Preparing Future Scholars for Academia and Beyond: A Mixed Method Investigation of Doctoral Students’ Preparedness for Multiple Career Paths

abstract: This action research study is a mixed methods investigation of doctoral students’ preparedness for multiple career paths. PhD students face two challenges preparing for multiple career paths: lack of preparation and limited engagement in conversations about the value of their research acro...

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Other Authors: Cason, Jennifer (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38643
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-386432018-06-22T03:07:19Z Preparing Future Scholars for Academia and Beyond: A Mixed Method Investigation of Doctoral Students’ Preparedness for Multiple Career Paths abstract: This action research study is a mixed methods investigation of doctoral students’ preparedness for multiple career paths. PhD students face two challenges preparing for multiple career paths: lack of preparation and limited engagement in conversations about the value of their research across multiple audiences. This study focuses on PhD students’ perceived perception of communicating the value of their research across academic and non-academic audiences and on an institutional intervention designed to increase student’s proficiency to communicate the value of their PhD research across multiple audiences. Additionally, the study identified ways universities can implement solutions to prepare first-generation PhD students to effectively achieve their career goals. I developed a course titled Preparing Future Scholars (PFS). PFS was designed to be an institutional intervention to address the fundamental changes needed in the career development of PhD students. Through PFS curricula, PhD students engage in conversations and have access to resources that augment both the traditional PhD training and occupational identity of professorate. The PFS course creates fundamental changes by drawing from David Kolb’s Experiential Learning Theory and the Social Cognitive Career Theory (SCCT) developed by Robert Lent, Steven Brown, and Gail Hackett. The SCCT looks at one’s self-efficacy beliefs, outcome expectations, goal representation, and the interlocking process of interest development, along with their choice and performance. I used a concurrent triangulation mixed methods research model that included collecting qualitative and quantitative data over 8 weeks. The results of the study indicated that PhD students’ career preparation should focus on articulating the relevancy of their research across academic and non-academic employment sectors. Additionally, findings showed that PhD students’ perception of their verbal and non-verbal skills to communicate the value of their research to both lay and discipline specific audiences were not statistically different across STEM and non-STEM majors, generational status, or gender, but there are statistical differences within each group. PhD programs provide students with the opportunity to cultivate intellectual knowledge, but, as this study illustrates, students would also benefit from the opportunity to nurture and develop practical knowledge and turn “theory into practice.” Dissertation/Thesis Cason, Jennifer (Author) Liou, Daniel (Advisor) Barber, Rebecca (Committee member) Justice, George (Committee member) Schugurensky, Daniel (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Educational leadership Career Development Doctoral Education First Generation Graduate Education Professional Development eng 219 pages Doctoral Dissertation Leadership and Innovation 2016 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38643 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2016
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Educational leadership
Career Development
Doctoral Education
First Generation
Graduate Education
Professional Development
spellingShingle Educational leadership
Career Development
Doctoral Education
First Generation
Graduate Education
Professional Development
Preparing Future Scholars for Academia and Beyond: A Mixed Method Investigation of Doctoral Students’ Preparedness for Multiple Career Paths
description abstract: This action research study is a mixed methods investigation of doctoral students’ preparedness for multiple career paths. PhD students face two challenges preparing for multiple career paths: lack of preparation and limited engagement in conversations about the value of their research across multiple audiences. This study focuses on PhD students’ perceived perception of communicating the value of their research across academic and non-academic audiences and on an institutional intervention designed to increase student’s proficiency to communicate the value of their PhD research across multiple audiences. Additionally, the study identified ways universities can implement solutions to prepare first-generation PhD students to effectively achieve their career goals. I developed a course titled Preparing Future Scholars (PFS). PFS was designed to be an institutional intervention to address the fundamental changes needed in the career development of PhD students. Through PFS curricula, PhD students engage in conversations and have access to resources that augment both the traditional PhD training and occupational identity of professorate. The PFS course creates fundamental changes by drawing from David Kolb’s Experiential Learning Theory and the Social Cognitive Career Theory (SCCT) developed by Robert Lent, Steven Brown, and Gail Hackett. The SCCT looks at one’s self-efficacy beliefs, outcome expectations, goal representation, and the interlocking process of interest development, along with their choice and performance. I used a concurrent triangulation mixed methods research model that included collecting qualitative and quantitative data over 8 weeks. The results of the study indicated that PhD students’ career preparation should focus on articulating the relevancy of their research across academic and non-academic employment sectors. Additionally, findings showed that PhD students’ perception of their verbal and non-verbal skills to communicate the value of their research to both lay and discipline specific audiences were not statistically different across STEM and non-STEM majors, generational status, or gender, but there are statistical differences within each group. PhD programs provide students with the opportunity to cultivate intellectual knowledge, but, as this study illustrates, students would also benefit from the opportunity to nurture and develop practical knowledge and turn “theory into practice.” === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation Leadership and Innovation 2016
author2 Cason, Jennifer (Author)
author_facet Cason, Jennifer (Author)
title Preparing Future Scholars for Academia and Beyond: A Mixed Method Investigation of Doctoral Students’ Preparedness for Multiple Career Paths
title_short Preparing Future Scholars for Academia and Beyond: A Mixed Method Investigation of Doctoral Students’ Preparedness for Multiple Career Paths
title_full Preparing Future Scholars for Academia and Beyond: A Mixed Method Investigation of Doctoral Students’ Preparedness for Multiple Career Paths
title_fullStr Preparing Future Scholars for Academia and Beyond: A Mixed Method Investigation of Doctoral Students’ Preparedness for Multiple Career Paths
title_full_unstemmed Preparing Future Scholars for Academia and Beyond: A Mixed Method Investigation of Doctoral Students’ Preparedness for Multiple Career Paths
title_sort preparing future scholars for academia and beyond: a mixed method investigation of doctoral students’ preparedness for multiple career paths
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.38643
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