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Supervision of Research Students

Supervising postgraduate research students is undoubtedly one of the most satisfying, but also one of the most challenging aspect of academic life. This resource for supervisors of postgraduate research (PGR) students at the University of Exeter is here to help you, and help you to enjoy supervising research students. You’ll find a range of resources and suggestions for working with your research students, including ideas for supporting students’ learning, developmental opportunities and workshops for new and experienced supervisors, wider reading for supervisors and links to College handbooks (where available), as well as everything you need to know about administrative requirements.

This resource has been developed as a result of collaboration between colleagues in the Academic Policy and Standards Office and Education Enhancement, in discussion with experienced supervisors from across the University.

Professor Andrew McRae
Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Research

Please send any comments regarding these pages to Doctoral.College@exeter.ac.uk 

Supervising postgraduate research students is undoubtedly one of the most satisfying, but also one of the most challenging aspect of academic life. This resource for supervisors of postgraduate research (PGR) students at the University of Exeter is here to help you, and help you to enjoy supervising research students. You’ll find a range of resources and suggestions for working with your research students, including ideas for supporting students’ learning, developmental opportunities and workshops for new and experienced supervisors, wider reading for supervisors and links to College handbooks (where available), as well as everything you need to know about administrative requirements.

This resource has been developed as a result of collaboration between colleagues in the Academic Policy and Standards Office and  Education Enhancement, in discussion with experienced supervisors from across the University.

Professor Andrew McRae
Dean of the Faculty of Graduate Research

Please send any comments regarding these pages to the Doctoral College (Doctoral.College@exeter.ac.uk)

Guidance to the Board of Examiners on completing their final Board of Examiners’ report form.

The following advice is designed to help examiners complete their Board of Examiners’ report form. 

Report forms may be found on the Postgraduate Administration Office webpage, Forms – Submission and Examination. 

Examiners are asked to bear in mind that the form must provide clear enough guidance to: 

  • Allow the student, with the support of their supervisors and without further input from the Board of Examiners, to revise their dissertation/thesis appropriately, and to the satisfaction of the Board of Examiners provided that they follow all the requirements given.
  • Allow the Board of Examiners even if the membership changes, or if there is a delay in the dissertation/thesis being reviewed, to successfully assess whether or not the student has met the conditions specified in the original Board of Examiners report, completion of which should be sufficient to allow the Board of Examiners to confirm a recommendation of award of the degree for which the student is registered.

As a member of the Board of Examiners you are assessing the candidate’s thesis/dissertation against the criteria for award of the programme upon which they are registered and this should be borne in mind when determining the extent to which revisions are necessary. The revisions requested should be those necessary in order to allow the student to reach the standard required to be successfully awarded the degree for which they are registered. Should you identify further optional revisions which you think it would be helpful to appraise the student of, for example because it would help the student to seek publication of their work, you are welcome to identify these in the report, but you must make it clear that these are optional changes which are for further information for the student but are not necessary revisions which would require review before confirming approval of the award.

Minor or major amendments should only be selected if the Board of Examiners can confirm that the student will meet the requirements for the degree following completion of those specific amendments. 

When making a recommendation of resubmission you should provide evidence against the criteria that outlines clearly both where the student has and has not met the Board of Examiners’ report form when you review the resubmission.

When following resubmission you are providing evidence of the student’s failure to meet the award criteria please do reference any positive achievements of the student, as well as being clear about how they have failed to meet the award criteria. Where you are recommending an award other than the award for which the student is registered please ensure you provide positive evidence against the criteria for the award for that degree as well as providing evidence of their failure to meet the criteria for the award of the degree for which they registered.

The report form must be typed to ensure legibility, and where issues have been identified in preliminary reports for correction these must be included in the final report form, as the student will not be sent the preliminary report as a matter of course.

Examiners are advised that it is useful to:

  • Distinguish substantial matters from minor matters so that it is clear to those reviewing the report what the significant issues are.
  • When identifying substantial matters for revision provide a clear explanation as to what is currently wrong, and clear guidance on how this needs to be addressed.
  • Where identifying deficiencies in background reading provide bibliographic references for selected key texts (from which the student can then follow up references for further reading).
  • When requiring additional sections of text to be added to the dissertation/thesis to provide an indication of the sort of length that is required.
  • In identifying minor issues, such as grammatical ones, to list such corrections with the page, paragraph and line number; where an issue recurs then it is good practice to give reference to an example of where the problem occurs.
  • Distinguish optional recommendations (e.g. those which might help a candidate seeking to publish their thesis) from those requirements necessary for the successful confirmation of award. 

Examiners should bear in mind that until the report form has been formally approved any recommendations made by the Board of Examiners must be viewed as provisional.

How to Examine a Thesis’ Lynne Pearce, 2005 (available from the University Library) includes the following advice:

 

   ‘if you believe something is wrong, and needs changing, you are obliged to offer very specific instructions on how that is to be achieved’.

   ‘Needless to say, this requirement is a serious – and possibly useful – deterrent against examiners making glib and unspecified criticisms of a piece of work. However, many examiners persist in giving instructions which are inadequate and/ or ambiguous, leaving both candidate and supervisor with the anxious task of interpretation. There is also a tendency to simply reproduce the main points made in the pre-viva report and ignore how these may need to modified or expanded in the light of the viva discussion.

   A useful recommendation here is to be as selective as possible in the changes you ask for. Even though, in an ideal world, you might wish for far more substantial amendments, try and keep in mind the distinction between a ‘good enough’ thesis and prospective publications in which you would expect candidates to more rigorously revise and improve the work in question.

   Unless you have requested a [resubmission] there will, in any case, be a limit on what you can ask to be changed. Asking for changes that are strategic and symptomatic – rather than ones that are exhaustive – is therefore the sensible way forward. Here are some of the most useful recommendations you could make concerning corrections: 

  • rephrase parts of the abstract so that it is a clear and accurate account of the thesis and what it attempts to do;
  • rephrase the title of the thesis for similar reasons to the above;
  • request changes to the introduction to signal more clearly to the reader what is to follow;
  • insert paragraphs on methodology/ rationale if this has been overlooked;
  • rewrite opening paragraphs of chapters to refocus the emphasis of each chapter if its current agenda is misleading;
  • insert sentences to resolve points of ambiguity or generalization;
  • insert footnotes for similar reasons to the above;
  • ask for the conclusion (or parts thereof) to be rewritten).

   All these recommendations are made in the spirit of making the thesis as it stands as watertight as possible in those instances where a major rewrite is deemed unnecessary.’ (pg 94-95)

 

Adapted examples from sections of real reports:

 

There are four broad categories of changes we would like the candidate to address.

 

1. Areas for Expansion, Clarification or Deletion There are several areas we would like the candidate to expand on or strengthen their claims or delete.

 

The author should strengthen the discussions on pp.78-79 of XXX. Specifically, they should address the contention that it is problematic to XXXXX

 

2. Methods The methodological choices made in the thesis need to be made more explicit and justified with reference to the appropriate XXXXX methods literature. In terms of structure the candidate should create a separate methodological chapter which deals with all the issues mentioned below to come after chapter 1 and then edit the existing methods discussions in the empirical chapters. As discussed in the viva, the method chapter should address the following issues:

 

 

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

 

3. Length The thesis needs to be edited down to fit the 100,000 word limit. The thesis has a good deal of repetition which could be deleted. In particular, Part 1 of the work outlines the background in XXXXX in several places, which is returned to once more in part 2 – this should be heavily edited. An obvious way of doing this would be to restructure the chapters to create a more integrated approach to Part 1 but we will leave this to the candidate. The key issue is that the work is edited and repetition avoided.

 

4. Presentational Issues The thesis has various presentational and referencing issues that should be addressed. The main presentational areas for attention are listed below with some indicative examples. Please note however, the examples and list is not exhaustive.

 

• A variety of fonts have been used in the contents page and there are issues with the point size of the footnotes which should be smaller than the main text.

 

• The paragraph spacing not always consistent – e.g. pp. 29; pp. 39; pp. 61; pp. 102; pp. 116-117; pp. 132; pp. 165; throughout chapter 6.

 

• Proof reading is required

• Grammar – there are missing apostrophes in places; inconsistent use of capitalisation – e.g. pp. 67, pp. 76, pp. 379 capitals after a colon. 

 

• Bibliography format – this needs to be better spaced and second lines indented, and needs to follow a single referencing system.

 

References mentioned in report (full bibliographic references are given of further reading mentioned in the report)

 

On what you might say if you are asking for an expansion to the work done:

                                                              

Chapter 1

 

Expand to incorporate a greater breadth of literature – aiming for ~35 pages in total. Part of this will include an expansion of the final section of aims of the research. Provide a more detailed rationale behind formulation of these aims as well as expanding the aims to fully cover the content of the thesis. Add reference to appropriate chapters as necessary.

 

On what you might require from a student:

 

The examiners require a revised version of the thesis together with an accompanying document which explains how and where in the thesis the examiners’ concerns are addressed.

 

On headings you might use:

 

Strategic deletions
Clarification, development and additional depth of discussion
Enhancement of analysis
Improvement of focus and argumentation