“Faculty Support” Research Progress #2 ~ Data Collection Complete

I am happy to share that I have now completed the data collection for my Faculty Support: Doctoral Students, Threshold Concepts, and Technology Enhanced Learning research project. Thank you for all the people who have generously shared their time, contacts, networks, and interests with me along the way. I hope my findings will be useful, or at least interesting, for those who have supported me in this endeavor.

Now, where is my transcription foot pedal again? Decided I have to go back and do the transcription myself, as the last time I did it, there were too many corrections along the way I had to make.

“Faculty Support” Research Progress #1

There have been so many wonderful people who have offered me suggestions to strengthen my research project, Faculty Support: Doctoral Students, Threshold Concepts, and Technology Enhanced Learning, as well as people who have expressed interest in being interviewed for my work.

For my first status update, I have completed my first interview, and am in the process of scheduling the next two (I am working with 3 people right now to confirm dates for within the next week). I hope at least 2 of these 3 people will confirm.

Logistically, I plan to use MAXQDA to navigate my transcription notes, once I finish doing the transcriptions (which I am doing myself this time).  The new version of this software was just released in March, and after seeing the demo while at ICQI, I am eager to try it. If there can be a user-friendly qualitative data analysis (QDA) software with pleasing colors and a clean interface, then this is it. Will give an update once I really get going with it.

Wonder what learning this project will lead to (and not to mention next steps!).

Request for Doctoral Faculty Participants for a Study

I just received ethical approval for my study Faculty Support: Doctoral Students, Threshold Concepts, and Technology Enhanced Learning, and am now to the point of requesting faculty members who supervise / tutor / mentor doctoral students, and who have supported these students during periods of significant perspective / ontological / epistemological / worldview change as a result of their studies, to consider participating in my small research project. I have attached my approved Invitation to Participate / Consent Form for a Research Study for consideration and review.

Let me summarize elements of my research design, especially as my audience will want to know more about this given the subject matter and to assist in consideration:

Research Problem
While programs in doctoral higher education (HE) are increasingly moving online and are being supported via distance, blended, or technology-enhanced learning , faculty members need to support these learners while attending to the changing pedagogical landscape notable for its increasing reliance on technology with decreasing face-to-face class time. Mindful of the work of Meyer and Land (2008), it seems the more we can understand where threshold concepts exist, the more doctoral faculty can help their distance students through the doctoral research process while these learners develop as new researchers. By threshold concepts, I mean those (inter)disciplinary concepts that have the power to fundamentally change the perspective of the learner, and which can preclude advancing in the field unless they are understood. Examples of these in my own experience as a student in educational research (with influences of cultural, sociological, and communications theories) include concepts such as hegemony, Freirian pedagogy, Lyotard’s framework of postmodernism, and Richardson’s work on the power and role of writing as a method of inquiry; they have all shifted my perspective on my field and have in turn enabled my own advances in my understanding of and implications for my work.

Purpose
The purpose of this research is to better understand the experiences of faculty members who work with doctoral students via distance or technology-enhanced learning who have identified threshold concepts (or trouble spots, breakthrough areas, or defining moments of epistemological or ontological shift that may be pivotal in one’s identity development) for their students and who have found success with helping these learners through this troublesome knowledge.

Research Question
What can we learn about how faculty support their doctoral students, studying from a distance, through areas of disciplinary challenge or threshold concepts?

Methodology and Method
I am hoping to identify and interview 3 social science doctoral faculty members who work with students using TEL or Network Learning methods.  I will conduct and record one Skype or phone interview, of approximately an hour, and will then engage in grounded theory (cf. Kathy Charmaz) to develop a theory to explain this phenomenon.

These are my open-ended, semi-structured interview questions:

  1. Tell me about your experiences identifying (inter)disciplinary areas that your doctoral students commonly struggle with as they pursue their studies from a distance.
  2. How have you helped your doctoral students through these areas?
  3. As a result of these experiences, what did you learn about:
  • your students
  • your discipline
  • your role as a doctoral tutor / mentor

Please let me know if you or anybody you know may be interested in learning more about or participating in this study. I have a tight time line for this work, and need to have the interviews completed by June 26.

I appreciate the help, support, suggestions, and challenges I have already received on this work by such bright, giving, generous, and inquisitive colleagues around the world. Thank you.

Research Project . . .Waiting for Ethics

After all the wonderful feedback I received on my research paper idea, I revised the idea specs and have since submitted it for ethical review at Lancaster University. As soon as I receive approval to proceed (in the next day or so?), I will post the final specs, my consent form, and a request for participants. I can only hope I have the same interest from faculty with the interviews I will need to conduct.

I have no idea what I may find with this research, and while I am content with that notion, I also know that my experience and findings are leading me in some research direction. How exciting!

Doctoral Research (Module #4) Project Idea

So, here is my current thinking about my final empirical research project in my doctoral program at Lancaster (I work on a literature review in the Fall and then begin the draft proposal for my doctoral thesis). I have already gotten some internal feedback on this, and am now interested in getting some thoughts from my most educated and helpful colleagues (yes, you, dear reader!). Once again, I will have a very short timeline of 4 weeks for this, so will formalize this in the next day or two, and begin seeking potential people to interview beginning this Wednesday.

Research Problem
While programs in doctoral higher education (HE) increasingly moving online and are being supported via distance delivery, it seems important that faculty members support these learners and attend to the changing pedagogical landscape of increasing technology with decreasing face-to-face class time. Mindful of the work of Meyer and Land (2008), it seems the more we can understand where threshold concepts exist, the more doctoral faculty can help their distance students through the doctoral research process while these learners develop as new researchers.

Purpose
The purpose of this research is to better understand the experiences of faculty members who work with doctoral students via distance or technology-enhanced learning who have identified threshold concepts, or trouble spots / breakthrough areas, for their students and who have found success with helping these learners through this troublesome knowledge.

Research Question
What can we learn about how faculty support their doctoral students, studying from a distance, through areas of disciplinary challenge or threshold concepts?

Methodology and Method
I am hoping to identify and interview 3 social science doctoral faculty members who work with students using TEL or Network Learning methods. I will reach out to my TEL / NL / Qualitative Research networks to inquire for interest. l will conduct and record Skype or phone interviews, and will then engage in grounded theory (cf. Kathy Charmaz) to develop a theory to explain this phenomenon. I will not expect my interviewees to know the terminology around “threshold concepts,” so I will have to define them as being “areas of discipinary trouble, places where students have breakthroughs and then understand their work and research in a new way.”

These are the open-ended, semi-structured interview questions I am considering beginning the conversations with:

  1. Tell me about your experiences identifying disciplinary areas that your doctoral students often struggle with as they pursue their studies from a distance.
  2. How have you helped your doctoral students through these areas?
  3. What did you learn about your students, your discipline, or your role as a doctoral tutor / mentor as a result of these experiences?

Any thoughts at this point are very appreciated.