‘Doctoring’ our own: Confessions of a Māori doctoral supervisor
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This chapter has been published in the book: University Teaching Reconsidered: Justice, Practice, Inquiry. © 2008 Joce Jesson, Vicki, M. Carpenter, Margaret McLean, Maxine Stephenson and Airini. Published in 2010 by Dunmore Publishing Ltd. Used with publisher’s permission.
Abstract
There is very little literature, empirically based or otherwise, on the supervision of Māori doctoral students (Fitzgerald, 2005; Pope, 2008; Kidman, 2007; Smith, 2007). There is even less relating to Māori supervisors working with Māori doctoral students (Kidinan, 2007), let alone Māori supervisors working with non- Māori students. While the relatively large corpus of literature on doctoral supervision may be of some assistance to Māori supervisors, there is also a dearth of studies that focus on the pedagogical aspects. Research undertaken by Elizabeth McKinley and her co-researchers (McKinley, Grant, Middleton, Irwin & Williams, 2009) will now help to fill the literature gap on the teaching and learning process of supervision as it pertains to Māori.
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Hohepa, M. (2010). ‘Doctoring’ our own: Confessions of a Māori doctoral supervisor. In J. Jesson, V.M. Carpenter, M. McLean, M. Stephenson & Airini (Eds.), University Teaching Reconsidered: Justice, Practice, Inquiry (pp. 129-138). Wellington, New Zealand: Dunmore Publishing Ltd.
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Dunmore Publishing Ltd