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Hideki Nakazono – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Postsession narrative notes written by professional tutors in a health sciences university writing center had never been analyzed to identify the most common elements noted as subpar in graduate students' scholarly writing. The purpose of this basic qualitative study was to examine these notes to identify the most common elements noted as subpar…
Descriptors: Tutors, Laboratories, Writing (Composition), Health Sciences
Sanganyado, Edmond; Nunu, Wilfred Njabulo; Sanganyado, Surprise – Innovations in Education and Teaching International, 2023
Doctorate graduates are expected to contribute original knowledge and possess advanced skills essential for addressing complex problems. Embedding doctorateness in doctorate programmes could help ensure that the productivity of doctoral research is explicitly demonstrated. Doctorateness represents independent scholarship, the transition from…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Scholarship, Research Proposals, Competence
José Cossa – International Journal of Lifelong Education, 2023
Anchored on Mondlane's biological mother's advice that he ought to 'go to school in order to understand the witchcraft of the white man, thus being able to fight against him' and on the argument that what he learned as a child informed his learning as an adolescent and as an adult, this study developed a profile of Eduardo Mondlane as a lifelong…
Descriptors: Lifelong Learning, Scholarship, Biographies, Adult Educators
Rall, Raquel M.; Morgan, Demetri L.; Commodore, Felecia – Innovative Higher Education, 2022
Despite the emergence of new scholarship, public higher education boards in the United States remain relatively under-investigated. While the literature on higher education governance and boards, in particular, tends to profess these knowledge gaps repeatedly, few works have scratched the surface as to why our understanding of boards is so…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Public Colleges, Governing Boards, Governance
Johnson, Kristine; Rifenburg, J. Michael – Across the Disciplines, 2022
In this article, we examine undergraduate research as a site of rhetorical development by listening to undergraduate researchers narrate and reflect upon their work as it unfolds. We draw from diary entries and follow-up interviews with eighteen undergraduate researchers at two different institutions, analyzing the rhetorical and affective…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Research, Rhetoric, Affective Behavior
Stewart, D-L – Review of Higher Education, 2022
In the 2021 Presidential Address, I argued that critical scholarship in higher education unsettled the demarcation between the street and the ivory tower and spans the gulf between theorizing and policy. I portrayed critical scholarship both as an insertion which disrupts bodies, stories, and refusals, as well as sitting uneasily on the fulcrum of…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Higher Education, Praxis, Educational Policy
Heck, Deborah – Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 2022
As higher education providers respond to increasing financial pressures with restructures and downsizing, teacher education is often subsumed into larger faculties that result in teacher educators' work, especially related to accreditation lost in the myriad of benchmarks and measures to be achieved. Even during a worldwide pandemic, teaching and…
Descriptors: Teacher Educators, Teacher Role, Scholarship, Educational Policy
Meghan Gilfoyle – Educational Action Research, 2025
When reflecting on my years as a doctoral student, I recall several questions that often came to mind throughout my journey: what is participatory health research? Is such an approach to research truly feasible in the pursuit of a doctoral degree? Is it worth it, or have I inadvertently made things more challenging for myself? My response to these…
Descriptors: Participatory Research, Action Research, Medical Research, Doctoral Students
Valeria Aman; Jochen Gläser – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2025
In their everyday work, scholars constantly acquire and transfer knowledge. Many of these knowledge flows are difficult to observe, not least because scholars are often not aware of them. This may be the reason why the attention to knowledge flows is very unevenly distributed across science studies, with bibliometric citation-based studies…
Descriptors: Sciences, Scholarship, Communication (Thought Transfer), Sharing Behavior
Taylor, Zach – College and University, 2021
M. Yvonne Taylor and Dr. Joshua Childs, both of The University of Texas at Austin, are two scholars who believe in the power of op-eds, especially as they draw attention to systemic inequity and the movement of U.S. society toward liberty and justice for all. In this interview, they articulated how op-eds can deliver timely, expert opinions on hot…
Descriptors: Opinions, News Media, Tenure, Faculty Promotion
Darío Luis Banegas; María Elisa Romano – PROFILE: Issues in Teachers' Professional Development, 2024
While the literature has examined the experiences and attitudes of TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages) professionals toward writing in English for publication in terms of material, environmental, and political conditions as well as (non)discursive challenges, little is known about the (de)motivating factors underpinning their…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), Foreign Countries, Writing for Publication, Motivation
Doniwen Pietersen; Mbusiseni Celimpilo Dube – Research in Social Sciences and Technology, 2024
In this theoretical paper we explore the authorial voice of black African postgraduate students in their writing and scholarship experience. This includes investigating the undergirding factors that need to be interrogated when it comes to the student-supervisor relationship. Some (if not most) black African postgraduate students experience…
Descriptors: Blacks, Graduate Students, Academic Language, Scholarship
Healey, Mick; Healey, Ruth L. – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2023
There are few sources that critically evaluate the ways of reviewing the literature on scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL). We use an academic literacies perspective as a lens with which to explore the ways that literature reviews may be undertaken. While reviewing the literature is often presented as a scientific, objective process, the…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Instruction, Learning, Search Strategies
Howard, Joy; Nash, Kindel; Thompson, Candace – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2023
Motherscholaring is an essential mode of intellectual and spiritual travel, a type of soulwork, epistemologically rooted in love, occuring at the intersections of personal and professional theories, research, and practices that move toward justice. In this conceptual paper, we creatively and collectively explore meanings of motherscholaring found…
Descriptors: Mothers, Scholarship, Poetry, Autobiographies
Kumar, Amal – Higher Education: The International Journal of Higher Education Research, 2023
Academic drift has been a central concept in the study of higher education for the past half-century, with higher education scholarship locating the phenomenon in fieldwide status competition dynamics stemming from the postwar massification and neoliberalization of higher education. In this paper, I explore the origins and evolution of academic…
Descriptors: State Universities, State Colleges, Organizational Change, Organizational Culture