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Impression formation of PhD supervisors during student-led selection: an examination of UK business schools with a focus on staff profiles

Impression formation of PhD supervisors during student-led selection: an examination of UK business schools with a focus on staff profiles
Impression formation of PhD supervisors during student-led selection: an examination of UK business schools with a focus on staff profiles
PhD students are allocated to supervisors in several ways. In Business Schools, the most dominant allocation method is student-led selection. In many cases, this requires students to approach and petition potential supervisors before having had any previous communications with them. Though, given that supervisors possess similar credentials, what evaluation process do students undertake when considering them? To date, research to understand this process is absent. Through the theoretical frame of impression management and the use of in-depth interviews (n = 19), we address this gap. Specifically, we examine how warmth and competence perceptions (i.e. The Big Two impressions) shape supervisor selection. Further, we provide understanding of the role academic staff profiles play in this process. We contribute first, a hierarchy of determinants for supervisor choice in ascending order of importance; gatekeeping attributes, competence, and warmth. Second, we provide a typology of stereotypical supervisors (The Guru, The Friend, The Machine, The Dud) based on informational cues from their profiles (i.e. high competence supervisors as colder, and high warmth staff as less competent). Third, we present a critical understanding of the opportunities and challenges of self-presentation through staff profiles. Finally, we offer specific advice for mobilising impression management tactics in these profiles to best appeal to PhD applicants.
1472-8117
Marder, Ben
1db4a1c7-6162-4402-b873-321e066be7d6
Oliver, Sebastian
06f4df0c-df3a-409f-a4f9-b28065fb2cb8
Yau, Amy
f9b3422a-16c8-4642-b5da-f8971335d127
Lavertu, Laura
39180438-30ff-4cc9-8230-5fc17d82d119
Perier, Claire
205e3ee7-290e-4692-ad15-a1d351aafe23
Frank, Mats
915f3535-fd74-4b54-861a-81625d419ede
Cowan, Kirsten
1f9287cc-261a-408f-9321-677a8caa3758
Marder, Ben
1db4a1c7-6162-4402-b873-321e066be7d6
Oliver, Sebastian
06f4df0c-df3a-409f-a4f9-b28065fb2cb8
Yau, Amy
f9b3422a-16c8-4642-b5da-f8971335d127
Lavertu, Laura
39180438-30ff-4cc9-8230-5fc17d82d119
Perier, Claire
205e3ee7-290e-4692-ad15-a1d351aafe23
Frank, Mats
915f3535-fd74-4b54-861a-81625d419ede
Cowan, Kirsten
1f9287cc-261a-408f-9321-677a8caa3758

Marder, Ben, Oliver, Sebastian, Yau, Amy, Lavertu, Laura, Perier, Claire, Frank, Mats and Cowan, Kirsten (2021) Impression formation of PhD supervisors during student-led selection: an examination of UK business schools with a focus on staff profiles. The International Journal of Management Education, 19 (1), [100453]. (doi:10.1016/j.ijme.2021.100453).

Record type: Article

Abstract

PhD students are allocated to supervisors in several ways. In Business Schools, the most dominant allocation method is student-led selection. In many cases, this requires students to approach and petition potential supervisors before having had any previous communications with them. Though, given that supervisors possess similar credentials, what evaluation process do students undertake when considering them? To date, research to understand this process is absent. Through the theoretical frame of impression management and the use of in-depth interviews (n = 19), we address this gap. Specifically, we examine how warmth and competence perceptions (i.e. The Big Two impressions) shape supervisor selection. Further, we provide understanding of the role academic staff profiles play in this process. We contribute first, a hierarchy of determinants for supervisor choice in ascending order of importance; gatekeeping attributes, competence, and warmth. Second, we provide a typology of stereotypical supervisors (The Guru, The Friend, The Machine, The Dud) based on informational cues from their profiles (i.e. high competence supervisors as colder, and high warmth staff as less competent). Third, we present a critical understanding of the opportunities and challenges of self-presentation through staff profiles. Finally, we offer specific advice for mobilising impression management tactics in these profiles to best appeal to PhD applicants.

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Accepted/In Press date: 14 January 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 January 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 481138
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481138
ISSN: 1472-8117
PURE UUID: 138d4d07-e8fc-4a08-9b92-0a80233e510b
ORCID for Sebastian Oliver: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-8600-7964

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Date deposited: 16 Aug 2023 16:43
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:21

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Contributors

Author: Ben Marder
Author: Sebastian Oliver ORCID iD
Author: Amy Yau
Author: Laura Lavertu
Author: Claire Perier
Author: Mats Frank
Author: Kirsten Cowan

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