Narratives in postgraduate studies: Stories of six master’s students who have experienced supervision-related challenges at a South African university

Magister Artium - MA === Postgraduate research throughput and problems associated with appropriate supervision are a key focus area for many higher education institutions around the world (Lessing & Schulze, 2012; Amehoe, 2014; Botha, 2016). Central to this challenge is the supervisory relatio...

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Main Author: Cyster, Grant Alexander
Other Authors: Clarence, Sherran
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6916
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-69162019-08-20T03:12:26Z Narratives in postgraduate studies: Stories of six master’s students who have experienced supervision-related challenges at a South African university Cyster, Grant Alexander Clarence, Sherran Postgraduate research Higher education Postgraduate supervision Postgraduate supervisor Student attrition Student retention South Africa Magister Artium - MA Postgraduate research throughput and problems associated with appropriate supervision are a key focus area for many higher education institutions around the world (Lessing & Schulze, 2012; Amehoe, 2014; Botha, 2016). Central to this challenge is the supervisory relationship, which by its very nature, is not one-sided. A productive and rewarding supervisory process requires that both student and supervisor(s) are committed to fulfilling clearly-articulated responsibilities relevant to the research project at hand (Eley & Jennings, 2005). Both student-centric and institutional factors have been found to contribute to low student throughput and to the time taken to complete postgraduate studies (Amehoe, 2014; Luescher-Mamashela, 2015). In South Africa, the higher education landscape is increasingly fraught with varied challenges, including issues of attrition and completion rates as they relate to postgraduate students. Some of the implications of the premature termination of postgraduate research are that various academic fields are deprived of potentially valuable research contributions, and there is a significant cost incurred by the affected students and supervisors (Lovitts, 2001; Lessing & Lessing, 2004), as well as the relevant faculties and institutions, and society at large. Additionally, a number of South African universities are still grappling with inequities resulting from the Apartheid era (Pillay & Karlsson, 2013). It is against this backdrop that this research, through a narrative research lens involving semi-structured interviews, explores and chronicles the stories of six Master’s students who have encountered supervision-related challenges. According to Pearson and Kayrooz (2004), a limited narrative research spotlight has been trained on the issue of postgraduate supervision from the student perspective. The primary objective of this study, therefore, is to facilitate a platform through which the six respondents are able to share the stories of their Master’s supervision experience. On a secondary level, the sharing of these student stories has the potential to enhance the postgraduate research experience, as Lovitts (2001) and Lessing and Lessing (2004) point out. 2019-06-19T10:23:21Z 2019-06-19T10:23:21Z 2019 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6916 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Postgraduate research
Higher education
Postgraduate supervision
Postgraduate supervisor
Student attrition
Student retention
South Africa
spellingShingle Postgraduate research
Higher education
Postgraduate supervision
Postgraduate supervisor
Student attrition
Student retention
South Africa
Cyster, Grant Alexander
Narratives in postgraduate studies: Stories of six master’s students who have experienced supervision-related challenges at a South African university
description Magister Artium - MA === Postgraduate research throughput and problems associated with appropriate supervision are a key focus area for many higher education institutions around the world (Lessing & Schulze, 2012; Amehoe, 2014; Botha, 2016). Central to this challenge is the supervisory relationship, which by its very nature, is not one-sided. A productive and rewarding supervisory process requires that both student and supervisor(s) are committed to fulfilling clearly-articulated responsibilities relevant to the research project at hand (Eley & Jennings, 2005). Both student-centric and institutional factors have been found to contribute to low student throughput and to the time taken to complete postgraduate studies (Amehoe, 2014; Luescher-Mamashela, 2015). In South Africa, the higher education landscape is increasingly fraught with varied challenges, including issues of attrition and completion rates as they relate to postgraduate students. Some of the implications of the premature termination of postgraduate research are that various academic fields are deprived of potentially valuable research contributions, and there is a significant cost incurred by the affected students and supervisors (Lovitts, 2001; Lessing & Lessing, 2004), as well as the relevant faculties and institutions, and society at large. Additionally, a number of South African universities are still grappling with inequities resulting from the Apartheid era (Pillay & Karlsson, 2013). It is against this backdrop that this research, through a narrative research lens involving semi-structured interviews, explores and chronicles the stories of six Master’s students who have encountered supervision-related challenges. According to Pearson and Kayrooz (2004), a limited narrative research spotlight has been trained on the issue of postgraduate supervision from the student perspective. The primary objective of this study, therefore, is to facilitate a platform through which the six respondents are able to share the stories of their Master’s supervision experience. On a secondary level, the sharing of these student stories has the potential to enhance the postgraduate research experience, as Lovitts (2001) and Lessing and Lessing (2004) point out.
author2 Clarence, Sherran
author_facet Clarence, Sherran
Cyster, Grant Alexander
author Cyster, Grant Alexander
author_sort Cyster, Grant Alexander
title Narratives in postgraduate studies: Stories of six master’s students who have experienced supervision-related challenges at a South African university
title_short Narratives in postgraduate studies: Stories of six master’s students who have experienced supervision-related challenges at a South African university
title_full Narratives in postgraduate studies: Stories of six master’s students who have experienced supervision-related challenges at a South African university
title_fullStr Narratives in postgraduate studies: Stories of six master’s students who have experienced supervision-related challenges at a South African university
title_full_unstemmed Narratives in postgraduate studies: Stories of six master’s students who have experienced supervision-related challenges at a South African university
title_sort narratives in postgraduate studies: stories of six master’s students who have experienced supervision-related challenges at a south african university
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/6916
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