Information Systems Auditing Data analytics and Internal auditing Artificial Intelligence and Internal Auditing Corporate Governance Risk Management
In an era where there is an increased demand in the number of postgraduate students that aspire to become academic scholars, the pressure is mounting on research supervisors to actively engage with their Masters and Doctoral students in an effort to guide their academic careers and research aspirations (Mothiba et al., 2019:123). As a result, research supervisors need to be equipped with the necessary skills to effectively respond to and attend to the demands of supervising Masters and Doctoral students. This is equally true for my own supervisory research journey. I obtained my Doctoral degree in Auditing in the year 2016. It was only from the beginning of 2018 that I started with my own supervisory research journey. To date, I have five actively registered Masters students from the university where I am employed at. In addition, I also have three Doctoral students for which I was appointed as the main supervisor since 2020 from another university in South Africa. My research journey up to now came with a lot of trials and errors as I proceeded on this research supervisory journey. This is one of the main reasons I enrolled for this CREST training course for doctoral supervision, in an effort to improve my own skillset and to hopefully become an even better supervisor to my students. In my opinion, one of the mistakes that universities are making is to assume that as soon as an academic staff member obtains his/her Doctoral degree that it automatically makes that person a competent research supervisor. On the contrary, one can also have empathy for this current practice by universities, seeing that the demand for enrolling for Masters and Doctoral studies are on the rise and a as a result universities are also grappling to respond to this influx of Masters and Doctoral enrolments. Supervisory capacity in South Africa and Africa is of concern. This pressure of increasing the number of PhD qualified staff in South Africa and the number of doctoral graduates is emphasised in the fact sheet report that was issued by the Department of Higher education and Training called: “Are we producing enough doctoral graduates in our universities?” (DHET, 2020).