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Articles

The challenge of achieving transparency in undergraduate honours-level dissertation supervision

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Pages 101-117 | Received 26 Aug 2019, Accepted 27 May 2020, Published online: 11 Jun 2020
 

ABSTRACT

The undergraduate honours-level dissertation is a significant component of many UK undergraduate programmes, as a key stage in the longer-term intellectual and career development of potential researchers and knowledge-workers, and also a critical contributor to immediate award outcome. This study aims to identify how dissertation supervisors balance and deliver on these expectations. Qualitative analysis of twenty interviews conducted with supervisors at two post-1992 UK universities identifies how supervisors construct supervision as a multi-stage process. Supervisors describe how their individual supervisory practices enable them to maintain initial control of the dissertation, to extend supervisee autonomy at a central stage, and to distance supervisors further from the written output at a final stage in the process. This study questions whether this approach is satisfactory either in an institutional context where the supervisor is also first marker of work they may have shaped substantially, or as a pedagogic approach to developing research skills.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1 The term ‘dissertation’ is used throughout this study, although the terms ‘project’ and ‘thesis’ are also in regular current use to refer to course components of similar level and dimension.

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