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Leslie D. Gonzales; Penny A. Pasque; Kyle D. Farris; Jordan M. Hansen – Review of Educational Research, 2024
Epistemic injustice is a condition where knowers and knowledge claims are unduly dismissed. Philosophers suggest that epistemic injustice manifests in three forms: testimonial, hermeneutical, and contributory. Although distinct, all forms of epistemic injustice stem from relations of power, privilege, and positionality -- where some have the…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Epistemology, Doctoral Students, Diversity
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Barnes, Benita J.; Randall, Jennifer – Research in Higher Education, 2012
Previous research suggests that it is the department, not the graduate school that bears the greatest responsibility for doctoral students' progress and success (Ehrenberg et al., Doctoral education and the faculty of the future (pp. 15-34). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, "2009") dictating the need to examine and understand how doctoral…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Doctoral Programs, Rating Scales, Humanities
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Barnes, Benita J.; Williams, Elizabeth A.; Stassen, Martha L. A. – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2012
The relationship a doctoral student develops with his/her advisor is a crucial aspect of doctoral training across disciplines; but research suggests that many such relationships fall short of a successful apprenticeship or mentoring ideal. Because disciplinary cultures and structures vary considerably, what makes for a successful advising…
Descriptors: Research Universities, Academic Advising, Doctoral Programs, Schools of Education
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Walsh, Anita – Research in Post-Compulsory Education, 2007
Considerable scepticism still persists with the academic disciplines in higher education in the United Kingdom about the quality of the research undertaken by employees in their own workplace. Workplace "investigations" are negatively contrasted to academy-based research degrees, which are held to be a model of how research should be…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Social Sciences, Foreign Countries, Researchers
Neudling, Chester L.; Blessing, James H. – Office of Education, US Department of Health, Education, and Welfare, 1960
This study was undertaken as a report on a relatively new kind of graduate program. It is intended to present the characteristics of existing general education programs in the humanities for comparison and appraisal. Since this study deals with a relatively new and still experimental field, it should be regarded as a status report, or perhaps even…
Descriptors: General Education, Graduate Study, Humanities, Program Descriptions
Cude, Wilfred – 1987
This critical appraisal of North American doctoral programs contends that the degree is a seriously flawed academic institution. Recent scholarship and personal experiences are utilized to illustrate the contention that doctoral programs are inflexible, cumbersome, restrictive and wasteful, and, in most fields, do more harm than good. The history…
Descriptors: Doctoral Degrees, Doctoral Dissertations, Doctoral Programs, Educational History
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Herubel, Jean-Pierre V. M. – Behavioral & Social Sciences Librarian, 2006
The purpose of this study is to demonstrate the use and importance of examining dissertations listed in scholarly journals, while focusing on a critical period of French doctoral education in historical studies. French dissertations in history were bibliometrically examined from "Revue historique," a mainstream history journal published…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Doctoral Dissertations, Academic Discourse, Periodicals
Chronicle of Higher Education, 1989
A table showing the results of the Survey of Earned Doctorates is presented. Degrees conferred, age, sex, citizenship, planned postdoctoral study, planned postdoctoral employment, and primary postdoctoral activity are included. Doctoral degrees included arts and humanities, business and management, computer science, education, engineering, life…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Business Administration, Comparative Analysis, Computer Science