Supporting Education PhD and DEd Students to Become Confident Academic Writers: an Evaluation of Thesis Writers’ Circles
4. Education
05 social sciences
420
0503 education
DOI:
10.53761/1.4.1.6
Publication Date:
2021-09-20T05:33:40Z
AUTHORS (3)
ABSTRACT
This paper critically evaluates the pilot of a Thesis Writers’ Circles program
offered to Education PhD and DEd students at the University of Melbourne
in semester 2, 2005. The analysis focuses on the needs of those students
that were felt to be well-met by this model of support. Broadly, the paper
identifies two distinct but inter-related themes: firstly, the challenge of
developing writing skills to a level sufficient to meet the demands of
preparing a research thesis; secondly, the importance for research higher
degree students of building confidence as apprentice academic writers. In
relation to the latter theme, the paper identifies the benefits of community
participation and peer-collaboration in working towards the aim of
consolidating a thesis-writing identity. It is in this capacity, we argue, that
thesis writers’ circles have distinct advantages compared with other forms
of candidature support, making them a valuable supplement to both
conventional supervision practices and generic English language and
thesis writing programs. The paper affirms the importance not only of
equipping international and non-English speaking background (NESB)
students with writing tools and strategies, but also of creating opportunities
for all postgraduate research students to receive (and offer) non-judgmental
feedback on work-in-progress within a discipline-specific learning and
discourse community.
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