- ISBN: 9780415442695 | 0415442699
- Cover: Hardcover
- Copyright: 10/21/2008
List of figures and tables | p. x |
List of contributors | p. xi |
Introduction | p. 1 |
Framing doctoral education as practice | p. 10 |
Why focus on practice | p. 12 |
Knowledge production and the knowledge economy | p. 16 |
Doctoral graduates as 'advanced knowledge workers' | p. 18 |
Changing practices of doctoral work | p. 20 |
Conclusion | p. 22 |
Disciplinarity and change | p. 27 |
Converging paradigms for doctoral training in the sciences and humanities | p. 29 |
Collaboration | p. 33 |
Independence | p. 38 |
Looking forward | p. 40 |
Disciplinary voices: a shifting landscape for English doctoral education in the twenty-first century | p. 42 |
How this account was developed | p. 43 |
The department: an outpost of the discipline | p. 43 |
The lived experience: mirroring the larger context | p. 47 |
The shifting landscape of knowledge production | p. 48 |
Co-constructing a discipline, a program and a process: the way forward? | p. 49 |
The doctorate as curriculum: a perspective on goals and outcomes of doctoral education | p. 54 |
Concerns about the doctorate | p. 54 |
The doctorate as curriculum | p. 55 |
Types of knowledge | p. 58 |
The language of intent in the doctoral curriculum | p. 59 |
The language of assessment in the doctoral curriculum | p. 61 |
The intended and assessed curriculum compared | p. 64 |
Pedagogy and learning | p. 69 |
Enhancing the doctoral experience at the local level | p. 71 |
A review of the literature on the doctoral experience | p. 71 |
The university-wide context of the doctoral experience | p. 73 |
The impact of the academic unit context on the doctoral experience | p. 75 |
Concluding comments | p. 82 |
Writing for the doctorate and beyond | p. 87 |
A literacy crisis in doctoral programs or a new agenda for writing? | p. 88 |
What do we know about doctoral writing? | p. 90 |
Changing demands require new approaches | p. 93 |
Conclusion | p. 96 |
PhD education in science: producing the scientific mindset in biomedical sciences | p. 100 |
Issues in PhD science education | p. 100 |
Working with the tensions: supervisor and student expectations and priorities | p. 102 |
Working with the tensions in practice - doing science | p. 104 |
A learning curriculum in the biomedical sciences | p. 108 |
Conclusion | p. 110 |
Representing doctoral practice in the laboratory sciences | p. 113 |
What do we know about doctoral practice in the laboratory sciences? | p. 114 |
A case narrative about doctoral practice in molecular biology | p. 116 |
To what extent does the case narrative validate or challenge the orthodox view of doctoral practice in the laboratory sciences? | p. 120 |
Reflections on the representation of doctoral practice in the laboratory sciences | p. 122 |
Conclusion | p. 124 |
Supervision development and recognition in a reflexive space | p. 126 |
An institutional program for supervision development | p. 127 |
Why reflexivity? Setting the theoretical framework | p. 129 |
Moving towards a more theorised position | p. 134 |
Conclusion | p. 138 |
New forms of doctorate | p. 141 |
Specialised knowledge in UK professions: relations between the state, the university and the workplace | p. 143 |
Sites of knowledge | p. 147 |
Engineering doctorates | p. 148 |
Education doctorates | p. 151 |
Conclusion | p. 154 |
Projecting the PhD: architectural design research by and through projects | p. 157 |
Research education context | p. 157 |
On the differences between research by project and thesis | p. 159 |
Disciplinary ways of knowing | p. 160 |
Architectural research by project | p. 161 |
Reflective practice | p. 162 |
The role of exegesis | p. 163 |
Examination | p. 164 |
Dissemination | p. 165 |
Institutional economies | p. 166 |
Literature on the field | p. 167 |
Conclusion | p. 168 |
Building doctorates around individual candidates' professional experience | p. 171 |
An example of a DProf programme | p. 172 |
Ongoing research and evaluation | p. 178 |
Emerging propositions and implications | p. 180 |
Conclusion | p. 183 |
Policy and governance | p. 187 |
Doctoral education in risky times | p. 189 |
What does performative mean? | p. 189 |
Performing (risk) management | p. 191 |
Risk and audit | p. 193 |
Risk 'events' | p. 195 |
Performing doctoral education | p. 198 |
New challenges in doctoral education in Europe | p. 200 |
Achievements | p. 202 |
Challenges | p. 206 |
Conclusion | p. 209 |
Policy driving change in doctoral education: an Australian case study | p. 211 |
The policy context | p. 212 |
Doctoral education in practice | p. 213 |
Conclusion | p. 221 |
Regulatory regimes in doctoral education | p. 225 |
Some drivers of risk management | p. 226 |
The code of practice - UK | p. 228 |
Recent Australian experience | p. 231 |
Concluding comments | p. 235 |
Reflections | p. 237 |
Challenging perspectives, changing practices: doctoral education in transition | p. 239 |
Knowledge, research and the doctorate: a world in motion | p. 239 |
(Re)turning to education | p. 241 |
Practice theory and doctoral studies | p. 244 |
Notes | p. 249 |
Index | p. 251 |
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