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The purpose of the PhD : theorising the skills acquired by students

journal contribution
posted on 2010-01-01, 00:00 authored by S Mowbray, Christine HalseChristine Halse
In the past decade there has been a marked push for the development of employability skills to be part of the PhD process. This push is generally by stakeholders from above and outside the PhD process, i.e. government and industry, who view skills as a summative product of the PhD. In contrast, our study interviewed stakeholders inside the PhD process – twenty final‐year, full‐time Australian PhD students – to provide a bottom‐up perspective into the skills question. Using grounded theory procedures we theorise the skills students develop during the PhD as a formative developmental process of acquiring intellectual virtues. Drawing on Aristotelian theory, we propose that theorising the PhD as a process of acquiring intellectual virtues offers a more robust and conceptually richer framework for understanding students’ development during the PhD than the instrumental focus on skills evident in contemporary debates.

History

Journal

Higher education research and development

Volume

29

Pagination

653-664

Location

Abingdon, England

ISSN

0729-4360

eISSN

1469-8366

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2010, Taylor & Francis

Issue

6

Publisher

Routledge

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