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Lydia Luise Bach; Emily May Armstrong; Matt Jones – Journal of Learning Development in Higher Education, 2025
The relationship between doctoral research supervisors and their students is crucial for success during doctoral study. Supervisors face increasing complexity in managing these relationships, compounded by job precarity and the pressure to ensure timely doctoral completion. Equally, doctoral students will navigate a competitive job environment…
Descriptors: Supervisory Methods, Supervisors, Doctoral Students, Interpersonal Relationship
Hora, Matthew T.; Wolfgram, Matthew; Chen, Zi; Zhang, Jiahong; Fischer, Jacklyn John – Wisconsin Center for Education Research, 2020
Internships are widely promoted extra-curricular experiences that can have positive impacts on student outcomes, yet how specific elements of internships contribute to these outcomes and facilitate learning is understudied. In this sequential mixed-methods study, we use sociocultural learning theory to interpret data from surveys (n = 435) and…
Descriptors: Internship Programs, Supervision, Higher Education, Supervisory Methods
Hu, Yanjuan; van der Rijst, Roeland Matthijs; van Veen, Klaas; Verloop, Nico – Higher Education Research and Development, 2016
The number of international Chinese students enrolled in research programmes in Western universities is growing. To provide effective research supervision to these students, it is helpful to understand the similarities and differences in the supervision process between the host country and their home country. We explored which learning outcomes…
Descriptors: Masters Theses, Supervision, Comparative Education, Supervisory Methods
Smith, Cynthia Sonderegger; Arsenault, Kimberly – Mentoring & Tutoring: Partnership in Learning, 2014
Mentoring is a widely used method of induction into a variety of professional roles, including educational leadership. However, little scholarly literature has focused on the role of mentoring in the career development of special education administrators. In this examination of 14 such mentoring relationships, the existence of career and…
Descriptors: Special Education, Educational Administration, Administrator Education, Mentors
Campbell, Corbin M.; Smith, Meredith; Dugan, John P.; Komives, Susan R. – Review of Higher Education, 2012
Mentorship is empirically related to several desired outcomes in college students including academic success and career development. Yet little is known about how mentorship aids leadership development in college students. This study uses data from the Multi-Institutional Study of Leadership, a national study with more than 110,000 participants…
Descriptors: College Students, Mentors, Student Leadership, Career Development
Washington, Christa Ellen – Forum on Public Policy Online, 2010
The purpose of this study was to examine perceived career barriers of women in entry-level and mid-level positions who were formally and informally mentored. Research studies have found that mentoring can yield positive outcomes; however, there is limited research on how mentoring style impacts career advancement. The primary research questions…
Descriptors: Mentors, Females, Barriers, Supervisory Methods
White, Lori S. – New Directions for Student Services, 2011
This chapter presents a series of supervision-related case studies of situations that midlevel managers might face. Individuals enrolled in a midlevel management professional development course recommended the topics selected for this chapter. Drawing upon her experience teaching the course, the author selected four case studies that individuals…
Descriptors: Supervision, Middle Management, Case Studies, Student Personnel Services
Peer reviewedKropf, Marcia Brumit – New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, 1998
Lists benefits of part-time employment for women and employers. Describes strategies for both women and their supervisors for successful part-time arrangements. (SK)
Descriptors: Career Development, Employment Practices, Females, Part Time Employment
Peer reviewedUgorji, Ugorji O. – Public Administration Review, 1997
A study identified career-impeding supervisory behaviors reported by 247 African Americans and 647 European Americans in New Jersey state government. European Americans were more satisfied with their jobs and experienced less career-impeding supervisory behavior than African Americans. Gender differences were not significant. (JOW)
Descriptors: Blacks, Career Development, Employer Employee Relationship, Job Satisfaction
Goodyear, Marilu – EDUCAUSE Quarterly, 2006
Mentoring has been a focus for individual career development since the mid-1980s when researchers and human resource administrators began to pay attention to its benefits. Research has shown that successful mentoring relationships can assist individuals in learning the ropes at an organization; increase career satisfaction, salaries, and influence…
Descriptors: Mentors, Career Development, Supervisor Supervisee Relationship, Supervisory Methods
Peer reviewedNorton, Steven D.; And Others – Personnel Psychology, 1980
A model of career development using three types of validity (empirical, content, and construct) is considered for supervisors' ratings of nonmanagers as a predictor of success as managers. As defined in the Uniform Guidelines and professional literature, all three are inapplicable to this prediction situation. (Author)
Descriptors: Administrator Selection, Career Development, Employees, Evaluation Methods
Peer reviewedMarsh, Stephanie R. – College Student Affairs Journal, 2001
Adult development theory can assist supervisors in understanding the needs of staff member sin various stages on their psychosocial and career development. A chart was created that identifies developmental tasks or challenges many student affairs professionals face during their working lives, and approaches supervisors may use to assist staff in…
Descriptors: Adult Development, Career Development, Developmental Tasks, Higher Education
Ryan, M. Colleen; Friedman, Paul G. – 1983
Exchanges within the mentor-protege relationship, the effect of age and gender on that relationship, and the effect of that relationship on career progress and subsequent mentoring behavior are here studied for the first time in the context of a state government agency. Twenty-five males and 25 females were selected randomly from among 250…
Descriptors: Administrator Role, Adults, Career Development, Females
Chen, Moon S. – Health Education (Washington D.C.), 1981
Four principles for arranging successful field experiences in health are: (1) Organize the experience as a partnership involving the student, faculty member, and health practitioner; (2) Require regular feedback from students; (3) Provide the student with input from the health practitioner; and (4) Observe and evaluate the students in the field.…
Descriptors: Allied Health Occupations, Career Development, Feedback, Field Experience Programs
Allbright, Bruce; Holup, John – 1988
This guide lists the competencies expected to be developed in four levels of the marketing education curriculum in Idaho: the career sustaining level, the specialist level, the supervisory level, and the entrepreneurial level. For the career sustaining and specialist levels, 15 competencies are listed: define and apply the role of marketing in the…
Descriptors: Behavioral Objectives, Business Administration, Career Development, Competence
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