"It was more a case of being critical of his supervisor and bringing in dissertations at the first degree stage where anything is unilkely to be original."
I'm not sure what is meant by this. Are you objecting to dissertations at first degree stage? If so, there may be an issue with the term "dissertation", which may range from a substantial PhD thesis to a small research project, as here. (Or maybe this is part of a bigger project.)
Also, the researcher describes his research (unhelpfully) as part of an undergraduate/postgraduate project, so we don't know if it's first-degree stage anyway.
Finally, from my personal experience of post-graduate research (i.e. at the levels of master's and post-master's research - MPhil/PhD) I am clear that the supervisor's role is not to guide the detail of a research project. The student is expected to function autonomously. He may well eventually be subject to criticism and/or poor marks for any errors of expression, intellectually suspect ideas, weakly constructed research processes and so on. Supervision sessions, where work in progress is discussed, should bring problems to the surface before a crucial point is reached, of course. But we don't know what stage the research in question is at.
So I think it's unfair to criticise the supervisor. As for criticising the student, I suggest we all try to be helpful. Certainly, if I was looking over his work (and I do support lower-level students) I would be pointing out poor expression and other intellectual issues with the logic of the questions, how well the topic was being addressed and so on. But I would be supportive, not destructive.
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