Case Study 4: Education Doctoral Student - "An Exploratory Study of Online Social Networking within a Doctorate of Education Program"


Autoria(s): Beutel, Denise; Gray, Larina; Beames, Stephanie; Klenowski, Valentina; Ehrich, Lisa; Kapitzke, Cushla
Contribuinte(s)

Westover, Jonathan H.

Westover, Jacque P.

Data(s)

2014

Resumo

Introduction The professional doctorate is specifically designed for professionals investigating real-world problems and relevant issues for a profession, industry, and/or the community. The focus is scholarly research into professional practices. The research programme bridges academia and the professions, and offers doctoral candidates the opportunity to investigate issues relevant to their own practices and to apply these understandings to their professional contexts. The study on which this article is based sought to track the scholarly skill development of a cohort of professional doctoral students who commenced the course in January 2008 at an Australian university. Because they hold positions of responsibility and are time-poor, many doctoral students have difficulty transitioning from professional practitioner to researcher and scholar. The struggle many experience is in the development of a theoretical or conceptual standpoint for argumentation (Lesham, 2007; Weese et al., 1999). It was thought that the use of a scaffolded learning environment that drew upon a blended learning approach incorporating face to face intensive blocks and collaborative knowledge-building tools such as wikis would provide a data source for understanding the development of scholarly skills. Wikis, weblogs and similar social networking software have the potential to support communities to share, learn, create and collaborate. The development of a wiki page by each candidate in the 2008 cohort was encouraged to provide the participants and the teaching team members with textual indicators of progress. Learning tasks were scaffolded with the expectation that the candidates would complete these tasks via the wikis. The expectation was that cohort members would comment on each other’s work, together with the supervisor and/or teaching team member who was allocated to each candidate. The supervisor is responsible for supervising the candidate’s work through to submission of the thesis for examination and the teaching team member provides support to both the supervisor and the candidate through to confirmation. This paper reports on the learning journey of a cohort of doctoral students during the first seven months of their professional doctoral programme to determine if there had been any qualitative shifts in understandings, expectations and perceptions regarding their developing knowledge and skills. The paper is grounded in the literature pertaining to doctoral studies and examines the structure of the professional doctoral programme. Following this is a discussion of the qualitative study that helped to unearth key themes regarding the participants’ learning journey.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/78035/

Publicador

Common Ground Publishing LLC

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/78035/6/78035_BEUTEL_Case_study_4_BOOK_CHAP.pdf

http://ubi-learn.cgpublisher.com/product/pub.215/prod.2

Beutel, Denise, Gray, Larina, Beames, Stephanie, Klenowski, Valentina, Ehrich, Lisa, & Kapitzke, Cushla (2014) Case Study 4: Education Doctoral Student - "An Exploratory Study of Online Social Networking within a Doctorate of Education Program". In Westover, Jonathan H. & Westover, Jacque P. (Eds.) Engaging Hybrid and Blended Learning in Higher Education. Common Ground Publishing LLC, Champaign, Illinois, USA, pp. 192-204.

Direitos

Copyright 2014 Jonathan H. Westover and Jacque P. Westover

Fonte

School of Cultural & Professional Learning; Faculty of Education

Palavras-Chave #130103 Higher Education #higher education #blended learning #online learning environments #hybrid learning #HERN
Tipo

Book Chapter