© university of reading 2006 25, 2014 professor pam denicolo examining the doctorate: product or...

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April 10, 2023 © University of Reading 2006 www.reading.ac.uk

Professor Pam Denicolo

Examining the Doctorate: Product or Person?

2HEA 2020 Vision British Library Nov 2008

Shifts of FocusDoctoral graduates:

How shall we know them?

Acknowledging D. Rowntree, and participants in UKCGE and Vitae workshops

Which is the figure and which the ground:

Postgraduate Research ……..Doctoral Education?

The thesis as product………the development of a researcher as process?

……………. Identifying the issues

3HEA 2020 Vision British Library Nov 2008

The Traditional Examination

Common practice in assessment/examination :

• Detailed review of the thesis

• Some form of Viva Voce

• General criteria related to demonstration of:

advanced knowledge; originality; critical, independent thinking; publishability.

Variations between institutions and countries on:

emphasis, detail, format and procedures.

Are equivalence, comparability, consistency being maintained through these means or do we need new forms anyway?

4HEA 2020 Vision British Library Nov 2008

A Context of Change and Diversity

• Broadening of the taught component (generic, transferable skills as well as research methods)

• Recognition that there are different kinds of knowledge (theoretical, procedural, action, tacit/expert,…)

• Diversity of students and modes of study• Acknowledgement of different purposes for study,

different career aspirations• Expanding range of doctoral qualifications• Increase in trans-disciplinary research

How can these developments be accommodated within doctoral assessment whilst maintaining standards?

5HEA 2020 Vision British Library Nov 2008

Frameworks for Quality and Standards

Proliferation of attempts to define the attributes of doctoral graduates to achieve common reference levels

from

Dublin Descriptors (2004) and Towards a European Qualifications Framework (2005)

to

QAA 2008 review of the Framework for higher education qualifications in England, Wales and Northern Ireland.

Some common agreement emerging, alongside further questions about appropriateness of examination/assessment forms.

6HEA 2020 Vision British Library Nov 2008

Attributes/ Learning outcomes

In addition to producing an original contribution to knowledge, there seems to be general agreement that doctoral graduates should demonstrate:

Knowledge: specialist and advanced; discipline and research related; theoretical and procedural.

Aptitudes: e.g. ability to analyse critically and work independently and creatively; mastery of skills such as communication and team working.

Attitudes: e.g. commitment to an ethical approach to research.

Are all of these best demonstrated and hence assessed through the thesis and viva, as products?

7HEA 2020 Vision British Library Nov 2008

The Doctorate as a Personal Development Process

Doing research and learning to be a researcher both take considerable time and benefit from supportive feedback.

Adult learning theories suggest that assessment should be formative as well as summative, incorporating continuous as well as final examination.

Most Institutions implement some progression rules.

Would it help to assess skills and attitudes separately from research outcomes, as personal development through process?

What form should such assessment take and how would the results contribute to the final decision?

8HEA 2020 Vision British Library Nov 2008

Implications of Assessment Review

Rather than add to the diversity of the situation and in order to maintain or increase equivalence, comparability, consistency, there needs to be a commitment to coordinate developments across the sector – a substantial enterprise.

Do examiners’ expectations need to be re-framed, with criteria made more explicit for candidates, supervisors and examiners?

9HEA 2020 Vision British Library Nov 2008

Summary of questions for debate

1. Are equivalence, comparability, consistency being maintained through traditional means or do we need new forms anyway?

2. How can developments in target population, modes of study, qualifications, skills, and topics be accommodated within doctoral assessment whilst maintaining standards?

3. Are all the required attributes best demonstrated and hence assessed through the thesis and viva, as final products?

4. Would it help to assess skills and attitudes separately from research outcomes, as personal development through process? What form should such assessment take and how would the results contribute to the final decision?

5. Do examiners’ expectations need to be re-framed, with criteria made more explicit for all?

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