Validation in Doctoral Education: Exploring PhD Students’ Perceptions of Belonging to Scaffold Doctoral Identity Work

Q2 Social Sciences International Journal of Doctoral Studies Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.28945/4876
J. Collins
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Methodology: The article reports on three studies on PhD journeys and communities undertaken at one UK university. It draws on interview data from thirty doctoral candidates, which was thematically analysed using NVivo 12. Taking a qualitative approach to provide a rich and holistic focus on participant ‘meaning making’, the studies explore how PhD students understand belonging, where they receive validation and feel they need validation, and where self-validation can make a difference to their positivity about the PhD. Taking this approach to understand processes of ‘meaning-making’ paves the way to scaffold solutions through ‘reframing’ processes such as coaching and mentoring. Contribution: Thinking about PhD students’ belonging through the dimension of validation allows for practical support for developing belonging to be scaffolded, specifically through creating spaces to draw coaching skills into supervisory training and PhD student support (e.g., peer mentoring). This is significant as scholarship has shown that coaching has positive effects on wellbeing. This article contributes to understanding of where and how validation and self-validation manifest in doctoral education for PhD students. This contribution identifies ways in which external validation can help to scaffold internal self-validation; thus, offering a way of potentially mitigating risk factors to PhD students’ wellbeing. Specifically, validation can be understood as a ‘reserve’ that can be drawn on for ‘self-validation’. Validation is a solutions-focused theory. As a conceptual apparatus to understand doctoral students’ perceptions, validation theory also provides a frame for scaffolding practical ways for PhD students to build doctoral identity. Findings: The article focuses on challenges to PhD students building communities, supervisory relations and self-validation. It finds that supervisory feedback is a key area where PhD students seek validation. Two arguments are offered. First, that validation is a crucial process in (positive) doctoral identity work. Second, the argument is offered that making spaces for coaching skills to support PhD students can increase opportunities for validation (e.g., via supervisory training) and self-validation (e.g., via peer mentoring). Recommendations for Practitioners: Those who support doctoral researchers can potentially support the development of validation skills and self-validation skills. Some recommendations are included around supporting supervisory training in feedback and listening skills, peer mentoring as a way to foster a transition between external validation and internal self-validation for PhD students, and a worksheet for students’ self-validation is included as an appendix. Recommendation for Researchers: This article extends existing literature on PhD students’ emotion work by offering a new dimension to understand how belonging is developed amongst PhD students. Thinking about belonging through the dimension of validation shifts work on belonging towards possibilities of practical support. Impact on Society: Whilst the term ‘validation’ has been used in undergraduate educational research, and in Psychology (in theory and in clinical contexts) drawing these terms together to create a theory to understand doctoral identity work in higher education has larger potential applications. ‘Validation’ could potentially prove useful within doctoral education context to understand and scaffold PhD students’ development as they navigate transitioning identity positions during candidature. Thus, although the studies are limited in scope to the UK context, the findings could be more widely applied to other higher education contexts. Future Research: Two areas for future research are identified. First, to understand whether and how different groups of doctoral candidates (e.g., such as international students, LGBTQ+ students, etc.) have different validation needs and priorities in their doctoral identity work. 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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Aim/Purpose: The aim of this article is to make a case of the role of validation in doctoral education. The purpose is to detail findings from three studies which explore PhD students’ experiences and perceptions of belonging in one UK university-ty, in order to hypothesise how validation and self-validation could make a difference in doctoral education, and what practices might support this. Background: The article draws on research into doctoral identity and work on ‘doctoral capital’ to explore how PhD students’ perceptions and experiences of not belonging to doctoral communities negatively impacts on their wellbeing. It extends this research by incorporating theories from Education and Psychology to build a theory of validation in doctoral education. Methodology: The article reports on three studies on PhD journeys and communities undertaken at one UK university. It draws on interview data from thirty doctoral candidates, which was thematically analysed using NVivo 12. Taking a qualitative approach to provide a rich and holistic focus on participant ‘meaning making’, the studies explore how PhD students understand belonging, where they receive validation and feel they need validation, and where self-validation can make a difference to their positivity about the PhD. Taking this approach to understand processes of ‘meaning-making’ paves the way to scaffold solutions through ‘reframing’ processes such as coaching and mentoring. Contribution: Thinking about PhD students’ belonging through the dimension of validation allows for practical support for developing belonging to be scaffolded, specifically through creating spaces to draw coaching skills into supervisory training and PhD student support (e.g., peer mentoring). This is significant as scholarship has shown that coaching has positive effects on wellbeing. This article contributes to understanding of where and how validation and self-validation manifest in doctoral education for PhD students. This contribution identifies ways in which external validation can help to scaffold internal self-validation; thus, offering a way of potentially mitigating risk factors to PhD students’ wellbeing. Specifically, validation can be understood as a ‘reserve’ that can be drawn on for ‘self-validation’. Validation is a solutions-focused theory. As a conceptual apparatus to understand doctoral students’ perceptions, validation theory also provides a frame for scaffolding practical ways for PhD students to build doctoral identity. Findings: The article focuses on challenges to PhD students building communities, supervisory relations and self-validation. It finds that supervisory feedback is a key area where PhD students seek validation. Two arguments are offered. First, that validation is a crucial process in (positive) doctoral identity work. Second, the argument is offered that making spaces for coaching skills to support PhD students can increase opportunities for validation (e.g., via supervisory training) and self-validation (e.g., via peer mentoring). Recommendations for Practitioners: Those who support doctoral researchers can potentially support the development of validation skills and self-validation skills. Some recommendations are included around supporting supervisory training in feedback and listening skills, peer mentoring as a way to foster a transition between external validation and internal self-validation for PhD students, and a worksheet for students’ self-validation is included as an appendix. Recommendation for Researchers: This article extends existing literature on PhD students’ emotion work by offering a new dimension to understand how belonging is developed amongst PhD students. Thinking about belonging through the dimension of validation shifts work on belonging towards possibilities of practical support. Impact on Society: Whilst the term ‘validation’ has been used in undergraduate educational research, and in Psychology (in theory and in clinical contexts) drawing these terms together to create a theory to understand doctoral identity work in higher education has larger potential applications. ‘Validation’ could potentially prove useful within doctoral education context to understand and scaffold PhD students’ development as they navigate transitioning identity positions during candidature. Thus, although the studies are limited in scope to the UK context, the findings could be more widely applied to other higher education contexts. Future Research: Two areas for future research are identified. First, to understand whether and how different groups of doctoral candidates (e.g., such as international students, LGBTQ+ students, etc.) have different validation needs and priorities in their doctoral identity work. The second is to understand the possible impact of using coaching with PhDs in different contexts (e.g., through peer mentoring schemes, supervision, and self-validation).
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博士教育的验证:探索博士生对脚手架博士身份工作的归属感
目的/目的:本文的目的是为验证在博士教育中的作用做一个案例。目的是详细介绍三项研究的结果,这些研究探索了博士生在一所英国大学的经历和归属感,以假设验证和自我验证如何在博士教育中发挥作用,以及哪些实践可能支持这一点。背景:本文通过对博士身份的研究和“博士资本”的研究,探讨博士生不属于博士生群体的感知和经历如何对他们的幸福感产生负面影响。在此基础上,结合教育学和心理学的理论,构建了博士教育的验证理论。方法:本文报告了在一所英国大学进行的博士旅程和社区的三项研究。它借鉴了来自30位博士候选人的访谈数据,并使用NVivo 12对其进行了主题分析。这些研究采用定性的方法,对参与者的“意义创造”提供了丰富而全面的关注,探讨了博士生如何理解归属感,他们在哪里得到认可,觉得自己需要认可,以及自我认可在哪里会影响他们对博士学位的积极性。采用这种方法来理解“意义创造”的过程,为通过“重构”过程(如指导和指导)来构建解决方案铺平了道路。贡献:通过验证维度思考博士生的归属感,可以为发展归属感提供实际支持,特别是通过创建空间,将指导技能引入监督培训和博士生支持(例如,同伴指导)。这一点很重要,因为学术研究表明,教练对幸福感有积极影响。本文有助于理解在博士生的博士教育中验证和自我验证在哪里以及如何体现。这一贡献确定了外部验证可以帮助支撑内部自我验证的方式;因此,提供了一种可能减轻博士生健康风险因素的方法。具体来说,验证可以被理解为一种“储备”,可以用于“自我验证”。验证是一个以解决方案为中心的理论。验证理论作为一种理解博士生感知的概念工具,也为博士生构建博士身份的实践途径提供了框架。研究发现:本文关注博士生在社区建设、监督关系和自我验证方面面临的挑战。研究发现,主管反馈是博士生寻求认可的一个关键领域。有两种观点。首先,在(积极的)博士身份工作中,验证是一个至关重要的过程。其次,该论点提出,为辅导技能提供空间来支持博士生可以增加验证(例如,通过监督培训)和自我验证(例如,通过同伴指导)的机会。对从业者的建议:那些支持博士研究人员的人可以潜在地支持验证技能和自我验证技能的发展。一些建议包括支持反馈和倾听技巧方面的监督培训,同伴指导作为培养博士生从外部验证到内部自我验证之间过渡的一种方式,以及学生自我验证的工作表作为附录。对研究人员的建议:本文通过提供一个新的维度来理解博士生之间的归属感是如何发展的,从而扩展了现有的关于博士生情感工作的文献。通过验证维度思考归属将归属的工作转向实际支持的可能性。对社会的影响:虽然“验证”一词已被用于本科教育研究,但在心理学(理论和临床环境)中,将这些术语结合起来创建一个理论来理解高等教育中的博士身份工作具有更大的潜在应用。“验证”可能在博士教育背景下被证明是有用的,可以理解和支持博士生在候选人期间过渡身份位置的发展。因此,尽管这些研究的范围仅限于英国,但研究结果可以更广泛地应用于其他高等教育领域。未来研究:确定了未来研究的两个领域。首先,了解不同群体的博士生(如留学生、LGBTQ+学生等)在博士身份认同工作中是否存在不同的验证需求和优先级,以及如何存在差异。第二是了解在不同背景下(例如,通过同伴指导计划、监督和自我验证)对博士进行指导的可能影响。
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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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