IB DP Supervisor Dynamics: The Best Way to Record Decisions After Meetings

There’s a special kind of energy in a supervisor meeting: ideas are born, questions get sharper, and a five-minute comment can change the shape of an entire investigation. But that energy is fragile. Left undocumented, a brilliant suggestion becomes a foggy memory, a deadline becomes “sometime next week,” and both student and supervisor end up puzzled by what was actually agreed.

Photo Idea : A supervisor and student at a study table with notebooks, laptop, and a checklist.

This guide is written for IB DP students navigating Internal Assessments (IA), Extended Essays (EE), and Theory of Knowledge (TOK) supervision. Its aim is simple: turn each meeting from a flash of productive conversation into reliable, actionable records that push your project forward. You’ll get practical templates, a compact decision-tracking table, technology dos and don’ts, and realistic examples that respect IB expectations without adding unnecessary admin.

Why clear records matter — more than you think

Recording decisions isn’t paperwork for its own sake. For an IB student, well-managed records do several things at once:

  • Protect academic integrity: they show the evolution of your ideas and the boundaries of supervisor input.
  • Create momentum: clear action items prevent stalled drafts and procrastination by turning vague intentions into deadlines and owners.
  • Help assessment alignment: supervisors can check that guidance stays within IB guidance on academic honesty and authenticity.
  • Reduce stress: when you know what to do next, your anxiety about the task falls away and your work becomes manageable.

Common pitfalls students fall into

Before we build a simple system, it helps to notice the usual traps:

  • Assuming “I’ll remember” — memory is unreliable, especially across multiple subjects.
  • Recording too much, or not enough — notes must be concise and actionable, not a transcript.
  • Using fragmented tools — meeting notes in three places (chat, notebook, an unattached doc) are effectively lost.
  • Blurring supervisor suggestions with student work — be explicit about which ideas came from whom.

A simple, reliable system you can use after every meeting

Here’s a practical workflow designed to be low-effort and high-impact. It balances speed with enough structure to be useful later in your IA, EE, or TOK process.

  • At the meeting: Use a short ‘decision column’ in your notebook or on a device. Write only: the decision, who does it, and a rough timeline. If something is unclear, ask for clarification before you leave.
  • Within 24 hours: Send a concise email summary to your supervisor (or upload the summary to a shared folder if that’s preferred). This locks in mutual understanding and creates an official record.
  • Track it centrally: Keep a single living document (a meeting log) that lists every meeting, its date, decisions, owners, and status. Update it after each meeting.
  • Archive evidence: Attach drafts, annotated sources, or screenshots that prove progress. Label them clearly so you can pull them for submission checks or final reflections.

What to include in every meeting note

Keep each note short but comprehensive. A compact checklist you can tick off:

  • Meeting reference: meeting number or brief label (e.g., “EE meeting 3”).
  • Participants (student, supervisor, any observer).
  • Key decisions (phrased as actions, not summaries).
  • Who is responsible for each action.
  • Expected timeline for each action (use relative timing: “before next meeting”, “within three school days”).
  • Evidence that will show completion (draft section, data set, annotated bibliography).
  • Any questions to be resolved at the next meeting.

Quick email summary template (send after every meeting)

Emails create a time-stamped trail that both you and your supervisor can reference. Use short paragraphs or bullets; don’t over-explain. A template you can copy/paste:

Subject: Meeting summary — [Your Name] — [Short project title]

Hi [Supervisor Name],

Thanks for meeting today. Quick summary of decisions and actions:

  • Decision: Narrow research question to focus on X. Action: Student to draft revised question. Deadline: Before next meeting.
  • Decision: Use method Y for data collection. Action: Supervisor to share example protocols. Deadline: Within three school days.

Next meeting: [tentative timing].

Best,

[Your name]

Decision-tracking table (use this in your living document)

Below is a compact table you can paste into a Google Doc or spreadsheet and update after each meeting.

Decision ID Decision Summary Owner Timeline Evidence / Follow-up Status
1 Narrow research question to focus on one case study Student Before next meeting Revised question in living doc Open
2 Adopt method X for experiments Supervisor Within three school days Protocol file uploaded Pending
3 Collect three primary sources Student By draft 1 Annotated bibliography entries Open

Why a compact table works

A table compresses what would otherwise be scattered across messages, notebooks, and brain fog. Use short labels and keep the ‘evidence’ column explicit: a filename, a link to a draft, or even a screenshot label. That way, when you’re writing reflections for the EE or finalizing your IA, you can reconstruct progress without guessing.

Technology: pick one hub and commit

Students often juggle multiple apps. The rule that actually helps is: choose one hub for records and keep everything else auxiliary. Hubs can be a Google Drive folder, OneDrive, a school LMS, or a single shared document. Whatever you choose, keep these principles:

  • Simplicity: one living decision-tracking doc plus a dedicated folder for attachments.
  • Versioning: save drafts with clear version labels (v1, v2) and date stamps in the filename — but avoid hard calendar years; stick to sequence and context.
  • Backups: ensure school-provided storage or your personal cloud has backups in case of accidental deletion.
  • Privacy: be mindful of sensitive data; don’t upload raw interview recordings without permission.

How to split responsibility between student and supervisor

Good supervision is a partnership. A practical division of labor keeps the relationship fair and productive:

  • Student: drafts, uploads evidence, compiles the meeting note, and sends the follow-up email within 24 hours.
  • Supervisor: confirms or corrects the summary, provides resources or protocols, and flags any academic-integrity boundaries.
  • Both: keep the decision-tracking doc updated; if a deadline shifts, both should agree to the change by email or a logged note.

Differences across IA, EE, and TOK — practical considerations

Not all decisions are created equal. Here are some discipline-specific lenses to keep in mind:

  • IA: Decisions often concern methodological clarity and data collection windows. Track raw data location and sampling decisions carefully.
  • EE: Decisions frequently revolve around research question scope, literature, and argument structure. Keep a separate column for key sources suggested by your supervisor.
  • TOK: Conversations can be conceptual and iterative. Record the exact phrasing of proposed knowledge questions and the evidence or real-life situations you’ll use to explore them.

When interpretations differ: how to record disagreements

Disagreements are normal and can be productive if documented. Use a short ‘disagreement’ note that records both perspectives and the agreed next step. For example:

  • Student suggests method A; supervisor flags concerns about scope. Agreed next step: student drafts a small pilot using method A and reports back with results.

Documenting disagreements shows academic maturity and protects both parties when assessment time comes.

Example meeting note (compact, 5–7 lines)

Use this as a one-paragraph meeting note to paste into an email or add to your living doc:

Meeting 4 — Discussed scope of EE chapter 2. Decision: narrow focus to a single comparative case. Action: student to submit revised research question and 500-word plan by next meeting. Supervisor to send two example articles. Evidence: upload revised question and annotated bibliography.

File naming and archiving: conventions that save time

Consistent names make retrieval painless. A recommended pattern:

  • [LastName]_[ProjectShortTitle]_[DocumentType]_[v#] — for example: ‘Garcia_EE_LitReview_v2’.

Keep a single folder labelled with your project short title and put the living decision-tracking doc at the top. Use subfolders for drafts, raw data, and supervisor feedback.

How external help fits in — a word about structured tutoring

If you’re building better note-taking habits and want extra guided practice, Sparkl‘s personalized tutoring can provide one-on-one guidance, tailored study plans, expert tutors, and AI-driven insights that help you apply these systems consistently. These supports can be particularly helpful when you’re translating supervisor comments into concrete next steps or improving the clarity of your follow-up emails.

Photo Idea : Close-up of a laptop screen showing a clear folder structure and a meeting-notes document open alongside a calendar.

Real-world example — a short narrative

Consider Mira, working on an EE in social anthropology. After a meeting where her supervisor suggested she narrow her fieldwork to one community, Mira did three practical things: she wrote a one-paragraph meeting note summarizing the decision and sent it by email; she created Decision ID 7 in her living doc listing follow-up interviews as the next action; and she uploaded a draft consent protocol to show evidence of ethical planning. Two weeks later, when Mira needed to write her methodology section, every decision was already logged and supported by attached documents — no frantic reconstruction, no worry about supervisor overreach. The work moved faster because each meeting produced a small, documented step forward.

Quick checklist to use after every meeting

  • Write the top 2–3 actionable decisions in one sentence each.
  • Assign an owner and a relative timeline for each decision.
  • Send a short summary email within 24 hours.
  • Update your living decision-tracking doc and attach evidence.
  • Label files with a clear naming convention and back them up.

Final practical tips

  • Make a template and reuse it — the speed comes from repetition.
  • Keep language neutral and factual in notes; avoid editorializing.
  • If your supervisor prefers to write the summary, ask them to confirm it in email for transparency.
  • When substantial changes occur, record the rationale briefly so assessors can see how and why your project evolved.

Closing thought

Clear records transform supervision from a series of good conversations into steady progress. By recording decisions concisely, assigning owners, and archiving evidence in a single hub, you protect the authenticity of your work and make the writing and reflection process vastly easier. Treat each meeting note as a small contract: brief, dated, and actionable. That discipline is one of the quiet skills that reliably separates stressed scrambling from calm, consistent progress.

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