Doctoral Students’ Academic and Professional Network Development: A Collaborative Autoethnography of Students Engaged in Fatherhood Research

Q2 Social Sciences International Journal of Doctoral Studies Pub Date : 2021-09-24 DOI:10.28945/4869
Rebecca Logue-Conroy, Justin S. Harty, Joyce Y. Lee, Lara Markovitz, Jaimie L. O’Gara
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The authors explored how the formation of a working group, through attendance at an annual academic conference, enhanced their doctoral education and expanded their network through social and academic support. \n\nMethodology: The participant-researchers in this study used collaborative autoethnography to collectively examine their participation in this group formed outside of their respective schools of social work. Having worked together for over a year, meeting monthly through video calls, on a discrete project, the participant-researchers embarked on this collaborative authoethnography as they discovered their transformation from working group to support group. This group of five participant-researchers examined their own feelings about their participation in the group and the consequent benefits of belonging to such a group.\n\nContribution: This study makes an important contribution to the doctoral education literature about how doctoral students from different schools can form informal groups that serve as a key source of intra-disciplinary networking, resources, opportunities, and support. This contribution helps to further the research on what kinds of supports doctoral students need in order to remain in their programs and graduate.\n\nFindings: We found that a working group of doctoral students from different schools of social work can develop into a community that can be used for social, academic, and networking support. We discovered that relationships with peers across schools provided a supportive environment that was distinct from those formed within our schools. Joining together to achieve a common research goal encouraged members to extend content-specific support. In addition, this group found that members had the opportunity to compare experiences at their respective doctoral programs, which enhanced peer support.\n\nRecommendations for Practitioners: Special interest groups at national conferences should encourage doctoral students at different schools to form communities of practice or similar groups. This group formation may lead to opportunities for doctoral students to work on a common project (e.g., website, publication) and serve as a source of social and academic support.\n\nRecommendation for Researchers: More research is needed on whether this relationship among doctoral students within the same discipline at different schools is equally helpful among students in different disciplines. 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Additional research is also needed on whether these types of informal groups work across research focus or whether it works best when students have the same research focus.","PeriodicalId":53524,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Doctoral Studies","volume":"124 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-09-24","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"International Journal of Doctoral Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.28945/4869","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Aim/Purpose: The overarching purpose of this paper was to examine how a collaborative working group of doctoral students from different institutions evolved into a community of practice and developmental network. Specifically, the aim of this study was to examine this group’s progression from working group to support group, a process that occurred through academic support, social support, professional networking, professional development, and skill development. Background: Although doctoral cohorts are often formed within the same school, some informal groups may develop among students in the same discipline from different schools. The authors explored how the formation of a working group, through attendance at an annual academic conference, enhanced their doctoral education and expanded their network through social and academic support. Methodology: The participant-researchers in this study used collaborative autoethnography to collectively examine their participation in this group formed outside of their respective schools of social work. Having worked together for over a year, meeting monthly through video calls, on a discrete project, the participant-researchers embarked on this collaborative authoethnography as they discovered their transformation from working group to support group. This group of five participant-researchers examined their own feelings about their participation in the group and the consequent benefits of belonging to such a group. Contribution: This study makes an important contribution to the doctoral education literature about how doctoral students from different schools can form informal groups that serve as a key source of intra-disciplinary networking, resources, opportunities, and support. This contribution helps to further the research on what kinds of supports doctoral students need in order to remain in their programs and graduate. Findings: We found that a working group of doctoral students from different schools of social work can develop into a community that can be used for social, academic, and networking support. We discovered that relationships with peers across schools provided a supportive environment that was distinct from those formed within our schools. Joining together to achieve a common research goal encouraged members to extend content-specific support. In addition, this group found that members had the opportunity to compare experiences at their respective doctoral programs, which enhanced peer support. Recommendations for Practitioners: Special interest groups at national conferences should encourage doctoral students at different schools to form communities of practice or similar groups. This group formation may lead to opportunities for doctoral students to work on a common project (e.g., website, publication) and serve as a source of social and academic support. Recommendation for Researchers: More research is needed on whether this relationship among doctoral students within the same discipline at different schools is equally helpful among students in different disciplines. Additional research is also needed on whether communities formed during doctoral studies can promote future collaboration as students become professors or researchers. Impact on Society: The present study’s model is applicable for use in academic settings where doctoral students convene for conferences relating to research, teaching, and practice. This model can facilitate the formation of inter-university working groups among students with similar research interests, career trajectories, and life responsibilities. Such groups can enrich peer support, promote collaboration, and enhance professional development. Future Research: More research is needed on whether this kind of social support group amongst doctoral students can be sustained as the students transition into academic careers. Additional research is also needed on whether these types of informal groups work across research focus or whether it works best when students have the same research focus.
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博士生学术与专业网络发展:从事父权研究的学生的协同自我民族志
目的/目的:本文的总体目的是研究来自不同机构的博士生合作工作组如何演变成一个实践和发展网络的社区。具体而言,本研究的目的是考察该小组从工作小组到支持小组的进展,这是一个经历学术支持、社会支持、专业网络、专业发展和技能发展的过程。背景:虽然博士群体经常在同一所学校内形成,但在不同学校的同一学科的学生中可能会形成一些非正式的群体。作者探讨了如何通过参加年度学术会议组建一个工作组,加强他们的博士教育,并通过社会和学术支持扩大他们的网络。研究方法:本研究的参与者-研究者使用协作性的自我民族志来集体考察他们在各自社会工作学校之外形成的这个群体中的参与情况。在一起工作了一年多,每月通过视频电话开会,在一个独立的项目上,参与者-研究人员开始了这个协作的授权,因为他们发现了他们从工作小组到支持小组的转变。这组五名参与者研究人员调查了他们自己对参与小组的感受,以及属于这样一个小组的随之而来的好处。贡献:本研究对博士教育文献做出了重要贡献,研究了不同学院的博士生如何形成非正式群体,作为学科内网络、资源、机会和支持的关键来源。这一贡献有助于进一步研究博士生需要什么样的支持才能留在他们的项目和毕业。研究结果:我们发现,由不同社会工作学院的博士生组成的工作组可以发展成一个社区,可以用于社会、学术和网络支持。我们发现,与其他学校的同学之间的关系提供了一个支持性的环境,这与我们学校形成的环境截然不同。联合起来实现共同的研究目标,鼓励成员提供特定内容的支持。此外,该小组发现,成员们有机会比较各自博士项目的经历,这增强了同伴间的支持。对从业者的建议:国家会议上的特殊兴趣小组应该鼓励不同学校的博士生组成实践社区或类似的小组。这种小组的形成可能会为博士生提供一个共同项目(例如,网站,出版物)的工作机会,并作为社会和学术支持的来源。对研究人员的建议:不同学校同一学科的博士生之间的这种关系是否对不同学科的学生同样有帮助,还需要更多的研究。在博士学习期间形成的团体能否在学生成为教授或研究员后促进未来的合作,也需要进一步的研究。对社会的影响:本研究的模型适用于博士生召开与研究、教学和实践有关的会议的学术环境。这种模式可以促进具有相似研究兴趣、职业轨迹和生活责任的学生之间形成校际工作组。这样的团体可以丰富同伴的支持,促进合作,促进专业发展。未来研究:这种博士生间的社会支持团体能否在学生进入学术生涯后持续下去,还需要更多的研究。还需要进一步研究这些类型的非正式小组是否跨研究重点起作用,或者当学生具有相同的研究重点时是否效果最好。
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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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