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Morrison, Emory; Rudd, Elizabeth; Zumeta, William; Nerad, Maresi – Journal of Higher Education, 2011
This paper unpacks how social science doctorate-holders come to evaluate overall excellence in their PhD training programs based on their domain-specific assessments of aspects of their programs. Latent class analysis reveals that social scientists 6-10 years beyond their PhD evaluate the quality of their doctoral program with one of two…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Doctoral Programs, Social Scientists, Scientists
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Morrison, Emory; Rudd, Elizabeth; Nerad, Maresi – Review of Higher Education, 2011
With event history analysis, we examine the impact of gender, marital status and spouse type, and parenting at key transition points in the early careers of more than 2,000 social science Ph.D. graduates. This analysis (a) uses data from recent Ph.D. graduates; (b) disentangles the effects of marriage and parenting; and (c) observes the effects of…
Descriptors: Careers, Marital Status, Females, Social Sciences
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Morrison, Emory; Rudd, Elizabeth; Picciano, Joseph; Nerad, Maresi – Research in Higher Education, 2011
This paper empirically evaluates Caplow and McGee's (The academic marketplace, 1958) model of academia as a prestige value system (PVS) by testing several hypotheses about the relationship between prestige of faculty appointment and job satisfaction. Using logistic regression models to predict satisfaction with several job domains in a sample of…
Descriptors: Reference Groups, Job Satisfaction, Reputation, Social Sciences
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Morrison, Emory; Rudd, Elizabeth; Nerad, Maresi – Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences, 2011
In this article, we analyse findings of the largest, most comprehensive survey of the career paths of social science PhD graduates to date, "Social Science PhDs--Five+Years Out (SS5)". "SS5" surveyed more than 3,000 graduates of U.S. PhD programmes in six social science fields six to ten years after earning their PhD. The…
Descriptors: Careers, Tenure, Females, Social Sciences