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Qi, Jing; Manathunga, Catherine; Singh, Michael; Bunda, Tracey – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
Existing literature on transcultural doctoral education remains largely silent about how history enters knowledge creation and the supervisory relationship. This paper draws upon Andzaldúa's borderlands theory and de Sousa Santo's theory on epistemologies of the South to examine the complex ways that history impacts upon First Nations, migrant,…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Immigrants, Refugees, Student Diversity
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Manathunga, Catherine; Qi, Jing; Bunda, Tracey; Singh, Michael – Discourse: Studies in the Cultural Politics of Education, 2021
In this article, we introduce a time mapping methodology to chart the impact of transcultural and First Nations' histories, geographies and cultural knowledges on doctoral education. Drawing upon a 'Southern', postcolonial-decolonial theoretical framing and extending textual life history methodologies, we argue that time mapping is a visual…
Descriptors: Postcolonialism, Doctoral Programs, Time, Accountability
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Winchester-Seeto, Theresa; Homewood, Judi; Thogersen, Jane; Jacenyik-Trawoger, Christa; Manathunga, Catherine; Reid, Anna; Holbrook, Allyson – Higher Education Research and Development, 2014
This article presents an analysis of rich data, gathered from interviews with 46 candidates and 38 supervisors from three Australian universities, about experiences of doctoral supervision in cross-cultural situations. Our analysis shows that many of the issues reported by international candidates are the same as those encountered by domestic…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Supervision, Interviews, Supervisors
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Connell, Raewyn; Manathunga, Catherine – Australian Universities' Review, 2012
In this essay, the authors talk about higher degree supervision as a human relationship, and shares how to supervise a PhD. There's a tendency now to talk about supervision as if it's a technical process one needs to learn the rules of. This paper urges educators to think about this as a human educational relationship, which has all the ups and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Graduate Students, Supervision, Doctoral Programs
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Manathunga, Catherine – Australian Universities' Review, 2012
Many universities have introduced team supervision as a means of intervening in the intensity of the traditional supervisor-student dyad. This policy is intended to provide students with a great support during their candidature and to share the burden of sole supervision. It is also a pedagogy that seeks to support students' engagement with new…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Graduate Students, Graduate Study, Supervision