教育科学博士生学者身份的发展:文献回顾与启示

Q2 Social Sciences International Journal of Doctoral Studies Pub Date : 2021-01-28 DOI:10.28945/4687
Y. Choi, J. Bouwma-Gearhart, Grant Ermis
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We focus specifically on the experiences of education sciences doctoral students, given their unique experiences (e.g., typically older in age, more professional experiences prior to starting doctoral program) and the potential of education sciences doctoral programs contributing to the diversification of academia and future generations of students and scholars. Methodology Our systematic literature search process entailed reviewing the titles, abstracts, and methods sections of the first 1,000 records yielded via a Google Scholar search. This process, combined with backwards and forwards citation snowballing, yielded a total of 62 articles, which were read in their entirety. These 62 articles were further reduced to 36 final articles, which were coded according to an Doctoral Students’ Identity Development 90 inductively created codebook. Based on themes derived from our coding process, we organized our findings according to a framework that illuminates individual identity development in relation to a larger activity system. Contribution This systematic review presents the current body of scholarship regarding the identity development of education sciences doctoral students via a constructivist sociocultural framework. We contribute to the study of doctoral education and education research more broadly by focusing on an area that has received relatively little attention. A focus on the identity development of doctoral students pursuing the education sciences is warranted given the field’s promise for preparing a diverse group of future educators and education scholars. Furthermore, this analysis broadens the conversation regarding scholarship on this topic as we present doctoral student identity development as occurring at the intersection of student, faculty, program, disciplinary, institutional, and larger sociocultural contexts, rather than as individualized and local endeavors. Findings Looking across our reviewed articles, identity as scholar emerged as recognition by self and others of possessing and exhibiting adequate levels of competence, confidence, autonomy, and agency with respect to scholarly activities, products, and communities. Students often experience tensions on their journey towards becoming and being scholars, in contending with multiple identities (e.g., student, professional) and due to the perceived mismatch between students’ idealized notion of scholar and what is attainable for them. Tensions may serve as catalysts for development of identity as scholar for students, especially when student agency is supported via formal and less ubiquitous subsidiary experiences of students’ doctoral programs. Recommendations for Practitioners We recommend that actors within the broader system of doctoral student identity development (e.g., doctoral students, faculty, organizational/institutional leaders) explicitly acknowledge students’ identity development and intentionally incorporate opportunities for reflection and growth as part of the doctoral curriculum, rather than assume that identity development occurs “naturally.” In this paper, we provide specific recommendations for different stakeholders. Recommendations for Researchers Our literature review focused on studies that examined the identity development of doctoral students in the education sciences. We recommend further discipline-specific research and synthesis of such research to uncover similarities and differences across various disciplines and contexts. Impact on Society Doctoral students have the potential to become and lead future generations of educators and scholars. Taking a sociocultural and system-level approach regarding the successful identity development of doctoral students is necessary to better support and cultivate a diverse group of future scholars who are wellequipped to lead innovations and solve problems both within and outside academia. Future Research Possible areas of future research include focusing on the experiences of students who leave their programs prior to completion (and thus not developing their identity as scholars), investigating specific knowledge, skills, and attitudes associated with activities that studies have claimed contribute to identity development, and examining phenomena or traits that are seen as more biologically determined and less modifiable (e.g., attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, dyslexia, and mental health differences) in relation to doctoral students’ identity development. Finally, we recommend that future research should look into the underlying norms and nuances of ontological, epistemological, and methodological roots of programs and disciplines as part of the “story” of developing Choi, Bouwma-Gearhart, & Ermis 91 identity as scholar. Norms, and related philosophical underpinnings of typical doctoral education (and the tasks these translate into) were not explored in the reviewed literature.","PeriodicalId":53524,"journal":{"name":"International Journal of Doctoral Studies","volume":"14 1","pages":"089-125"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2021-01-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"12","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Doctoral Students’ Identity Development as Scholars in the Education Sciences: Literature Review and Implications\",\"authors\":\"Y. Choi, J. Bouwma-Gearhart, Grant Ermis\",\"doi\":\"10.28945/4687\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Aim/Purpose The purpose of this paper is to offer a systematic review of empirical literature examining doctoral students’ identity development as scholars in the education sciences. 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We contribute to the study of doctoral education and education research more broadly by focusing on an area that has received relatively little attention. A focus on the identity development of doctoral students pursuing the education sciences is warranted given the field’s promise for preparing a diverse group of future educators and education scholars. Furthermore, this analysis broadens the conversation regarding scholarship on this topic as we present doctoral student identity development as occurring at the intersection of student, faculty, program, disciplinary, institutional, and larger sociocultural contexts, rather than as individualized and local endeavors. Findings Looking across our reviewed articles, identity as scholar emerged as recognition by self and others of possessing and exhibiting adequate levels of competence, confidence, autonomy, and agency with respect to scholarly activities, products, and communities. Students often experience tensions on their journey towards becoming and being scholars, in contending with multiple identities (e.g., student, professional) and due to the perceived mismatch between students’ idealized notion of scholar and what is attainable for them. Tensions may serve as catalysts for development of identity as scholar for students, especially when student agency is supported via formal and less ubiquitous subsidiary experiences of students’ doctoral programs. Recommendations for Practitioners We recommend that actors within the broader system of doctoral student identity development (e.g., doctoral students, faculty, organizational/institutional leaders) explicitly acknowledge students’ identity development and intentionally incorporate opportunities for reflection and growth as part of the doctoral curriculum, rather than assume that identity development occurs “naturally.” In this paper, we provide specific recommendations for different stakeholders. 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引用次数: 12

摘要

本文的目的是对研究博士生作为教育科学学者身份发展的实证文献进行系统回顾。我们通过建构主义的社会文化视角来构建我们的分析,以组织我们的发现,并讨论对构成博士教育系统的多个参与者和组成部分的影响,博士生是该系统的核心参与者。尽管越来越多的人通过他们在教育项目中的经历对高等教育学生的职业认同发展感兴趣,但相对而言,人们对博士生如何发展他们作为从事学术研究的专业人士的身份知之甚少。我们特别关注教育科学博士生的经历,考虑到他们独特的经历(例如,通常年龄较大,在开始博士课程之前有更多的专业经验),以及教育科学博士课程对学术界和未来几代学生和学者的多样化做出贡献的潜力。我们系统的文献检索过程包括回顾通过Google Scholar搜索得到的前1000条记录的标题、摘要和方法部分。这个过程,加上前后引文滚雪球,总共产生了62篇被完整阅读的文章。这62篇文章进一步缩减为36篇最终文章,根据一个博士生身份发展90归纳创建的代码本进行编码。基于我们编码过程中衍生的主题,我们根据一个框架组织了我们的发现,该框架阐明了与更大的活动系统相关的个人身份发展。这篇系统的综述通过建构主义的社会文化框架介绍了目前关于教育科学博士生身份发展的学术研究。我们通过关注一个相对较少受到关注的领域,更广泛地为博士教育和教育研究的研究做出贡献。关注追求教育科学的博士生的身份发展是有必要的,因为该领域有望培养出多样化的未来教育工作者和教育学者。此外,这一分析拓宽了关于这一主题的学术讨论,因为我们将博士生身份发展视为发生在学生、教师、项目、学科、机构和更大的社会文化背景的交叉点,而不是个体化和地方性的努力。纵观我们所回顾的文章,学者的身份是自我和他人对在学术活动、产品和社区方面拥有并表现出足够水平的能力、信心、自主性和能动性的认可。学生在成为和成为学者的过程中,在与多重身份(例如,学生、专业人士)的斗争中,以及在学生理想的学者概念与他们可以达到的目标之间,往往会感到紧张。紧张关系可能成为学生学者身份发展的催化剂,特别是当学生代理通过学生博士课程的正式和不太普遍的附属经历得到支持时。我们建议在博士生身份发展的更广泛系统中的行为者(例如,博士生,教师,组织/机构领导者)明确承认学生的身份发展,并有意将反思和成长的机会作为博士课程的一部分,而不是假设身份发展是“自然”发生的。在本文中,我们为不同的利益相关者提供了具体的建议。对研究人员的建议我们的文献综述集中在研究教育科学博士生的身份发展。我们建议进一步的学科研究和综合这些研究,以揭示不同学科和背景之间的异同。博士生有潜力成为并领导下一代的教育工作者和学者。从社会文化和系统层面对博士生的成功身份发展采取措施是必要的,以更好地支持和培养多样化的未来学者群体,他们有能力领导创新并解决学术界内外的问题。 未来研究未来可能的研究领域包括关注那些在完成课程之前离开的学生的经历(因此没有发展出他们作为学者的身份),调查与研究声称有助于身份发展的活动相关的特定知识、技能和态度,以及研究被认为是生物学决定的、不可改变的现象或特征(例如,注意力缺陷/多动障碍,阅读障碍和心理健康差异)与博士生身份发展的关系。最后,我们建议未来的研究应该关注项目和学科的本体论、认识论和方法论根源的潜在规范和细微差别,作为发展Choi、Bouwma-Gearhart和Ermis 91学者身份的“故事”的一部分。规范,以及典型博士教育的相关哲学基础(以及这些转化为的任务)没有在所评论的文献中进行探讨。
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Doctoral Students’ Identity Development as Scholars in the Education Sciences: Literature Review and Implications
Aim/Purpose The purpose of this paper is to offer a systematic review of empirical literature examining doctoral students’ identity development as scholars in the education sciences. We frame our analysis through a constructivist sociocultural perspective to organize our findings and discuss implications for multiple actors and components that constitute the system of doctoral education, with doctoral students as the central actors of the system. Background Despite increasing interest in the professional identity development of postsecondary students via their experiences in educational programs, relatively little is known about how doctoral students develop their identity as professionals who engage in scholarship. We focus specifically on the experiences of education sciences doctoral students, given their unique experiences (e.g., typically older in age, more professional experiences prior to starting doctoral program) and the potential of education sciences doctoral programs contributing to the diversification of academia and future generations of students and scholars. Methodology Our systematic literature search process entailed reviewing the titles, abstracts, and methods sections of the first 1,000 records yielded via a Google Scholar search. This process, combined with backwards and forwards citation snowballing, yielded a total of 62 articles, which were read in their entirety. These 62 articles were further reduced to 36 final articles, which were coded according to an Doctoral Students’ Identity Development 90 inductively created codebook. Based on themes derived from our coding process, we organized our findings according to a framework that illuminates individual identity development in relation to a larger activity system. Contribution This systematic review presents the current body of scholarship regarding the identity development of education sciences doctoral students via a constructivist sociocultural framework. We contribute to the study of doctoral education and education research more broadly by focusing on an area that has received relatively little attention. A focus on the identity development of doctoral students pursuing the education sciences is warranted given the field’s promise for preparing a diverse group of future educators and education scholars. Furthermore, this analysis broadens the conversation regarding scholarship on this topic as we present doctoral student identity development as occurring at the intersection of student, faculty, program, disciplinary, institutional, and larger sociocultural contexts, rather than as individualized and local endeavors. Findings Looking across our reviewed articles, identity as scholar emerged as recognition by self and others of possessing and exhibiting adequate levels of competence, confidence, autonomy, and agency with respect to scholarly activities, products, and communities. Students often experience tensions on their journey towards becoming and being scholars, in contending with multiple identities (e.g., student, professional) and due to the perceived mismatch between students’ idealized notion of scholar and what is attainable for them. Tensions may serve as catalysts for development of identity as scholar for students, especially when student agency is supported via formal and less ubiquitous subsidiary experiences of students’ doctoral programs. Recommendations for Practitioners We recommend that actors within the broader system of doctoral student identity development (e.g., doctoral students, faculty, organizational/institutional leaders) explicitly acknowledge students’ identity development and intentionally incorporate opportunities for reflection and growth as part of the doctoral curriculum, rather than assume that identity development occurs “naturally.” In this paper, we provide specific recommendations for different stakeholders. Recommendations for Researchers Our literature review focused on studies that examined the identity development of doctoral students in the education sciences. We recommend further discipline-specific research and synthesis of such research to uncover similarities and differences across various disciplines and contexts. Impact on Society Doctoral students have the potential to become and lead future generations of educators and scholars. Taking a sociocultural and system-level approach regarding the successful identity development of doctoral students is necessary to better support and cultivate a diverse group of future scholars who are wellequipped to lead innovations and solve problems both within and outside academia. Future Research Possible areas of future research include focusing on the experiences of students who leave their programs prior to completion (and thus not developing their identity as scholars), investigating specific knowledge, skills, and attitudes associated with activities that studies have claimed contribute to identity development, and examining phenomena or traits that are seen as more biologically determined and less modifiable (e.g., attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, dyslexia, and mental health differences) in relation to doctoral students’ identity development. Finally, we recommend that future research should look into the underlying norms and nuances of ontological, epistemological, and methodological roots of programs and disciplines as part of the “story” of developing Choi, Bouwma-Gearhart, & Ermis 91 identity as scholar. Norms, and related philosophical underpinnings of typical doctoral education (and the tasks these translate into) were not explored in the reviewed literature.
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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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