40
Working with second-language
speakers of English
Mentorship, which involves a type of apprenticeship learning, collabora-
tion in research and writing, and the establishment of trusting relationships,
has been identified as a key component of successful supervision in a number
of studies of second-language research students (Belcher 1994; Braine 2002;
Dong 1997; Hasrati 2005; Myles and Cheng 2003). In Belcher’s (1994) study
of three second-language PhD students in the US and their mentors, the most
successful of the student–supervisor relationships was observed to be less
hierarchical, while being trust-based and supportive. While the supervisor
still retained her authority, the successful student grew and developed the
ability to become an independent researcher,
in some ways surpassing her
supervisor’s expectations.
Su Wu’s (2002) analysis of her experience of two very different postgraduate
environments in the UK underlines what she perceives as Taiwanese students’
need for explicit, hands-on, supportive supervision. Su Wu came to study in
the UK from the highly structured, competitive, teacher-directed Taiwanese
education system in which the traditional teacher ‘filled the pot’ (the empty
student). She began her MPhil studies at an ‘ancient’ (her words) university
where teaching tended to be conceptualized as simply ‘lighting the fire’ in the
student, and then she enrolled at a new polytechnic university for her PhD.
She contrasts these two experiences, describing the shock she and her fellow
Chinese students experienced at the ‘ancient’ university,
which appeared to
lack structure and support and did not articulate its expectations of students,
all in the name of cultivating the ‘independence’ and the maturity of post-
graduate students. The polytechnic, on the other hand, provided her with the
explicit induction, support and structure she needed for her doctoral studies.
Another characteristic of hands-on supervision that may particularly
support the second-language student and reduce potential isolation and
lack of access to academic research networks is the encouragement of team-
work environments that:
●
foster collaboration between candidates via informal coursework,
seminars and use of electronic media;
●
draw in other academics and experts;
●
link candidates into broader research community and/or
industry
networks;
●
encourage joint preparation for conference and journal papers.
(Sinclair 2005: viii)
While these sorts of environments are common in the sciences they are much
less so in the social sciences and arts and, as identified earlier in this chapter,
social and emotional isolation is a common experience for many PhD students
(Deem and Brehony 2000; Delamount
et al. 1997) and may be more acutely
experienced by international second-language students far from friends and
family. Dong (1998) comments that many supervisors are not aware of their
Working with second-language speakers of English
41
second-language students’ sense of isolation. Delamount
et al. recommend
providing access to facilities such as a staff common room and some social
events where students and faculty can meet and socialize,
while being sensi-
tive to the needs of those who may not drink alcohol or may have childcare
responsibilities. Second-language students need assistance with understand-
ing the ways they can ‘maximize the benefits to be derived from supervision,
research training, reading groups, seminars and participation in learned soci-
eties’ and a clearer understanding of ‘what doctoral study is about’ (Deem and
Brehony 2000: 163). Some international social sciences students interviewed
by Deem and Brehony would have welcomed ‘more collective ways of work-
ing’:
You see, we don’t have a common room ... where we could sit and talk
and ... which is normal. I mean, my other university ... I mean you always
bump into people in the coffee room [...] and you always can have a little
chat with somebody in the coffee room and they say ‘how are you doing’
and ‘how are you getting on’.
(International student, cited in Deem and Brehony 2000: 158)
Supervisors can help international students by providing stability,
structure
and continuity, and by acknowledging the investment that students have
made in coming to study in a foreign county, as well as their strong desire for
success combined with the social and family pressures that are often heavier
than those of English students (Wu 2002).
The introduction of research training courses at British and Australian
universities may help with both transition and social network issues and they
may parallel, to a limited extent, the substantial coursework that North
American doctoral students complete before proceeding to the dissertation.
Our own courses in thesis writing that run over a semester provide not only
skills development but also an opportunity for students to interact across dis-
ciplinary boundaries and build collegial friendships (Paltridge 2003; Starfield
2003). Deem and Brehony (2000) found that the
international students they
surveyed appreciated the research training courses and felt them to be more
beneficial than did the local students, both in terms of social contact and for
skills and theoretical framework development:
it was a very good experience ... In my country I felt everything was so
new, ontology, epistemology and all new and different concepts going
round in my head so having another year of methods course made a lot of
difference because you settle down. [...] nowadays I go a lot back to my
notes, especially those from the sessions about philosophy of social
research.
(Deem and Brehony 2000: 157)
42
Working with second-language speakers of English
Cohort or group supervision, which is the common and frequently very suc-
cessful way supervision
occurs in the natural sciences, fosters collaboration
and communication and could be considered across all disciplines, particu-
larly as a means of integrating second-language students into specific research
cultures (Sinclair 2005). In Chapter 3, we consider the role that writing
groups and learning how to provide feedback on the writing of others may
help develop thesis writing skills.
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