For tutors, if they want to recruit graduate students, they must first evaluate their professors. In principle, lecturers are not qualified to recruit graduate students, and professors are divided into professors and associate professors. Especially associate professors who graduated after 1985 are required to have a master's degree in principle. This is easy to understand. Since you want to take a postgraduate exam, you should at least take a master's degree yourself.
But now our reality is that teaching in colleges and universities with a doctorate is the basic starting point. However, the professors and associate professors who can be evaluated in universities basically have doctoral degrees, so the degree is basically not a problem.
How many students can a graduate tutor take? The tutor with the largest number of students I have ever met * * * brought 13 students-one of them is a doctor, and 12 is a master. But the average tutor has only three or five students (including all grades).
Generally, the tutor who has just been promoted to associate professor will bring a master's degree and a master's degree.
If this tutor applies for a national subject or project, the college will give more places to take students, so that one or two more students can be admitted.
Therefore, a master tutor can take several students, which is generally dynamic. If his graduate student is postponed or academic misconduct, the enrollment of the tutor in the second year will also be affected to some extent, especially if there is something wrong with his doctoral thesis, and the tutor will be stopped from enrolling in the second year.