‘We can work on this’: exploring supervisor approaches to feedback in the context of writing for the professional doctorate.

Tuck, Jackie (2024). ‘We can work on this’: exploring supervisor approaches to feedback in the context of writing for the professional doctorate. Studies in Graduate and Postdoctoral Education (Early access).

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1108/sgpe-01-2024-0004

Abstract

Purpose
This paper aims to show how an Academic Literacies lens can contribute a deeper understanding of writing for the Professional Doctorate (PD) by focusing both on the language of supervisors’ written feedback, and on student and supervisor perspectives on feedback throughout Year 1 (Y1).
Design/methodology/approach
First, written feedback summaries on formative assessments across two Y1 cohorts on a UK PD programme were analysed thematically to identify patterns in feedback practices. Secondly, two longitudinal, detailed student/supervisor case studies were developed, drawing on multiple data sources.
Findings
Supervisors’ written feedback enacted an encouraging dialogue around assessed writing, discursively constructing a sense of solidarity on the doctoral journey, focusing on the ‘long view’. Case study analysis, however, revealed tensions centred around jarring discontinuities in students’ feedback experience as they transitioned from formative to summative assessment at the end of Y1.
Research limitations/implications
The article demonstrates that an Academic Literacies approach can offer valuable insights into the specific, situated context of writing for a distance learning Professional Doctorate and makes the case for greater attention to writing in contexts of partly taught doctorates.
Practical implications
Findings suggests that PD programmes should work towards providing continuity of feedback experience, through supervisor and examiner training and through assessment arrangements which support students to navigate challenging transitions between formative and summative phases of assessment.
Originality/value
This article reports on an innovative research design which combined a textual ‘snapshot’ of supervisory feedback, paying close attention to language, with detailed longitudinal case studies exploring perspectives on feedback over time. It contributes to doctoral writing research by throwing light on the relatively underexplored domain of writing in the taught phase of the professional doctorate. It contributes to doctoral education studies by highlighting the central role of feedback on writing in shaping the experience of PD researchers.

Viewing alternatives

Download history

Metrics

Public Attention

Altmetrics from Altmetric

Number of Citations

Citations from Dimensions

Item Actions

Export

About