Author:
Blaney Jennifer M.,Kang Jina,Wofford Annie M.,Feldon David F.
Abstract
Purpose
This study aims to examine how science, technology, engineering, and mathematics doctoral students interact with postdocs within the research laboratory, identifying the nature and potential impacts of student–postdoc mentoring relationships.
Design/methodology/approach
Using a sample of 53 doctoral students in the biological sciences, this study uses a sequential mixed-methods design. More specifically, a phenomenological approach enabled the authors to identify how doctoral students make meaning of their interactions with postdocs and other research staff. Descriptive statistics are used to examine how emergent themes might differ as a product of gender and race/ethnicity and the extent to which emergent themes may relate to key doctoral student socialization outcomes.
Findings
This study reveals six emergent themes, which primarily focus on how doctoral students receive instrumental and psychosocial support from postdocs in their labs. The most frequent emergent theme captures the unique ways in which postdocs provide ongoing, hands-on support and troubleshooting at the lab bench. When examining how this theme plays a role in socialization outcomes, the results suggest that doctoral students who described this type of support from postdocs had more positive mental health outcomes than those who did not describe this type of hands-on support.
Originality/value
Literature on graduate student mentorship has focused primarily on the impact of advisors, despite recent empirical evidence of a “cascading mentorship” model, in which senior students and staff also play a key mentoring role. This study provides new insights into the unique mentoring role of postdocs, focusing on the nature and potential impacts of student–postdoc interactions.
Reference46 articles.
1. Race and gender differences in undergraduate research mentoring structures and research outcomes;CBE – Life Sciences Education,2017
2. A social capital perspective on the mentoring of undergraduate life science researchers: an empirical study of undergraduate–postgraduate–faculty triads;CBE – Life Sciences Education,2016
3. Preparing the professoriate of the future: graduate student socialization for faculty roles,2006
4. McNair scholars’ science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) graduate experience: a pilot study;Mid-Western Educational Researcher,2016
5. ‘If these women can do it, I can do it, too’: building women engineering leaders through graduate peer mentoring;Leadership and Management in Engineering,2010
Cited by
25 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献