Dismantling Common Perceptions of Research Proposals Through South African Doctoral Students’ and Supervisors’ Experiences

Q2 Social Sciences
Walters Doh Nubia, S. Simmonds
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The danger is that greatly increasing the number of doctoral graduates will have a deleterious effect on the quality of the studies done. At present, the general view is that the research proposal phase is an administrative requirement or merely a planning phase in doctoral education. However, the research proposal phase is when doctoral students have their first opportunity to show their capacity for high-level intellectual engagement. This article explores what doctoral students and supervisors regard as necessary for a quality research proposal and how they view this phase of the doctoral journey. Methodology: This qualitative research used phenomenology to capture the lived experiences of participants. There were nineteen (19) participants from three South African universities. Eleven (11) of them were supervisors and eight (8) were doctoral students. Semi-structured interviews generated the data that were used to explore how participants experience and construct their understanding of quality at the research proposal phase. Contribution: The study makes three contributions: (i) it increases our understanding of the research proposal phase of doctoral education, (ii) it provides an alternative understanding of quality attributes: those centred on research learning. At present planning to meet administrative requirements dominates notions of quality; and (iii) it positions the doctoral research proposal at an intersection of different views of knowledge production: mode 1 that favours disciplinary knowledge production, mode 2 that favours cross disciplinary knowledge production and mode 3 that favours quadruple helix innovation systems of knowledge production. Findings: The findings indicate that participants understand quality in terms of planning for research, compliance with administrative requirements, confinement of research ideas within disciplinarity boundaries and the calibre of academic support. These understandings inform the common perceptions of the research proposal phase and its quality attributes. Participants’ narrow understanding of the research proposal phase and its quality attributes have, in turn, supported the view that writing of research proposals is a matter of technical compliance. This has deprived the research proposal phase from harnessing the full potential of research learning. It has also restricted the epistemological imagination of students, as econometrics parameters are being used to measure the production of knowledge. Recommendations for Practitioners: The possibility of enhancing the quality of the doctoral research proposal phase could be increased if those directing doctoral education were more aware (i) that the support programmes should encourage significant doctoral research; (ii) of the importance of having courses that are an integral part of the research proposal phase, which enable candidates to develop the ability to sustain a cohesive, coherent, critical and logical academic argument, and (iii) of the necessity for interdisciplinary research at the level of doctoral education. Recommendation for Researchers: Researchers from diverse social and cultural contexts need to improve the quality of their research proposals through engaging in research learning. This would require deeper understandings of social and cultural diversity of the context from which the research proposal phase is being experienced. 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引用次数: 2

Abstract

Aim/Purpose: There is a significant amount of research on supervision, assessment, and socio-economic benefits in South Africa. However, there have been relatively few attempts to analyse the research proposal phase, which remains a critical part of doctoral education in South African. Background: As part of the broader transformation agenda in South Africa, universities are under pressure to produce vastly more high-level doctoral graduates. The aim is to allow South Africa to build its knowledge base so it can address the socio-economic problems inherited from the apartheid regime. In South Africa, quality in doctoral education is mainly understood and measured in terms of throughput rate. The danger is that greatly increasing the number of doctoral graduates will have a deleterious effect on the quality of the studies done. At present, the general view is that the research proposal phase is an administrative requirement or merely a planning phase in doctoral education. However, the research proposal phase is when doctoral students have their first opportunity to show their capacity for high-level intellectual engagement. This article explores what doctoral students and supervisors regard as necessary for a quality research proposal and how they view this phase of the doctoral journey. Methodology: This qualitative research used phenomenology to capture the lived experiences of participants. There were nineteen (19) participants from three South African universities. Eleven (11) of them were supervisors and eight (8) were doctoral students. Semi-structured interviews generated the data that were used to explore how participants experience and construct their understanding of quality at the research proposal phase. Contribution: The study makes three contributions: (i) it increases our understanding of the research proposal phase of doctoral education, (ii) it provides an alternative understanding of quality attributes: those centred on research learning. At present planning to meet administrative requirements dominates notions of quality; and (iii) it positions the doctoral research proposal at an intersection of different views of knowledge production: mode 1 that favours disciplinary knowledge production, mode 2 that favours cross disciplinary knowledge production and mode 3 that favours quadruple helix innovation systems of knowledge production. Findings: The findings indicate that participants understand quality in terms of planning for research, compliance with administrative requirements, confinement of research ideas within disciplinarity boundaries and the calibre of academic support. These understandings inform the common perceptions of the research proposal phase and its quality attributes. Participants’ narrow understanding of the research proposal phase and its quality attributes have, in turn, supported the view that writing of research proposals is a matter of technical compliance. This has deprived the research proposal phase from harnessing the full potential of research learning. It has also restricted the epistemological imagination of students, as econometrics parameters are being used to measure the production of knowledge. Recommendations for Practitioners: The possibility of enhancing the quality of the doctoral research proposal phase could be increased if those directing doctoral education were more aware (i) that the support programmes should encourage significant doctoral research; (ii) of the importance of having courses that are an integral part of the research proposal phase, which enable candidates to develop the ability to sustain a cohesive, coherent, critical and logical academic argument, and (iii) of the necessity for interdisciplinary research at the level of doctoral education. Recommendation for Researchers: Researchers from diverse social and cultural contexts need to improve the quality of their research proposals through engaging in research learning. This would require deeper understandings of social and cultural diversity of the context from which the research proposal phase is being experienced. This requires further research on understanding how students negotiate the transition from different social learning contexts into doctoral education. Impact on Society: Implementation of the recommendations would help to establish a robust standard of doctoral education, which could enhance the personal, professional, social, and economic growth of South African society. Future Research: Future research should explore different approaches to support services to identify the kind of support services that would enable doctoral students to engage in quality interdisciplinary research.
透过南非博士生与导师的经验,拆解对研究建议的普遍认知
目的/目的:南非对监督、评估和社会经济效益进行了大量研究。然而,对研究提案阶段进行分析的尝试相对较少,这一阶段仍然是南非博士教育的关键部分。背景:作为南非更广泛的转型议程的一部分,大学面临着培养更多高水平博士毕业生的压力。其目的是使南非能够建立自己的知识库,以便能够处理从种族隔离政权遗留下来的社会经济问题。在南非,博士教育的质量主要是通过通过率来理解和衡量的。危险在于,大量增加博士毕业生的数量将对所做研究的质量产生有害影响。目前普遍认为,在博士教育中,研究计划阶段是一种行政要求或仅仅是一个规划阶段。然而,研究计划阶段是博士生第一次有机会展示他们高层次智力参与的能力。这篇文章探讨了博士生和导师认为什么是高质量研究计划所必需的,以及他们如何看待博士旅程的这一阶段。方法:本定性研究使用现象学捕捉参与者的生活经验。共有来自南非三所大学的19名参与者。其中导师11人,博士生8人。半结构化访谈产生的数据用于探索参与者在研究提案阶段如何体验和构建他们对质量的理解。贡献:该研究做出了三个贡献:(i)它增加了我们对博士教育的研究计划阶段的理解,(ii)它提供了对质量属性的另一种理解:那些以研究学习为中心的属性。目前规划以满足行政要求为主,质量观念占主导地位;(3)将博士研究计划定位于不同知识生产观的交叉点:模式1倾向于学科知识生产,模式2倾向于跨学科知识生产,模式3倾向于知识生产的四螺旋创新体系。研究结果:研究结果表明,参与者从研究规划、遵守行政要求、在学科界限内限制研究思想和学术支持的水平等方面理解质量。这些理解告知研究提案阶段及其质量属性的共同看法。参与者对研究提案阶段及其质量属性的狭隘理解反过来又支持了研究提案写作是技术合规性问题的观点。这剥夺了研究提案阶段利用研究学习的全部潜力。它也限制了学生的认识论想象力,因为计量经济学参数被用来衡量知识的生产。对实践者的建议:如果那些指导博士教育的人更多地意识到(i)支持计划应该鼓励重要的博士研究,那么提高博士研究计划阶段质量的可能性就会增加;(2)在研究计划阶段开设课程的重要性,这些课程使候选人能够培养保持连贯、连贯、批判性和逻辑性的学术论点的能力;(3)在博士教育层面进行跨学科研究的必要性。对研究人员的建议:来自不同社会和文化背景的研究人员需要通过参与研究学习来提高他们的研究建议的质量。这将需要对研究提案阶段所处背景的社会和文化多样性有更深入的了解。这需要进一步研究学生如何从不同的社会学习环境过渡到博士教育。对社会的影响:这些建议的实施将有助于建立一个健全的博士教育标准,这将促进南非社会的个人、专业、社会和经济增长。未来研究:未来研究应探索不同的支持服务方法,以确定支持服务的类型,使博士生能够从事高质量的跨学科研究。
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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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