Abstract

This article centres upon experiences of supervising practitioner-researchers engaged in the first year of a Customised Master of Philosophy (MPhil) programme of study. This pathway resides within a larger collaboration between the University of Sunderland’s Centre for Excellence in Teacher Training (SUNCETT) and the Education and Training Foundation (ETF) delivering a National Practitioner Research Programme (PRP) in England. It takes as its starting point how non-traditional research students from the further adult and vocational education (FAVE) sector experience entry into the programme and their subsequent development of scholarship and research skills as they pursue their studies at research degree level in higher education (HE). Using six guiding principles underpinning the PRP as a framework for analysis, illustrative stories of the experiences of supervisors and research students provide insights into ways in which supervision is enacted. Some key characteristics of supervision practice are described. These often bring to light differences between supervision on the Customised MPhil with that of conventional MPhil programmes. The most striking finding supports how the development of collaborative and cooperative practice helps to shift the customary dynamic of research degree study away from isolation towards a shared experience as members of an inclusive and active research community.

Highlights

  • This article presents an account of a model of supervision practice, stemming from the experience of supervising practitioner-researchers from the further adult and vocational education (FAVE) sector studying on a Customised Master of Philosophy (MPhil) programme

  • Practitioners to participate in higher degree study, the Education and Training Foundation (ETF) in partnership with the University of Sunderland have developed a Practitioner Research Programme (PRP), which is open for application to all practitioners working in FAVE organisations funded by the Education & Skills Funding Agency (ESFA) in England

  • Practical, cooperative and mutual engagement in practice-focused research is a central principle in the Sunderland’s Centre for Excellence in Teacher Training (SUNCETT)-ETF PRP

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Summary

Introduction

This article presents an account of a model of supervision practice, stemming from the experience of supervising practitioner-researchers from the further adult and vocational education (FAVE) sector studying on a Customised Master of Philosophy (MPhil) programme. In the context of this study, non-traditional students are FAVE practitioners awarded a place on a Customised MPhil programme. The FAVE sector in the UK is characterised by learners studying for academic, vocational and leisure qualifications, work-based learning, apprenticeship and traineeship programmes and the new 2020 “Technical Level” qualifications. This diverse sector includes “returners” to learning across the age range and 14–19-year-old learners who have missed out on qualifications in the school sector. FAVE encompasses large multi-campus further education colleges (FECs), independent training

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