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Pedagogical Principles for Graduate Supervision

Graduate supervision is shaped by a wide range of values, expectations, and pedagogical commitments. While supervisory practices vary across disciplines, institutions, and career stages, research in graduate education and the scholarship of teaching and learning has identified several principles that consistently underpin high-quality, effective, and equitable supervision (Hall et al.; Ontario Council of Graduate Studies). 

This section outlines a set of pedagogical principles and practices that commonly inform high-quality graduate supervision as a form of teaching. These principles are not intended as a checklist or prescriptive model. Rather, they offer a conceptual framework to support reflection on what might matter most in your own supervisory practice. Each principle includes practical examples to help prompt reflection on how supervision functions pedagogically and in practice across academic, relational, and professional domains. The list is designed to serve as a starting point for identifying or expanding core principles that may strongly align with your values, experiences, and supervisory context, but it is certainly not an exhaustive set. 

If you feel you already have a coherent set of pedagogical principles in place for your supervisory practice, please feel welcome to proceed to activity 3 below.  

Pedagogical Principles for Graduate Supervision

Effective graduate supervision draws on a growing body of research that frames supervision as a distinct pedagogical practice rather than solely an administrative or managerial role. Just as faculty engage with disciplinary scholarship to inform their research and teaching, supervisors benefit from engaging with literature on graduate education, supervision, mentoring, and academic development. 

An evidence-informed approach encourages supervisors to reflect critically on their practices, adapt to emerging research, and remain attentive to changing graduate student experiences, institutional expectations, and broader higher education contexts. Scholarly engagement supports more intentional, reflective, and responsive supervision for both students and supervisors. 

In practice:

A supervisor notices recurring challenges among their graduate students related to feedback, independence, and time to completion. Rather than assuming these issues are individual or idiosyncratic, the supervisor engages with literature on graduate supervision and doctoral pedagogy to better understand common patterns and evidence-informed strategies. Insights from this scholarship inform changes to meeting structures, feedback practices, and conversations about expectations. The supervisor treats supervision as a form of teaching that benefits from ongoing inquiry and learning. 

Optional Reflection: Where do you draw on evidence or scholarship to inform your supervisory decisions?

Graduate supervision is inherently individualized and relational. Students enter supervision with diverse identities, goals, experiences, and responsibilities, and effective supervision responds to this complexity. A student-centred approach recognizes graduate students as whole people, attending not only to intellectual development but also to well-being, confidence, and professional identity formation. 

Holistic supervision involves care, responsiveness, and advocacy, while also maintaining appropriate professional boundaries. Supervisors play an important role in fostering trust, supporting help-seeking, and creating environments where students feel safe to ask questions, take intellectual risks, and navigate challenges—particularly during periods of academic or personal stress. 

In practice:

A supervisor notices that a graduate student who is usually engaged has become quieter and less responsive. Rather than focusing immediately on productivity, the supervisor initiates a check-in conversation that invites the student to share how things are going more broadly. Together, they discuss priorities, adjust timelines, and clarify expectations for the coming weeks. The supervisor also shares on-campus resources that may be helpful as added avenues for support. The supervisor maintains appropriate boundaries while signalling care, flexibility, and support. 

Optional Reflection: How do you attend to students’ needs beyond academic output while maintaining professional boundaries?

High-quality supervision requires attention to equity, power, and difference. Supervisors must reflect on how culture, race, Indigeneity, disability, language, citizenship status, and other social locations shape supervisory relationships and graduate student experiences in post-secondary systems. 

Equitable supervision involves cultural humility, anti-oppressive practice, and awareness of systemic barriers within Canadian higher education. This includes supporting Indigenous, racialized, international, disabled, and other equity-deserving students, recognizing that well-intentioned practices can still reproduce inequities if left unexamined. Inclusive supervision is proactive rather than reactive, seeking to design supervisory practices that foster belonging, accessibility, and fairness (Kohout-Diaz). 

In practice:

A supervisor notices that a graduate student feels hesitant about presenting their work in departmental or conference settings due to past experiences of exclusion. Rather than encouraging exposure without preparation, the supervisor discusses strategies for navigating academic spaces, offers feedback on presentation approaches, and helps identify supportive venues for early sharing. The supervisor also reflects on whose voices tend to be affirmed in scholarly spaces and how supervision can help students build confidence and belonging over time while addressing social, cultural, or systemic inequities present within academic culture. Equity is understood as supporting access to participation and addressing areas for broader systemic and cultural change. 

Optional Reflection: How do you support students’ sense of belonging and confidence in academic or professional spaces?

Graduate supervision extends beyond research guidance to include mentorship across the multiple roles graduate students occupy—as students, researchers, instructors, colleagues, and emerging professionals. Supervisors support students’ development not only through formal instruction, but through modeling, dialogue, and participation in academic communities. 

Mentorship in supervision may include: 

  • Research mentorship, such as fostering scholarly independence, integrity, and authorship practices 
  • Teaching mentorship, including feedback on teaching, access to development opportunities, and reflective practice 
  • Service mentorship, such as introducing students to peer review, committees, community engagement, or professional service 

Recognizing and supporting these intersecting roles is a key pedagogical responsibility of supervision. 

In practice:

A supervisor recognizes that a graduate student is simultaneously navigating research, teaching responsibilities, and emerging service opportunities. Rather than treating these roles as separate or competing, the supervisor discusses how they intersect and what the student hopes to develop professionally. The supervisor offers guidance on balancing commitments, identifying opportunities aligned with the student’s goals, and setting boundaries when needed. Mentorship extends beyond research to support the student’s broader academic and professional identity. 

Optional Reflection: How do you support students in navigating the multiple roles they occupy during graduate study?

Clear, respectful, and ongoing communication is foundational to effective supervision. Supervisors and students benefit from establishing shared expectations around roles, timelines, feedback practices, availability, and working styles, while remaining open to revisiting these expectations as needs evolve. 

Constructive, timely feedback supports learning, confidence, and progress, particularly when feedback is dialogic rather than unidirectional. Conflict, while often uncomfortable, is not uncommon in supervisory relationships and should be understood as part of relational pedagogical work and relationships. Effective supervision involves recognizing tension early, engaging in difficult conversations with care, and drawing on institutional supports when appropriate. 

In practice:

Early in the supervisory relationship, a supervisor and graduate student discuss expectations around meeting frequency, feedback timelines, and communication norms. When tension later arises around critical feedback on a draft, the supervisor names the discomfort and revisits those shared expectations. By framing feedback as part of an ongoing pedagogical dialogue, the supervisor creates space for clarification rather than defensiveness. The focus remains on learning, progress, and relationship repair. 

Optional Reflection: How do you typically establish—and revisit—expectations when misunderstandings occur?

Supervisors play a central role in supporting students’ academic progress, helping them navigate degree requirements, research milestones, and program expectations. Beyond completion, supervision also supports students’ professional development and future pathways. 

This includes facilitating opportunities for students to: 

  • Present and publish research
  • Build scholarly and professional networks
  • Develop teaching identities and portfolios
  • Engage in service and leadership
  • Explore academic and non-academic career options

Effective supervision acknowledges the diversity of graduate student aspirations and normalizes multiple definitions of success within and beyond the academy. 

In practice:

As a graduate student approaches a key program milestone, a supervisor schedules time to discuss both degree progress and longer-term goals. Together, they review timelines, identify upcoming opportunities for presentations or publications, and talk about possible career pathways inside and outside academia. The supervisor normalizes multiple definitions of success and connects the student to relevant networks, colleagues, and resources. Supervision is framed as preparation for a range of professional futures. 

Optional Reflection: How do you support students’ academic progress while also attending to diverse career aspirations?

Graduate supervision is not static; it evolves over time and across contexts. Reflective practice allows supervisors to examine their assumptions, learn from experience, and adapt to changing student needs, disciplinary norms, and institutional conditions. 

Reflection may involve seeking feedback from students, talking with colleagues, engaging in professional learning communities, revisiting supervisory goals, or articulating supervisory philosophies and principles. Just as graduate students benefit from mentorship, supervisors also benefit from institutional supports, collegial dialogue, and recognition of supervision as a form of pedagogical labour and professional practice. 

In practice:

After completing a graduate supervision cycle, a supervisor takes time to reflect on what supported student learning and where challenges emerged. They review notes from supervision meetings, consider informal feedback from the student, and reflect on moments of uncertainty or tension. These reflections prompt discussions with colleagues and small adjustments to how the supervisor structures meetings, communicates expectations, and provides feedback in future supervisory relationships. Supervision is approached as an evolving pedagogical practice shaped by ongoing learning and experience. 

Optional Reflection: How do you create space to reflect on your supervisory practice, and how do those reflections inform future decisions?

Activity 3: Identifying Core Pedagogical Principles, Practices, and Goals

Building on earlier reflections, our next activity is designed to help you identify and expand 2-4 core pedagogical principles, practices, and goals that personally defines your approach to graduate supervision. These may be principles and practices that are well-established, while others are more future-focused as an area of growth.  

Please proceed to Activity 3 which will take approximately 5-10 minutes to complete. 

Information Box Group

Activity 3: Identifying Core Pedagogical Principles, Practices, Goals  Downloadable Worksheet

After reviewing the pedagogical principles and related dimensions outlined above, take time to reflect on the values and commitments that most strongly shape your approach to graduate supervision in the downloadable worksheet.

Step 1: Select Principles and Practices  

Begin by identifying 2-4 pedagogical principles that resonate most strongly with your current supervisory practice. These may come from the list provided in this module or from values that emerge from your own experiences and context. 

For each principle you identify, consider: 

  • Why is this principle especially important to you as a graduate supervisor?
  • How does this principle show up in your day-to-day supervisory practices?
  • Can you describe a concrete example, habit, or strategy that illustrates this principle in action?

Reflection prompt:
In my approach to graduate supervision, I prioritize principles such as…

Step 2: Identifying Areas for Growth and Intentional Development 

Graduate supervision is an evolving pedagogical practice. This section invites you to name one area you are actively developing or would like to strengthen. 

Take a moment to consider: 

  • Which pedagogical principle or dimension of supervision would you like to integrate more intentionally into your practice?
  • What draws you to this area at this point in your supervisory journey?
  • What small, realistic changes or practices might support your growth in this area?

Reflection sentences (optional): 

  • An area of supervisory pedagogy I am actively working to develop is…
  • I view my approach to graduate supervision as evolving, particularly in relation to…

References

Hall, Wendy, et al. Developing a Set of Pedagogical Principles for Graduate Student Supervision. Version 1, University of British Columbia, 2019,https://www.grad.ubc.ca/faculty-staff/information-supervisors/principles-graduate-supervision 

Kohout-Diaz, M. Promoting inclusive university practices: Fostering diversity and dignity in doctoral supervision. European Journal of Education,  59, e12710, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1111/ejed.12710 

Ontario Council on Graduate Studies. Principles for Graduate Supervision at Ontario’s Universities. Council of Ontario Universities, 26 June 2023, https://cou.ca/wp-content/uploads/2023/06/Principles-for-Graduate-Supervision-at-Ontarios-Universities-FN-June-2023.pdf