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McCoy, Shuntay Z. – Journal of Diversity in Higher Education, 2018
This article utilizes the qualitative methodology of autoethnography for examining how doctoral programs create intellectual war zones for African American students through oppressive institutional socialization. Theoretically grounded in critical race theory, I utilize my counternarrative as an African American graduate student to describe the…
Descriptors: Autobiographies, Ethnography, Doctoral Programs, Graduate Students
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Berger, Roni – Journal of Teaching in Social Work, 2015
A major task of social work doctoral programs is preparing the next generation of researchers and educators in the profession. To develop competence in generating new knowledge relevant to social work practice and disseminating it to future practitioners, doctoral candidates need to master a broad and complicated set of theoretical, empirical, and…
Descriptors: Social Work, Welfare Services, Doctoral Dissertations, Barriers
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Singh, Michael – Globalisation, Societies and Education, 2009
The problematic of the research reported in this paper, namely the place of Chinese knowledge in educational research in Australia provides an opportunity to use Rancire's work to rethink the place of ignorance in the supervisory pedagogies used in internationalising education. Because its scope and character is quite variable, consideration is…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, Familiarity
Perlmutter, David D.; Porter, Lance – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2005
Doctoral students become so focused on the classroom, exam and dissertation burdens of the moment that they graduate without really being prepared in terms of networking, intellectual development, and publication-ready texts. Hence, certain strategies that have proved reliable indicators are recommended, including starting the dissertation,…
Descriptors: Intellectual Development, Doctoral Programs, Doctoral Dissertations, Writing for Publication
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Wilkins, Lee – Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, 1998
Describes a course at the University of Missouri that gives doctoral students a chance to explore teaching issues in a setting that emphasizes reflection, critical thinking, and individual risk taking. Discusses how the class approaches learning about college students' intellectual development; curriculum design for programs in journalism and mass…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Course Descriptions, Curriculum Design, Doctoral Programs