Acknowledgements *
Who we are: contributorsâ biographical details *
Editors *
Chapter authors *
Introduction: opening the books on research writing feedback *
Part I: Starting a new supervision with writing in focus *
The relationship between reading, thinking and writing the literature review component of a doctoral confirmation proposal *
Settling students into a community of practice *
Framing feedback expectations: A âpedagogy of explicitnessâ *
Setting up frameworks *
Part II: Making use of other resources along the way *
The role of tertiary learning advisors in successful doctoral completion *
Making the implicit explicit: generic writing workshops *
Peer-writing groups *
Online thesis-writing resources *
Part III: Encouraging style through control of language *
Giving feedback on grammar and style *
Giving early feedback to doctoral writers *
How to improve your adviseesâ writing permanentlyâ"in 30 minutes *
Part IV: Writing feedback on English as an Additional Language (EAL) writing *
Written feedback typically provided on L2 studentsâ chapter drafts *
Five approaches to supporting students writing in English as an additional language *
Feeding back on research writing: New Zealand supervisorsâ priorities with an L2 focus *
Part V: Masterâs and Honours smaller projectsâ writing feedback *
Supervising masterâs/honours: A project management approach to researcher development *
Directive feedback in honoursâ or masterâs degree research *
Effective supervision of masterâs researchers in professional contexts *
Part VI: Thesis by publication or performance-based writing *
Feedback from journal reviewers: writing a thesis by publication *
Supervising a thesis that includes publications *
Finding my voice(s) in the creative arts thesis *
Part VII: Maintaining and gathering momentum *
Writing Methodically: Teaching Students by Our Words and Deeds *
Writing prolifically *
Strategies for helping students through writerâs block *
Part VIII: Keeping the examiner happy *
Helping students demonstrate mastery of doctoral threshold concepts *
Building bulwarks: Defence in thesis writing *
What examiners value in a PhD *
Keeping the examiner happy â" things to do: *
Part IX: Writing feedback as nudging through identity transition *
Writing an identity into being *
Negotiating agency through authorial voice in thesis writing *
Cultural identity/researcher identity: managing multiple positionings *
The SISA matrix for feedback fostering doctoral studentsâ creativity *
Managing those haunting voices: A student and supervisor in dialogue *
Thinking rhetorically: A pragmatic approach to texts
Conclusion *
Bibliography *
Index *