In late 2012 and early 2013 we interviewed 25 experienced and early career supervisors of creative practice higher research degrees. This journey spanned five universities and a broad range of disciplines including visual art, music, performing art, new media, creative writing, fashion, graphic design, interaction design and interior design. Some of the supervisors we interviewed were amongst the first to complete and supervise practice-led and practice-based PhDs; some have advocated for and defined this emergent field; and some belong to the next generation of supervisors who have confidently embarked on this exciting and challenging path.
Their reflections have brought to light many insights gained over the past decade. Here we have drawn together common themes into a collection of principles and best practice examples. We present them as advice rather than rules, as one thing that the supervisors were unanimous about is the need to avoid proscriptive models and frameworks, and to foster creativity and innovation in what is still an emergent field of postgraduate supervision.
There is now an increasing body of knowledge on creative practice-based doctorates especially in Australia and the United Kingdom. A particular focus in recent years has been on the written examinable component or exegesis, and a number of studies have provided important information about change and stability in the form and nature of the exegesis and its relationship to the creative project. However, we still know relatively little about the pedagogical practices that supervisors use to support these students’ development as scholarly writers, nor of how supervisors view ‘writing’ in relation to the creative practice components of the degree endeavour. This paper draws on data from a recent study of supervision in creative practice higher research degrees and it highlights the transformative nature of writing for the development of creative practice research scholars in the context of competing discourses on research writing. In contrast to institutional silencing of writing, the study relates numerous examples of effective writing-rich supervisory pedagogies illustrating how successful supervisors work with their students to bring their creative projects into articulation.
http://dx.doi.org.libraryproxy.griffith.edu.au/10.1080/00131857.2015.1035629
We find ourselves at an interesting intersection. As supervisors of practice-led research higher degree students in both art and design, we find ourselves consciously using different vocabularies when we teach our postgraduate students research methods. We encounter stark differences in project designs and we find ourselves switching hats as we alternate between draft exegeses and consider, for example, the poetic goals of an installation artist one day and the pragmatic aims of an interaction designer the next.
Hamilton, Jillian G. and Jaaniste, Luke O. (2009) The effective and the evocative : reflecting on practice-led research approaches in art and design. In: Interventions in the Public Domain, 30 September - 2 October 2009, Queensland College of Art, Griffith University, Brisbane, Queensland.
How does ethics screening affect research in writing programs? The Social and Behavioural Research Ethics Committee (SBREC) at my university has recently been dealing with an increasing number of applications regarding projects based around the writing of life stories. While there are necessarily sensitivities about the feelings and rights of the human subjects, an insistence on ethical screening is sometimes seen as antagonistic to research in the creative arts. I have previously considered the way in which creative writing programs deal with the emerging ethical 'intrusion' in activities that, hitherto, had been regarded as requiring only an informal code of conduct (NHMRC Ethics in Human Research Conference 2005).
This paper updates that earlier work, including a review both of U.S. ethical guidelines for conducting oral history interviews and the events this year at QUT regarding a controversial documentary film project on disabled people. It points to some future actions that could address the emerging situation as it concerns research in life writing.
The Supervision Whisperers is dedicated to the topic of supervising a thesis. Like many great ideas, this blog grew from a conversation among fellow academics over dinner – with margaritas! We agreed that there needed to be a space online to discuss the highs, lows and challenges of supervising higher degree by research students (PhD, Professional Doctorate and Masters by Research/MPhil).
We built this space to share, reflect on and help improve research supervision practice around the world. For those beginning their supervision practice, this blog provides some insight into life on the other side and an opportunity to share what you have learned. Together we’ll explore how best to supervise students through their own exciting, often unpredictable, research journey.
The Supervision Whisperers is co-edited by Dr Inger Mewburn, founder of The Thesis Whisperer and Director of Research Training at the Australian National University and Dr Evonne Miller, Director of QUT Design Lab, Creative Industries at Queensland University of Technology.
I work at a university helping university academics who are supervising research students. I am a research supervisor myself. This blog is intended to share some of the experiences I have as a research supervisor to encourage other supervisors to share their practice. In my work helping research supervisors I have learned that most people come into this particular academic practice strongly influenced by the ways in which they were supervised. Sometimes it involves adopting what you have observed from your own research supervisor and at other times you are adamant that you will supervise very differently from the ways in which you were supervised.
I have developed my own framework for investigating research supervision. The theory behind this framework is documented in a chapter from a book edited by Kumar, V & Lee, A Connecting the Local, Regional and International in Doctoral Education, Serdang, Universiti Putra Malaysia Press. http://www.otago.ac.nz/research/graduate/otago029654.pdf
TEXT Special Issue No 3 April 2004, Journal of the Australian Association of Writing Programs, edited by Julie Fletcher and Allan Mann.
Jeri Kroll The Exegesis and the Gentle Reader/Writer
Nike Bourke and Philip Nielsen The Problem of the Exegesis in Creative Writing Higher Degrees
Estelle Barrett What Does it Meme? The Exegesis as Valorisation and Validation of Creative Arts Research
Barbara Bolt The Exegesis and the Shock of the New
Donna Lee Brien The Problem of Where to Start: A Foundation Question for Creative Writing Higher Degree Candidates and Supervisors
Barbara Milech and Ann Schilo 'Exit Jesus': Relating the Exegesis and the Creative/Production Components of a Research Thesis
Robert Nelson Doctoralness in the Balance: The Agonies of Scholarly Writing in Studio Research Degrees
Exegesis - The Debate in TEXT Papers published in previous issues of TEXT
How can we nurture creativity in education? The Raising Creativity documentary project answers the why, who, how, what, and now what about creativity in education respectively (i.e., why is this topic important, who has spoken/written on this topic already, how will this issue be investigated this time, what was observed during the inquiry, and now what will this mean going forward?). Tweet, post, comment, and share!
Raising Creativity is a 5 part documentary-style YouTube video series produced in partial fulfillment of the requirements for Rebecca Zak's PhD in Educational Studies. www.raisingcreativity.com
Because the traditional conventions of supervision are ill-suited to the diverse contexts, mediums and outputs of creative practice; because of the rapid growth in enrolments and pressures on supervision load; and because of a lack of sector-wide consensus, postgraduate supervision in the creative arts and design is particularly complex. Thus, supervisors have to be flexible, innovative, and able to solve new and often unanticipated challenges in what remains an emergent, contested and highly differentiated field.
Yet, until now, few collections have brought together a range of perspectives on the supervision of creative practice HDR. To enable capacity building of leadership in research education for supervisors and schools, it is time to consider the subject from the perspective of a spectrum of stakeholders—supervisors, administrators, examiners and allied HDR support services, as well as researchers who have captured the experiences of supervisors. This special issue of ACCESS brings together such a range of insights into supervising creative practice PhDs.
There is a paucity of material available to support supervisors of honours and coursework dissertation students in Australian universities. Most universities provide policy and procedural documents relating to undergraduate, honours and master’s dissertation supervision, but limited information is provided on the practice of supervision. Previous research suggests a mismatch between supervisor and student expectations of the supervisory relationship and uncertainties surrounding good supervisory practice.
In 2013 Associate Professor Lynne Roberts at Curtin University was granted an Office for Learning and Teaching National Teaching Fellowship to identify, develop and disseminate best practice in supporting honours and coursework dissertation supervision. Lynne interviewed new supervisors, students and dissertation coordinators to identify common supervisory issues and perceptions of what 'good' supervision entailed. Workshops with experienced supervisors identified best practices for dealing with issues surrounding supervision. On this website you will find a range of material resulting from this project:
- Guide for New Supervisors
- Information and tools for dealing with supervisory issues
- Annotated bibliography
- Information on related projects
Evans, S. (2007, November 21–23). No laughing matter: Ethics and human research in the arts. Paper presented at a meeting of the Australasian Association of Writing Programs, University of Canberra, Canberra.
How does ethics screening affect research in writing programs? The Social and Behavioural Research Ethics Committee (SBREC) at my university has recently been dealing with an increasing number of applications regarding projects based around the writing of life stories. While there are necessarily sensitivities about the feelings and rights of the human subjects, an insistence on ethical screening is sometimes seen as antagonistic to research in the creative arts. I have previously considered the way in which creative writing programs deal with the emerging ethical 'intrusion' in activities that, hitherto, had been regarded as requiring only an informal code of conduct (NHMRC Ethics in Human Research Conference 2005).
This paper updates that earlier work, including a review both of U.S. ethical guidelines for conducting oral history interviews and the events this year at QUT regarding a controversial documentary film project on disabled people. It points to some future actions that could address the emerging situation as it concerns research in life writing.