究可以比较有指导和没有指导的心理结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Falling Through the Cracks: Graduate Students’ Experiences of Mentoring Absence
Theory about how mentorship is supposed to work, its goals, and what “makes it work” is abundant. It is rarer to encounter empirical information about processes and implications when mentoring is a problem. Graduate students experience significant psychological, physical, financial, and relational challenges and likely have expectations about the ameliorating effects of mentorship. Limited qualitative literature has described graduate students’ perceptions about problems with mentorship and students’ outcomes. The descriptive qualitative study used secondary analysis to describe students’ perceptions of problematic mentorship. Graduate student research assistants conducted 12 recorded focus group interviews and transcribed them. The authors used inductive content analysis to develop themes. Fifty-four participants were recruited, including masters’ (n=19), PhD (n=34), and a graduate student not enrolled in a specific faculty (n=1). The students represented multiple disciplines. The major theme identified was “falling through the cracks.” The subthemes included missing mentorship, students’ difficulties accessing mentorship, university structures undermining mentoring, and damage to mentees. Falling through the cracks highlights students’ struggles with accessing mentorship, effects of missing mentorship, and students’ solutions for modifying structural features that inhibit mentoring. Quantitative work could compare psychological outcomes associated with present and missing mentoring.
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8 weeks
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