TY - JOUR
T1 - Mentoring through the structured seminars: Student progression in the online Ed.D. program
AU - Wan, Guofang
N1 - Mentoring Through the Structured-Seminars: Student Progression in the Online Ed.D. Program Guofang Wan, Francis E. Godwyll, Rashmi Sharma, Wisdom Mensah, Hongwei Yang, Mark Malisa & William Crawley Innovative Teaching and Learning, 3 (2021), pp. 12-35. Published online: 2021-06 Retention and graduation continue to be topics of discussion for online doctoral programs within academia.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Retention and graduation continue to be topics of discussion for online doctoral programs within academia. Focusing on the post-coursework, dissertation proposal stage, this study examines whether students progress differently with two different mentoring approaches: the innovative structured-seminars versus the traditional unstructured mentoring. This study, using a quantitative approach and an extant data of 116 doctoral students, measures students' progression by the number of years enrolled in the program and number of credit hours earned while engaged with the two different mentorings. The results indicate that students engaged in the new structured-seminars on average spent significantly less time and needed significantly fewer credits than their peers in the unstructured mentoring. The innovative structured-seminar approach shows potential as an effective curriculum for online doctoral programs.
AB - Retention and graduation continue to be topics of discussion for online doctoral programs within academia. Focusing on the post-coursework, dissertation proposal stage, this study examines whether students progress differently with two different mentoring approaches: the innovative structured-seminars versus the traditional unstructured mentoring. This study, using a quantitative approach and an extant data of 116 doctoral students, measures students' progression by the number of years enrolled in the program and number of credit hours earned while engaged with the two different mentorings. The results indicate that students engaged in the new structured-seminars on average spent significantly less time and needed significantly fewer credits than their peers in the unstructured mentoring. The innovative structured-seminar approach shows potential as an effective curriculum for online doctoral programs.
UR - https://global-sci.org/intro/article_detail/itl/19338.html
U2 - 10.4208/itl.20210002
DO - 10.4208/itl.20210002
M3 - Article
JO - Innovative Teaching and Learning
JF - Innovative Teaching and Learning
ER -