Abstract
The supervision of master’s students at the dissertation stage of their taught programme is generally considered to be one of the privileges of an academic in Higher Education (Bacwayo et al., 2017). Of concern to those who are less experienced or new to the supervisory role is knowing the best way to effectively support their supervisees, particularly at the write-up stage. This opinion piece focuses its attention on the discussion, an important chapter which typically provokes ‘fear, uncertainty and doubt’ (Mewburn, 2016) in the minds of taught master’s students as they wrestle with its construction. I argue that supervisors can alleviate some of their supervisees’ anxieties by introducing them to the SCE model – Support, Challenge, and Extend – which was personally developed and has been shared with taught master’s students in England for a number of years. Designed to purposefully target key chapter content, I aim to show readers how this simple yet useful model effectively encourages taught master’s students to establish and knit connections between their review of literature and findings chapters, ‘comparing and contrasting the study results with those of other relevant studies’ (Bavdekar, 2015, p.40) with reasoning. Extracts from master’s dissertations (taught; from the academic discipline of education) are offered by way of illustrating the value of the SCE model for supervisors to help their students avoid making common mistakes in their writing, thus generating a stimulating discussion about what is known (literature) and what is now known (findings) in the student’s chosen area of study. The applicability of the SCE model to dissertations at any level of study is also recognised.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Number of pages | 9 |
| Journal | Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education |
| Volume | 28 |
| DOIs |
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| Publication status | Published - 24 Sept 2023 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:(c) 2023 Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education
Keywords
- Dissertation
- Discussion chapter
- Research links
- SCE model
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