注意差距:从博士毕业生到早期职业教师的转变

Q2 Social Sciences
Katey McCormick, Libba Willcox
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引用次数: 3

摘要

目的/目的:研究生课程旨在为学生未来的职业角色做准备,然而博士毕业生通常在与他们社会化的机构不同的机构中获得教师职位。克服这种“准备间隙”会产生不确定感、紧张感,最终导致不和谐。这个合作的自我民族志研究探讨了这一差距,因为它是由两个早期职业教师在美国的背景下经历的。背景:学术界的格局正在迅速变化,这意味着研究生课程无法为每个研究生提供每个潜在的专业角色。因此,当博士毕业生从各自的研究生专业毕业时,不可避免地存在着准备差距。这种准备上的差距反映了研究生社会化文献中的差距,这些文献在描述早期职业教师如何社会化进入他们的第一个职位方面是有限的。研究方法:本文讨论了一项为期一年的自我民族志合作研究,该研究由美国大学教育与艺术领域的两位终身教职教师进行。该研究采用克兰西(2010)的永久身份建构理论作为理论框架,研究了从博士毕业生到早期职业教师的过渡过程中产生的感知失调。贡献:这篇关于两位早期职业生涯、终身教职员工从博士研究生到助理教授转变的自我民族志的合作文章,扩展了关于博士社会化、学术身份和定性研究模式潜力的文献。具体来说,它承认博士毕业生在第一年经历不和谐并经历身份建构。研究结果:我们的研究结果揭示了在我们合作的自我民族志数据中重复出现的三个类别,这可能是阐明跨越差距的不和谐的复杂性的一个窗口:支持、联系和控制。每个类别都包括不同程度的与自我、部门、机构和我们所属领域的不和谐。运用永久认同建构理论,通过三个阶段的学术认同建构来考察每个类别。对从业人员的建议:该研究对从业人员,特别是那些帮助博士生准备在教学密集型大学任职的人有影响。我们建议授予博士学位的机构扩大正式和非正式的社会化计划,以提高学生对他们可能遇到的环境和紧张局势的认识和准备。对研究人员的建议:像我们这样的额外细致的研究是有必要的,以进一步阐明社会化差距和早期职业教师学术身份建构过程之间复杂的相互作用。对社会的影响:意识到身份的解构和重建继续超越博士社会化,可以更好地为未来的教师在整个职业生涯中永久的身份工作做好准备;它有可能培养出适应能力更好的早期职业教师,这些教师可以提高学生的成绩,并进行影响社会的研究。未来研究:基于本研究的发现,未来的研究领域应进一步调查早期职业教师的经历,特别是他们从候选人到第一职业职位过渡期间的社交经历。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mind the Gap: Transitioning from Doctoral Graduates to Early Career Faculty
Aim/Purpose: Graduate programs aim to prepare students for future professional roles, yet doctoral graduates often earn faculty positions at institutions that differ from those in which they were socialized. Navigating this “preparation gap” can produce feelings of uncertainty, tension, and, ultimately, dissonance. This collaborative autoethnographic study explores the gap as it was experienced by two early career faculty in a U.S. context. Background: The landscape of academia is rapidly changing, meaning graduate programs cannot prepare each graduate student for every potential professional role offered to them. Therefore, as doctoral graduates emerge from their respective graduate programs, an inevitable gap in preparation exists. This gap in preparation mirrors a gap in the graduate socialization literature, which is limited in describing how early career faculty are socialized into their first positions. Methodology: The paper discusses a year-long collaborative autoethnographic study conducted by two tenure-track early career faculty in Education & Arts fields at universities in the U.S. The study employs Clancy’s (2010) theory of Perpetual Identity Constructing as a theoretical framework to examine the perceived dissonance produced during the transition from doctoral graduates to early career faculty. Contribution: This collaborative autoethnographic account of two early career, tenure-track faculty members’ transition from doctoral graduate to assistant professors expands the literature on doctoral socialization, academic identities, and the potential of qualitative modes of inquiry. Specifically, it recognizes that doctoral graduates experience dissonance and undergo identity construction during the first year. Findings: Our findings revealed three categories repeated in our collaborative autoethnographic data that potentially serve as a window to illuminate the complexity of the dissonance across the gap: support, connection, and control. Each category includes varying levels of dissonance with the self, department, institution, and fields of which we were part. Using Perpetual Identity Constructing theory, each category was examined through the three-stages of academic identity construction. Recommendations for Practitioners: The study has implications for practitioners, specifically those who help to prepare doctoral students for positions at teaching-intensive universities. We recommend doctoral granting institutions expand formal and informal socialization programming to enhance students’ awareness and preparation for the contexts and tensions they may encounter. Recommendation for Researchers: Additional fine-grained studies, like ours, are warranted to further illuminate the complex interaction between the gap in socialization and the academic identity construction process as early career faculty. Impact on Society: Awareness that deconstruction and reconstruction of identity continues beyond doctoral socialization could better prepare future faculty for the perpetual identity work across a career; it has the potential to produce better adjusted early career faculty who improve student outcomes and conduct research that impacts society. Future Research: Based on the findings of this study, future areas of research should further investigate the experiences of early career faculty, in particular their socialization experiences during the transition from candidacy to first career positions.
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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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