Doctoral success as ongoing quality business: A possible conceptual framework
Abstract
The challenges involving doctoral non-completion and a lack of academic or scholarly quality are not restricted to putting the blame on doctoral candidates themselves, their supervisors or the institutions where they enrol. As candidates carry huge responsibilities when entering doctoral studies, success can be associated with an array of factors or challenges. Based on relevant literature, this article explores several such challenges related to potentially limiting or promoting doctoral success and quality. It proposes a preliminary theoretical or conceptual framework that might be useful for further investigating the phenomenon of doctoral study success associated with quality. It is suggested that doctoral success in higher education institutions represents a productive inter-relationship among a number of critical factors and in particular between academic mentoring and supervision on the one hand and institutional research and monitoring on the other.
Downloads
References
Full text available from AJOL Archives - https://www.ajol.info/index.php/sajhe/issue/archive
Copyright (c) 2011 SAJHE

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
This journal is an open access journal, and the authors and journal should be properly acknowledged, when works are cited.
Authors, copyright holders, may use the publishers version for teaching purposes, in books, theses, dissertations, conferences and conference papers.
A copy of the authors' publishers version may also be hosted on the following websites:
- Non-commercial personal homepage or blog.
- Institutional webpage.
- Authors Institutional Repository.
The following notice should accompany such a posting on the website: This is an electronic version of an article published in SAJHE, Volume XXX, number XXX, pages XXX “XXX", DOI. Authors should also supply a hyperlink to the original paper or indicate where the original paper (http://www.journals.ac.za/index.php/SAJHE) may be found.
Authors publishers version, affiliated with the Stellenbosch University will be automatically deposited in the University Institutional Repository SUNScholar.
Articles as a whole, may not be re-published with another journal.
The following license applies:
Attribution CC BY-NC-ND 4.0