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Rashid, Rafi – Teaching in Higher Education, 2021
As the pressing problems of the real world are not organized into disciplinary categories, there is an urgent need to make doctoral education more interdisciplinary. As an extension of the border-crossing metaphor that is commonly used for interdisciplinarity, academic educators wishing to engage students in this activity might consider themselves…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Higher Education, Doctoral Programs, STEM Education
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Jordan, Katy; Howe, Christine – Teaching in Higher Education, 2018
Postgraduate students involved in delivering undergraduate teaching while working toward a research degree are known as graduate teaching assistants (GTAs). This study focused upon the problems and benefits arising from this dual role as researchers and teachers, as perceived by GTAs at the University of Cambridge. To this end, GTAs at Cambridge…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Graduate Students, Teaching Assistants, Foreign Countries
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Danvers, Emily; Hinton-Smith, Tamsin; Webb, Rebecca – Teaching in Higher Education, 2019
The paper explores questions of power arising from feminist facilitators running a doctoral writing group at a UK university. Butler's [2014. Re-thinking Vulnerability and Resistance. [Online]. Accessed September 12, 2017.…
Descriptors: Power Structure, Feminism, Doctoral Programs, Writing (Composition)
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Xu, Linlin – Teaching in Higher Education, 2017
This paper explores the feedback interactions in an intercultural supervision context between a white New Zealand supervisor and a Chinese international doctoral student, who is also the author (and researcher) of this study. Using mixed methods, it examines the supervisor's written feedback on a draft PhD proposal and the student's feedback…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Case Studies, Intercultural Programs, Doctoral Programs
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McGrath, Lisa; Kaufhold, Kathrin – Teaching in Higher Education, 2016
Academic Literacies and English for Specific Purposes perspectives on the teaching of academic writing tend to be positioned as dichotomous and ideologically incompatible. Nonetheless, recent studies have called for the integration of these two perspectives in the design of writing programmes in order to meet the needs of students in the…
Descriptors: Literacy, English for Academic Purposes, Workshops, Anthropology
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Hyatt, David – Teaching in Higher Education, 2013
This paper addresses an issue of increasing significance in the context of taught educational doctorates and argues that this may have wider applicability for doctoral students across a range of social science disciplines. It identifies the need to engage with policy analysis as a key element of such programmes and attempts to address students'…
Descriptors: Discourse Analysis, Graduate Students, Doctoral Programs, Educational Policy
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Bastalich, Wendy; Behrend, Monica; Bloomfield, Robert – Teaching in Higher Education, 2014
In recent years, contentiously for some, universities have developed generalist skills lists and associated curricula in response to government demand for more "employment-ready" graduates. Such training usually includes writing and communication. In Australia and the UK, guidelines designed to support the development of skills…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, Foreign Countries, Literacy, Curriculum Development
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Cotterall, Sara – Teaching in Higher Education, 2011
Writing occupies a key role in doctoral research, because it is the principal channel students use to communicate their ideas, and the basis on which their degree is awarded. Doctoral writing can, therefore, be a source of considerable anxiety. Most doctoral candidates require support and encouragement if they are to develop confidence as writers.…
Descriptors: Communities of Practice, Doctoral Programs, Graduate Students, Writing (Composition)
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Parker, Rachel – Teaching in Higher Education, 2009
The paper reports on the findings of a community learning approach to doctoral education involving scholarly writing groups (SWGs) which was developed and implemented in the context of a higher degree research programme within the social sciences in an Australian university. The research evaluated the impact of the teaching intervention on…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Social Sciences, Doctoral Programs, Learning Experience
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Cargill, Margaret – Teaching in Higher Education, 2004
Recognition is increasing that Ph.D. graduates require transferable skills for employment within or outside academia, and professional written communication skills form an important subset which contributes to many other skill categories. Writing journal articles for publication is a key task within candidatures and research workplaces, so…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Workshops, Journal Articles, Writing for Publication