Doctoral Trainee Preferences for Career Development Resources: The Influence of Peer and Other Supportive Social Capital

Q2 Social Sciences
Rebekah L. St. Clair, J. Melkers, J. Rojewski, Kevin M. Ford, Tamara Dahl, N. McCarty, S. Watts, D. Chatterjee
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Aim/Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to understand doctoral and postdoctoral trainee preferences for different models of career development resources and how career-relevant social capital affects these preferences. Background: The supply and demand mismatch within the academic job market is augmented by a growing complaint that trainees are not prepared for a range of careers beyond the academic. So, trainees are often put in a position to seek out resources to navigate their career search processes, yet, the career development strategies that they pursue and the preferences that they have for different types of career development resources is not well understood. Drawing from existing higher education and social capital theory literatures, we examine how trainee preferences for career development resources are shaped by the career support received from their Principal Investigator (PI) and peers, as well as their own self-efficacy. Methodology: We focus on doctoral and postdoctoral trainees in the biomedical science and engineering disciplines at two sites (but involving three institutions) funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Broadening Experiences in Scientific Training (BEST) Program, a program designed to help prepare trainees for a broad variety of bio-medically related careers within and outside of academic research. Using a survey of both BEST and non-BEST trainees (those not formally in a BEST program), we conducted descriptive and logistic regression analyses of survey data to assess the factors affecting trainee preferences for three different types of career development models: (1) an intensive cohort career development experience (BEST “cohort”), (2) ad-hoc resources (“cafeteria”), or (3) choosing not to seek any career development resources at all. Contribution: This study contributes to the doctoral trainee research base by (1) taking a quantitative approach to cohort based interventions for career development, concepts historically largely examined by qualitative methods, (2) distinguishing among the types and sources of support to better tease out the different types of relationships trainees may have, (3) identifying these issues for both the experiences of the doctoral student and the lesser-studied postdoctoral fellow, and (4) moving beyond a single institution study context by examining data from three different university programs, which allows us to control for institutional and demographic characteristics which importantly is recognized as a significant need in cohort model research. Findings: We find that social capital in the form of a supportive environment and peer support was critical for shaping career development preferences. Cohort programs were particularly attractive to trainees interested in careers outside of academic science and who had low career self-efficacy. Trainees who reported high levels of PI support were less likely to pursue other career development resources, while students reporting low levels of PI support were more likely to choose to participate in a career development focused BEST cohort community. Trainees who reported low levels of PI, department, and peer support were less likely to participate in formal career development events or resources offered by academic institutions. Recommendations for Practitioners: These findings can inform university and career development administrators about the social context in which trainees develop and how that matters for how they prefer and value different formats and intensities of career support. Our recommendations point to the importance of developing (if possible) different models for providing career development resources, so trainees can take advantage of the ones most suitable for them. We further recommend programs consider different marketing strategies for the types of career development programs they offer in order for trainees to understand their options and engage in the resources that make the most sense for them. Highlighting the benefits of cohort based programs will help attract those trainees who desire and need that type of support. This clarity in program goals not only helps to set and manage expectations for trainees to know what the outcomes can be, it also helps to inform programs in terms of what resources to use and measure in helping move trainees along in their own career progression. Recommendation for Researchers: We recommend empirically differentiating the different types of support trainees may receive, as our results emphasized that the source of support matters. We also recommend that this study be replicated across different disciplines to assess the extent to which these findings apply universally. Impact on Society: This research is especially important for its impact for the job market and graduate higher education. With the growth in graduate career development training available across U.S. campuses, by designing and targeting the appropriate interventions for career development in academic institutions we can better prepare trainees for their next steps after training as they enter into the job market. Future Research: Future research needs to further examine the black-boxes that are the doctoral student and postdoctoral experiences. This literature is growing, but we need a more concerted effort to understand how factors like support (in its various forms) work with other factors, like career development efficacy. Within this context, future research should look at first generation trainees, as well.
博士实习生职业发展资源偏好:同伴和其他支持性社会资本的影响
目的:了解博士和博士后受训者对不同模式职业发展资源的偏好,以及职业相关社会资本如何影响这些偏好。背景:越来越多的人抱怨受训者没有为学术以外的一系列职业做好准备,这加剧了学术就业市场的供需不匹配。因此,受训者往往被置于寻找资源的位置,以引导他们的职业发展过程,然而,他们所追求的职业发展策略和他们对不同类型的职业发展资源的偏好并不是很清楚。基于现有高等教育和社会资本理论的文献,本研究考察了受训者职业发展资源偏好是如何受到其首席研究员和同伴的职业支持以及自我效能感的影响的。方法:我们专注于生物医学科学和工程学科的博士和博士后学员,在两个地点(但涉及三个机构),由美国国立卫生研究院(NIH)科学培训拓宽经验(BEST)计划资助,该计划旨在帮助学员为学术研究内外的各种生物医学相关职业做好准备。通过对BEST和非BEST学员(未正式参加BEST项目的学员)的调查,我们对调查数据进行了描述性和逻辑回归分析,以评估影响学员对三种不同类型职业发展模式偏好的因素:(1)密集队列职业发展体验(BEST“队列”),(2)临时资源(“自助餐厅”),或(3)选择不寻求任何职业发展资源。贡献:本研究对博士生研究基础的贡献是:(1)对基于队列的职业发展干预采取定量方法,这一概念以往主要由定性方法来检验;(2)区分支持的类型和来源,以更好地梳理实习生可能拥有的不同类型的关系;(3)确定博士生和较少研究的博士后的经历中存在的这些问题。(4)通过检查来自三个不同大学项目的数据,超越了单一机构的研究背景,这使我们能够控制机构和人口特征,这在队列模型研究中被认为是一个重要的需求。研究发现,支持性环境和同伴支持形式的社会资本对职业发展偏好的形成至关重要。队列项目对那些对学术科学以外的职业感兴趣、职业自我效能感低的学员尤其有吸引力。报告高水平个人支持的学员不太可能追求其他职业发展资源,而报告低水平个人支持的学生更有可能选择参加以职业发展为重点的BEST队列社区。报告PI、部门和同伴支持水平较低的受训者不太可能参加正式的职业发展活动或学术机构提供的资源。对从业人员的建议:这些发现可以让大学和职业发展管理人员了解培训生成长的社会背景,以及这对他们如何偏好和重视不同形式和强度的职业支持有何影响。我们的建议指出,开发(如果可能的话)不同的模式来提供职业发展资源的重要性,这样学员就可以利用最适合他们的模式。我们进一步建议项目考虑不同类型的职业发展项目的营销策略,以便学员了解他们的选择,并参与对他们最有意义的资源。强调基于队列的项目的好处将有助于吸引那些渴望并需要这种支持的学员。项目目标的明确性不仅有助于设定和管理学员的期望,让他们知道可能的结果,还有助于告知项目应该使用哪些资源和衡量标准,以帮助学员在自己的职业发展中取得进步。研究人员的建议:我们建议经验区分不同类型的支持学员可能会收到,因为我们的结果强调支持的来源问题。我们还建议在不同学科中重复这项研究,以评估这些发现普遍适用的程度。对社会的影响:这项研究对就业市场和毕业生高等教育的影响尤为重要。随着美国毕业生职业发展培训的增长
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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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