Doctor who? Developing a translation device for exploring successful doctoral being and becoming
PDF

Keywords

attributes
axiology
doctoral education
equity
inclusion

How to Cite

Clarence, S., & van Heerden, M. (2023). Doctor who? Developing a translation device for exploring successful doctoral being and becoming. Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.14426/cristal.v11i1.1767

Abstract

Doctoral training and education tends to focus on how to research and write a thesis, which can take many forms. However, a thesis is not the only valued outcome of a doctorate: the emerging Doctor is important too. Being and becoming a Doctor implies identity work and engaging affective dimensions of researcher development alongside researching and writing a thesis. These are not always explicit in doctoral education, though. Thus, we contend that their role in researcher development needs to be named, described, and understood. In this paper we use Constellations from Legitimation Code Theory to make visible two valued doctoral attributes and dispositions as exemplars. We have used published papers in the field of doctoral studies as data. Within increasingly diverse doctoral student cohorts, it is important to actively foreground the development of valued affective dispositions through doctoral education to enable more candidates to achieve success in their doctorates.

https://doi.org/10.14426/cristal.v11i1.1767
PDF
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.