Trends
influencing
researcher education and careers: What do we know, need to
know and do in
looking forward
Montserrat Castellóa,
Lynn McAlpineb and Kirsi Pyhältöc
aUniversity of Ramon Llull,
Spain
bUniversity
of Oxford, UK
cUniversity
of Oulu and University of Helsinki, Finland
Article received 3 August 2015 /
revised 19 August 2015 / accepted 20 August 2015 /
available online 23 October
2015
Abstract
EARLI SIG 24, Researcher Education and
Careers (SIG-REaC), was founded because increasing interest
has emerged within
the EARLI community into understanding different aspects of
doctoral and
post-PhD researcher educational and career development. This
special issue
brings together the outcome of our first scholarly
discussion at the SIG-REaC
inaugural meeting in September 2014 in Barcelona. The goal
of each of the five
co-authored papers is to make visible what has been
overlooked, and to attend
to methodological considerations in order to draw out future
lines of research.
As a collection, the
papers address multiple levels
and issues of researcher education: establishing the
multifaceted phenomenon
that is researcher education and careers and providing key
concepts that others
might take up, e.g., informal/invisible curriculum; the
personal as a sphere of
activity that may collide with the sphere of work; drivers
of education that
can provide cross-national points of comparison. Further, by
identifying gaps
in the literature, these papers together lay out an
ambitious research agenda
in a number of areas related to researcher education. In the
process, they
provide an extensive list of references well worth exploring
since they
represent the knowledge networks of over thirty researchers.
In this editorial
paper the Sig-REac is presented, and the characteristics of
the papers, their
limitations
and some future challenges of researcher education are
discussed.
Keywords: Researcher education,
career development; Post PhD
education; PhD education; cross-cultural research
Corresponding
author:
Montserrat Castelló, Facultat de psicologia, Ciències de
l’Educació I l’Esport.
Blanquerna. Universitat Ramon LLull, Císter 34. 08022.
Barcelona. Phone:
+34932533000, Fax: +34932533031,
Email: montserratcb@blanquerna.url.edu
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.14786/flr.v3i3.197
EARLI
SIG 24, Researcher Education and
Careers (from now on SIG-REaC), was founded because increasing
interest has
emerged within the EARLI community into understanding
different aspects of
doctoral and post-PhD researcher educational and career
development. This
special issue brings together the outcome of our first
scholarly discussion at
the SIG-REaC inaugural meeting in September 2014 in Barcelona.
Our goal was to
construct a richer, more comprehensive view of researcher
education and
careers: to begin to address the theoretical and
methodological challenges
underlying research and
theory development in this area in order to create a shared
agenda for the
future.
The
meeting (and the preparation for it) launched collaborative
writing that
challenged us collectively to make transparent different
theoretical
perspectives, methods and methodologies. Our goal was to
negotiate these
differences in order to articulate a commonly understood
research agenda. While
we shared an interest in
examining the experiences of early career researchers we come
from a
variety
of locations: geographic, disciplinary, career stage and
intellectual
tradition. When
researchers from different theoretical, methodological, and
national spaces
want to do ‘real work’, it takes time to really understand
each other and
negotiate new understandings. Therefore, the preparation for
the SIG-REaC
meeting included participants writing individual positions
papers in which they
addressed the following questions: What
are the emerging trends in the research environment essential
to better/more
fully understand early career researcher (ECR) experience?
What do we learn
about ECR experience of the emerging trends by looking across
the fields of
academic communication, sociology of work, pedagogy? What are
the gaps? What
has been overlooked? What different methods and methodologies
have been used
across the three fields? Which of these has been productive?
What has been
overlooked?
In
this way, we had the opportunity
before the meeting to read each other’s thoughts and begin to
get a sense of
the richness and diversity in the group as well as common
concerns, conceptions
or methodologies. The
preparation for the SIG-REaC
meeting also included launching pre-discussions via Moodle,
based on reading
each other’s papers.
Altogether 31 scholars from fourteen different countries
participated in the
SIG meeting, where we launched co-writing, and worked together
in small groups
intensively for two days. Post-meeting, this face-to-face work
shifted to
virtual exchanges and the
special issue represents the results
of our continued discussion over ten months.
The
Special Issue consists of five co-authored papers. The goal of
each is to make
visible what has been overlooked, and to attend to
methodological
considerations in order to draw out future lines of research.
Each of the
papers addresses a specific aspect of researcher education and
careers in order
to develop a future research agenda:
·
Drivers
and Interpretations of Doctoral Education Today
contributes to the literature on researcher education by
examining the ways in
which core global trends and drivers of higher education
emerge in different
guises at national levels. The paper compares recent doctoral
education changes
in the following countries – Canada, Colombia, Denmark,
Finland, UK, and the USA
– to provide insights on how global trends translate into
local policies. By
using the same global drivers as criteria across national
boundaries, it is
possible to see how educational policies are formed in
considerably different
ways. This raises questions about the universality of the PhD.
In the
discussion, a research agenda for comparative studies is
discussed.
·
The curriculum question in doctoral
education
begins by stating that although a global trend
in researcher education has
been developing more systematic doctoral education to enhance
the quality of
research and researchers, the value of a curricular
perspective has remained
largely unexplored both theoretically and empirically. It
is argued that adopting an explicit curriculum approach is
significant not only
because it might help to disclose the
tensions, but also
because it allows us to face and reinterpret current
challenges to doctoral
education. First the
concept of the curriculum in
doctoral education is discussed and tensions between the
formal/informal, open/hidden, and
standardised/pluralised dimensions of curriculum are
discussed. Then, processes –how the
curriculum is experienced- and
outcomes – assessment and employability- of doctoral education
are addressed.
Finally, a research agenda drawing on notions of curriculum
to help reconfigure doctoral education is proposed.
·
The
doctorate as an original contribution to knowledge:
Considering relationships
between originality, creativity, and innovation explores
the meaning of originality in doctoral studies and its
relationship with
creativity and innovation. The paper opens up
discussion about the taken-for-granted traditional
expectation of ‘originality’
as an outcome of doctoral research. It does so by
juxtaposing ‘originality’
with the notions of ‘innovation’, and ‘creativity.’ By
exploring the
similarities and differences among the concepts, the paper
provides insight
into both the possible meanings of ‘originality’ in research
as well as the
utility of the term in the context of 21st
century knowledge
societies. Some future research steps are suggested
to move towards
unpacking the relationship between doctoral training
conditions and outcomes,
in the sense of fulfilling the requirement of originality.
·
Mentoring:
a review of early career researcher studies describes the result
of a focused literature review of studies on early career
researcher as a base
for further inquiry into mentoring, given the frequent
reference to mentoring
as a source of support for early career researchers, e.g., EU
Concordat on
researchers. The
most striking finding of this
analysis was the un- and under- conceptualized nature of
empirical studies.
There is much research to do, first, to better inform our
conceptualization of
early career researcher mentoring and, second, to better
understand the value
of specific aspects of mentoring support.
·
Researcher
Identities in Transition: Signals to Identify and Manage
Spheres of Activity in
a Risk-career
argues that changes in ‘knowledge
societies’ mean researchers are now embarked upon what could
be defined as a
‘risk-career.’ This paper uses a framework of researcher
identity produced by
analysing spheres of activity and individuals’ ability to
identify and
interpret external signals (expectations, constraints and
opportunities) to
account for theoretical assumptions about researcher identity.
It is argued
that applying the framework to empirical examples of tensions
in identity
construction provides the basis for future research to unravel
the complex
interplay between signals and spheres of activity when dealing
with the
tensions and struggles of becoming a researcher.
As a collection, the
papers address multiple levels
and issues of researcher education: establishing the
multifaceted phenomenon
that is researcher education and careers and providing key
concepts that others
might take up, e.g., informal/invisible curriculum; the
personal as a sphere of
activity that may collide with the sphere of work; drivers of
education that
can provide cross-national points of comparison. Further, by
identifying gaps
in the literature, these papers together lay out an ambitious
research agenda
in a number of areas related to researcher education. In the
process, they
provide an extensive list of references well worth exploring
since they
represent the knowledge networks of over thirty researchers.
Still, there are
limitations represented in this
special issue. While
it has explored in depth a number
of issues, we are mindful there remains much to explore. For
instance, they mostly focus on
doctoral experience, as does much
of the research in this area. So we encourage ourselves and
other researchers
to pay greater attention to postdoctoral experience, both in
and out of
academia. For instance, the vertical transition from doctoral
student to
post-doctoral researcher still remains largely uncharted, as
do horizontal
transitions e.g. from academia to other types of careers.
We
know that internationally, more than
half of PhD graduates leave academia whether by choice or lack
of opportunity
(Barnacle & Dall’Alba, 2011). What appears to be emerging
internationally
is a range of alternate academic positions: contract teaching,
contract
post-PhD research, and increasingly teaching-only lecturer
positions, as well
as administrative positions related to research and teaching.
In the non-academic
context, emerging
types of employment include business, government, NGOs,
banking, industry, and
previously unknown positions, e.g., start-ups. Unfortunately
we know little of
the experience of individuals in any of the three fields,
e.g., the extent to
which they have the skills needed, their satisfaction with
their employment,
what range of genre they use. This is especially the case as
regards a
theoretical perspective since most of the available evidence
is non-theorized
survey data. Such studies
are needed to gain better understanding of the complexity of
researcher
careers.
As well, postdoctoral
supervision is also an underexplored issue that deserves more
research
interest. Post-PhD researchers consistently report they do not
receive
supervisory support to develop as researchers, further that
they are even
discouraged from seeking out professional development
opportunities themselves.
As long as such individuals are not conceived as becoming
researchers, the
supervisory attitudes they report are unlikely to change
Concluding
remarks
This special issue maps
some of the uncharted terrain
of inquiry into researcher education and careers. National
developments in
researcher education are affected by the global forces which,
however, take
different forms in national and local contexts. This became
particularly
apparent to us at our Barcelona meeting where we represented
fourteen different
national contexts. There is still an insufficient
understanding of how and in
which forms global trends (which we collectively believe we
understand) are
translated into the local practices of researcher education,
and their effect
on doctoral education and academic work (which we collectively
may not
understand, though believe we do). Accordingly, our overall
conclusion is the
need for well-designed international comparative studies so
that as researchers
we can gain a concrete understanding of the effects of global
developments for
researcher education and careers.
We hope that the papers
in this special issue evoke
curiosity, provoke discussions and stimulate both theoretical
and especially
empirical research on researcher education and careers. The
various approaches,
empirical evidence and challenges identified in the papers
highlight the
importance of and the need for further research into this
fascinating area. We
look forward to lively discussion, commentaries and research
papers addressing
the new terrains in this area of research and encourage you to
join us in EARLI
SIG 24, Researcher Education and Careers (SIG-REaC).
References
Barnacle,
R., & Dall’Alba, G.
(2011). Research degrees as professional education? Studies
in Higher
Education, 36(4), 459-470.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03075071003698607
Cantwell,
B. (2011). Academic
in-sourcing: International postdoctoral employment and new modes
of academic
production. Journal of Higher Education Policy and
Management, 33(2),
101-114. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1360080X.2011.550032
Evans,
L. (2011). The scholarship of
researcher development: Mapping the terrain and pushing back
boundaries. International
Journal for Researcher Development, 2(2), 75-98.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/17597511111212691
Laudel, G., & Glaser, J. (2008). From
apprentice to colleague: The
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