In Pursuit of Careers in the Professoriate or Beyond the Professoriate: What Matters to Doctoral Students When Making a Career Choice?

Q2 Social Sciences International Journal of Doctoral Studies Pub Date : 2020-10-22 DOI:10.28945/4652
Gaeun Seo, HeyJin T Yeo
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While a growing number of studies have investigated these changing trends, it remains limited to fully capture more introspective domains of the career choice processes. Given that the career decision-making experience is highly individualized, it is critical to explore doctorate students’ own narratives about career decision-making. Methodology Individual structured interviews were conducted with 30 doctoral students from a public research-oriented university in the United States. Employing Directed Content Analysis, two researchers developed the initial coding categories based on the guiding theory, CIP theory, and deductively analyzed the data to identify emerging major themes. What Matters to Doctoral Students When Making a Career Choice? 616 Contribution Findings from the study highlight the core factors that influence doctoral students’ career choices across fields, which allows developing centralized career resources and support systems at the institutional level. Specifically, findings pointed to different approaches for doctoral students to (re-)assess their career choice while providing implications for institutions, academic departments, and individual stakeholders such as faculty advisor and doctoral students, to develop systematic career support in this changing academic job market. Findings Data analysis uncovered three core factors impacting doctoral students’ career decision making, which are (1) roles of the first-hand experience in career confirmation/shift; (2) dissimilar career readiness status by group; and (3) impact of personal career values. Recommendations for Practitioners Both institutions and academic departments could reassess the culture and value of career development and refine co-curricular activities to offer adequate professional development opportunities in doctoral training to develop career support systems aligned with students’ diversified career needs and interests. As time and first-hand experiences are identified as critical factors facilitating their career progress, doctoral students may want to proactively seek diverse opportunities to gain first-hand experience in and outside campus. Recommendations for Researchers Researchers could continue similar research in other universities and countries where similar concerns exist. These studies would help fully clarify common influential factors on career choices of doctoral students across fields. Impact on Society Considering the realities of doctoral students’ diversified career interests and career outcomes, institutes of higher education should make intentional efforts to broaden the definition of “successful” PhD career outcomes, which ultimately helps break the prevailing myth that doctoral students or recipients who pursue careers beyond the professoriate, called nontraditional or alternative career paths, are considered as failures or incompetent. Future Research Future research should consider examining diverse doctoral student populations such as early-stage doctoral students to discover additional factors influencing their career decision-making. 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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Aim/Purpose This qualitative study was conducted to illuminate the under-researched aspect of doctoral students’ career decision-making by examining their internal cognitive processes based on the Cognitive Information Processing (CIP) theory. Specifically, this study compared doctoral students’ career decision-making from two career groups, those pursuing the professoriate versus those pursuing careers beyond the professoriate. Background Due to PhD workforce supply-demand imbalances in academic job markets and to a growing interest in careers outside academia around the world, an increasing number of doctoral recipients have pursued careers beyond the professoriate, which are considered non-traditional career paths in doctoral education. While a growing number of studies have investigated these changing trends, it remains limited to fully capture more introspective domains of the career choice processes. Given that the career decision-making experience is highly individualized, it is critical to explore doctorate students’ own narratives about career decision-making. Methodology Individual structured interviews were conducted with 30 doctoral students from a public research-oriented university in the United States. Employing Directed Content Analysis, two researchers developed the initial coding categories based on the guiding theory, CIP theory, and deductively analyzed the data to identify emerging major themes. What Matters to Doctoral Students When Making a Career Choice? 616 Contribution Findings from the study highlight the core factors that influence doctoral students’ career choices across fields, which allows developing centralized career resources and support systems at the institutional level. Specifically, findings pointed to different approaches for doctoral students to (re-)assess their career choice while providing implications for institutions, academic departments, and individual stakeholders such as faculty advisor and doctoral students, to develop systematic career support in this changing academic job market. Findings Data analysis uncovered three core factors impacting doctoral students’ career decision making, which are (1) roles of the first-hand experience in career confirmation/shift; (2) dissimilar career readiness status by group; and (3) impact of personal career values. Recommendations for Practitioners Both institutions and academic departments could reassess the culture and value of career development and refine co-curricular activities to offer adequate professional development opportunities in doctoral training to develop career support systems aligned with students’ diversified career needs and interests. As time and first-hand experiences are identified as critical factors facilitating their career progress, doctoral students may want to proactively seek diverse opportunities to gain first-hand experience in and outside campus. Recommendations for Researchers Researchers could continue similar research in other universities and countries where similar concerns exist. These studies would help fully clarify common influential factors on career choices of doctoral students across fields. Impact on Society Considering the realities of doctoral students’ diversified career interests and career outcomes, institutes of higher education should make intentional efforts to broaden the definition of “successful” PhD career outcomes, which ultimately helps break the prevailing myth that doctoral students or recipients who pursue careers beyond the professoriate, called nontraditional or alternative career paths, are considered as failures or incompetent. Future Research Future research should consider examining diverse doctoral student populations such as early-stage doctoral students to discover additional factors influencing their career decision-making. The authors also recommend cross-cultural studies in other countries where similar career concerns exist, such as the U.K. and the Netherlands, to develop a more comprehensive understanding of how doctoral students’ career decisions are made.
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在追求教授或教授之外的职业生涯:博士生在做职业选择时什么重要?
本研究基于认知信息加工(CIP)理论,对博士生职业决策的内部认知过程进行定性研究,以阐明其研究不足的方面。具体而言,本研究比较了两个职业群体的博士生的职业决策,即追求教授职位的博士生和追求教授职位以外的博士生。由于学术就业市场的博士劳动力供需失衡,以及世界各地对学术界以外职业的兴趣日益浓厚,越来越多的博士获得者追求教授以外的职业,这被认为是博士教育中的非传统职业道路。虽然越来越多的研究调查了这些变化的趋势,但它仍然局限于充分捕捉职业选择过程中更多的内省领域。鉴于职业决策经历是高度个性化的,探索博士生关于职业决策的自己的叙述是至关重要的。方法对来自美国一所公立研究型大学的30名博士生进行个体结构化访谈。两位研究者运用定向内容分析法,在指导理论CIP理论的基础上建立了初始编码类别,并对数据进行演绎分析,以识别新兴的主要主题。博士生在做职业选择时,什么最重要?研究结果突出了影响博士生跨领域职业选择的核心因素,从而可以在机构层面开发集中的职业资源和支持系统。具体而言,研究结果指出了博士生(重新)评估其职业选择的不同方法,同时为机构、学术部门和个人利益相关者(如指导教师和博士生)提供了启示,以便在不断变化的学术就业市场中开发系统的职业支持。数据分析揭示了影响博士生职业决策的三个核心因素,即:(1)第一手经验在职业确定/转变中的作用;(2)群体间职业准备状况存在差异;(3)个人职业价值观的影响。对从业者的建议院校和学术部门都可以重新评估职业发展的文化和价值,完善课外活动,在博士培训中提供足够的职业发展机会,建立符合学生多样化职业需求和兴趣的职业支持系统。随着时间和第一手经验被认为是促进其职业发展的关键因素,博士生可能希望积极寻求各种机会,以获得校园内外的第一手经验。给研究人员的建议研究人员可以在存在类似问题的其他大学和国家继续进行类似的研究。这些研究有助于全面厘清各领域博士生职业选择的共同影响因素。考虑到博士生职业兴趣和职业成果多样化的现实,高等教育机构应该有意识地努力拓宽“成功”博士职业成果的定义,这最终有助于打破普遍存在的误解,即博士生或受助人追求教授以外的职业,即非传统或另类职业道路,被认为是失败或无能的。未来的研究未来的研究应该考虑考察不同的博士生群体,如早期博士生,以发现影响他们职业决策的其他因素。作者还建议在其他存在类似职业问题的国家进行跨文化研究,如英国和荷兰,以更全面地了解博士生的职业决定是如何做出的。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Doctoral Studies
International Journal of Doctoral Studies Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
4.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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