| Literature DB >> 24410984 |
Damalie Nakanjako1, Achilles Katamba, Dan K Kaye, Elialilia Okello, Moses R Kamya, Nelson Sewankambo, Harriet Mayanja-Kizza.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Good mentoring is a key variable for determining success in completing a doctoral program. We identified prevailing mentoring practices among doctoral students and their mentors, identified common challenges facing doctoral training, and proposed some solutions to enhance the quality of the doctoral training experience for both candidates and mentors at Makerere University College of Health Sciences (MakCHS).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24410984 PMCID: PMC3897930 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6920-14-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Educ ISSN: 1472-6920 Impact factor: 2.463
Participants of the doctoral mentorship workshop at Makerere University College of Health Sciences
| | ||
|---|---|---|
| | | |
| Female n (%) | 5(42) | 12(54) |
| | | |
| Internal medicine | 1 | 5 |
| Psychiatry | 3 | |
| Paediatrics | 2 | |
| Surgery | | 2 |
| Obstetrics & Gynaecology | 3 | 5 |
| Basic sciences | 1 | 3 |
| Public Health | | 2 |
| Epidemiology | 1 | 4 |
| Nursing | 1 | 1 |
| Others* |
*Three research administrators and one information technology expert.
¶Representation of the mentors and doctoral students by discipline.
Doctoral students’ discussions on mentoring through doctoral training at Makerere University College of Health Sciences
| ● Peer support received from the increasing number of doctoral candidates in the various disciplines. | |
| | ● Available guidelines for doctoral supervision and mentoring. |
| | ● Increasing numbers of supervisors and their commitment to mentor doctoral candidates. |
| | ● PhD forum where students have opportunities to present their research projects. |
| | |
| ● Limited physical space for doctoral students in their respective departments. | |
| ● Limited physical space for the mentors in their respective departments. | |
| ● Unexplained delays in the procurement processes which, in many cases, delay the students’ progress. | |
| ● Lengthy registration processes including delays in appointing doctoral supervisors. | |
| ● Limited number of mentors with the skills to supervise and mentor doctoral students. | |
| ● Limited laboratory infrastructure for biomedical research so that most students have to ship samples abroad. | |
| | |
| ● Improvement of laboratory infrastructure to support doctoral students’ projects locally. | |
| ● Infrastructure development to create office space for doctoral students during their doctoral period. | |
| ● Create office space for post-doctoral and faculty involved in mentoring doctoral students and junior faculty. | |
| ● Improve the procurement systems to meet the needs of doctoral students and other scientists in biomedical research at Makerere University. | |
| ● Induction courses for doctoral students and their mentors, including a mandatory course on PhD supervision. | |
| ● A catalogue of frequently asked questions (FAQs) for doctoral Students and mentors should be compiled and uploaded on the institutional website. | |
| ● Regular PhD forum meetings and seminars. | |
| ● Communication skills’ training for both mentors and mentees including skills in conflict resolution. | |
| ● Facilitate more seminars between mentors and doctoral students for inspiration and encouragement through the doctoral training experience. |
Mentors’ discussions of the current status and proposed solutions to improve mentoring through doctoral training at Makerere University College of Health Sciences
| | |
| | There are more numbers of doctoral students, which has increased the opportunities for peer support. |
| | Supervisors of the doctoral students are more tuned to supervise and mentor students better than before. |
| | Funding opportunities for doctoral research have increased. |
| | More students complete doctoral training within 3–5 years because of the available opportunities to fund their research projects. |
| | Supervision of doctoral students is one of the recognised parameters for promotion. |
| | |
| | Delays in the procurement systems cause unnecessary delays in students’ research progress. |
| | There are limited systems for international procurement of laboratory-based research supplies which causes huge delays for basic science research projects. |
| | Unexplained delays by the national drug authority (NDA) for research projects including investigational drugs. |
| | Limited human resource for health care when clinicians are pursuing doctoral training activities. |
| | Limited communication between doctoral students and their mentors. |
| | |
| ● Conduct workshops between the scientists [doctoral students and mentors] and the institutional procurement team. | |
| ● Propose and design institutional procurement systems with provisions for international procurement of laboratory-specific equipment and consumables. | |
| ● Strategic approach to implement the institutional doctoral supervision and mentoring guidelines among doctoral students and mentors. | |
| ● Communication skills’ training including skills in conflict resolution. | |
| ● Induction courses for doctoral students and mentors. | |
| ● Utilisation of the College of Health Sciences’ research support centre. | |
| ● Clinical departments need to relieve doctoral students of some clinical duties to allow some protected time for academic research training although the students might still participate in selected teaching activities due to limited teaching staff. | |
| ● Facilitate more seminars to increase networking between doctoral students and mentors. |
High priority areas for doctoral training workshops at Makerere University College of Health Sciences
| ● Workshops with the procurement team to streamline the processes and encourage mutual benefit | ● Finance management and budgeting modules | |
| ● Meetings with NDA to review and design support systems to encourage timely review and feedback. | ● Ongoing training in Human Subjects’ Research | |
| ● Orientation on other research regulatory processes such as Institutional Review Boards (IRB) and the Uganda National Council for Science and Technology (UNCST). | ||
| ● Communication seminars | ● Induction workshops for doctoral candidates and their mentors | |
| ● Inspirational talks to doctoral students | ||
| ● Inspirational talks to mentors | ● Compile a frequently asked questions (FAQ) document on the doctoral students’ website | |
| ● Training on conflict resolution and public relations |