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Comparative scholarship and test records of masters' and bachelors' degree students at Kansas State CollegeWells, James Ralph. January 1941 (has links)
LD2668 .T4 1941 W41 / Master of Science
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Zooming in : the impact of primary relationships on doctoral student persistenceRobole, Debra Dee, 1954- 13 July 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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Writing-centred supervision for postgraduate studentsChamberlain, Cheryl January 2016 (has links)
Thesis submitted
In fulfillment of the requirements for a PhD
Faculty of Humanities
University of the Witwatersrand
April 2016 / Over the last decade there has been a considerable increase in research which centres on postgraduate supervision and research supervision has recently changed significantly (Grant, 2010; Walker, 2010; McCallin and Nayar, 2012). For some time postgraduate pedagogy has taken a lesser role in supervision practice compared with the role of supervisor as researcher. More recently supervision pedagogy has taken a more central role in the supervision debates and there is recognition of research teaching as a necessary and sophisticated skill (Grant, 2010; Walker, 2010; McAlpine and Amundsen, 2011). This shift in doctoral training away from viewing the thesis as a product to a pedagogy of training has resulted in a growing field of interest in postgraduate research writing. The emphasis on the research supervision role is beginning to acknowledge the work on postgraduate academic writing (Caffarella and Barnett, 2000; Kumar and Stracke, 2007; Aitchison and Lee, 2010; Catterall et al., 2011; McCallin and Nayar, 2012; Lee and Murray, 2015). However, for many supervisors writing is still seen as ‘marginal or ancillary’ to the real work of research and consequently there is very little research that ‘opens out the complexity of PhD writing practice’ (Kamler and Thomson, 2001, 6). This research, located in two disciplines in a Science faculty in a research-intensive university in South Africa, provides a local perspective on supervision pedagogy and research writing in a Science Faculty.
In this thesis, research writing is seen as contextualized social practice in that supervision and writing practices have implications for the development of individual research writers. Within the institution there is little discussion between supervisors or between supervisors and their postgraduate students around research writing. There needs to be sensitivity to the disparate needs of individual students in the context of their research writing. Historically in the context of this thesis, this related to opening up academic literacy practices to historically disadvantaged undergraduate students, but more recently has widened to include all students, including postgraduate students. It has become increasingly important to find out what the writing challenges and practices are for postgraduate students and their supervisors, not only by focusing on their research texts but also by critically engaging with written feedback given to these students as they struggle to engage with the academic discourse of the institution.
This research employs a qualitative approach to investigate the flow of events and processes related to the writing aspect of supervision and the perceptions and reported experiences of both postgraduate students and their supervisors. The thesis considers how participants understand these using a case study approach, consisting of eleven pairs of supervisors their Masters and doctoral students. A variety of data sources are employed including interviews with the participants, and drafts of student writing with written feedback from supervisors.
Some aspects of supervision and postgraduate research writing remain hidden from view as these practices are intensely personal, revolving around the identities of those taking part and power relations which centre on both the relationship between co-supervisors and the supervisor-student relationship. This thesis puts forward a new model of co-supervision i.e. a writing-centred co-supervision model with a content supervisor and a writing supervisor both located within the discipline. This co-supervision model allows the writing co-supervisor to provide a ‘safe space’ in the writing process for the student. Significantly issues of power between the co-supervisors remain inherent in this model of co-supervision and thus research writing remains to a large extent on the margins of academic work.
A further finding relates to the research writing issues identified by supervisors and/or postgraduate students mainly linked to positioning viz. structure; coherence; argument and flow; voice; and audience. There is little pre-thinking about the process of assisting postgraduate students to write. Despite the identification of some writing issues (either by supervisors and /or students), these are not always linked to strategies to enable students to overcome their writing difficulties. The analysis shows that the majority of these relate to the process of research writing and positioning issues (argument, voice, and audience). Furthermore these strategies are not always made explicit when supervisors work with students and surprisingly there is little match between those suggested by supervisors and those utilised by their students.
Central to this research is the nature of written feedback given to postgraduate students. Supervisors’ knowledge of their written feedback practices is critical. The diverse feedback practices of the supervisors are uncovered using a new analytic feedback framework illustrating a continuum of feedback practices varying from big
picture feedback; superficial surface-level feedback; and a combination of the two – mixed feedback. An analysis of the findings show that the majority of the supervisors use mixed feedback as their modus operandi. It is suggested that a shared meta-language regarding feedback would allow supervisors to open a space for an improved feedback dialogue both with their colleagues and with their postgraduate research students.
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A prototype data base for computer science graduate admissionsRebong, Alfonso C. Jr January 2010 (has links)
Typescript (photocopy). / Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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An economic analysis of the demand for graduate educationKhan, Ahmad Saeed 22 July 1977 (has links)
This study is an economic analysis of enrollment demand for
graduate education at Oregon State University as well as in the United
States. For the analysis of Oregon State University data on new
graduate enrollment, data were obtained for 27 academic departments
with 10 observations per department. The most important objective of
this study was to determine the reasons for variation in demand for
graduate education at Oregon State University and in the United States.
Monetary gains associated with graduate education and the quality of
the graduate program offered by the institution were hypothesized to
have a significant, positive effect on graduate enrollment demand. The
size of the tuition was hypothesized to be inversely related to the
number of new enrollments demanded. The level of admission requirements
was hypothesized to have a significant, negative effect on
graduate enrollment demand. It was also hypothesized that the demand
for graduate enrollment varies significantly among disciplines.
Along with a "size of tuition" variable, shown by other investigators
to be related to college enrollment, the institutional model
incorporated the monetary gains associated with graduate education,
minimum grade point average for admission and binary variables
representing the academic department variables hypothesized here also
to be associated with graduate enrollment demand.
From the estimated coefficients of the institutional model, it
was concluded that the demand for new graduate enrollment varies
significantly among most of the disciplines. Also, it was concluded
that, for Oregon State University, a proportional increase in the
graduate tuition level will be associated with a less than proportional
decrease in the number of enrollments demanded. The positive sign and
the statistical significance of the estimated coefficient associated
with the monetary gains variable support the human capital view of the
demand for graduate education.
For the national model only 12 observations on first year graduate
enrollment were available. The unemployment rate for master's and
doctoral degree holders and family income were hypothesized to have
negative and positive effects, respectively, on enrollment demand for
graduate education. For the ordinary least square estimation, the
Durbin-Watson test was inconclusive. A generalized least square
procedure was used to correct for the presence of a first order auto-regressive
error term structure. The results supported the hypothesis
of an inverse relationship between the unemployment rate and graduate
enrollment demand. Results with respect to the role of income,
however, were mixed.
An important implication of the institutional estimation is that,
for an institution faced with graduate enrollment ceilings, any attempt
by the administration to increase the grade point average for admission
will place additional pressure on that institution to live within the
enrollment ceilings. On the other hand, data limitations precluded
examining the possibility that, for some disciplines and for some
institutions, the demand-rationing aspect of the minimum grade point
average requirement will overwhelm the "quality of the program"
component. For such cases an increase in the grade point average
requirement may, in fact, reduce enrollment demand.
An important implication of the national estimation is that one
should be very cautious in recommending some kind of income enhancing
program as a vehicle for increasing the demand for graduate enrollment.
However, because it was not possible to measure the effect of direct
financial assistance on enrollment demand, one cannot infer that
increasing the availability of financial assistance for graduate study
would not increase the enrollment demand. / Graduation date: 1978
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The relationship between doctoral selection criteria in counseling and guidance and post graduate cognitive flexibilityHeffron, Jean Louise January 1972 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to determine the correlation (r) between the criterion variable of cognitive flexibility and each of the selection criteria variables used by the Ball State University Graduate Studies Committee in screening applicants into a doctoral program in Counseling and Guidance. The differential effect of these selection criteria variables on various multiple correlations (R) was also examined.
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Teachers as Learners: Impacts of Graduate Teachers Education Programs’ Features on In-Service Teachers’ PracticesNag, Anindita January 2017 (has links)
Significant research efforts have addressed the need for pursuing graduate teacher education to improve in-service teachers’ teaching practices. On contrary, empirical knowledge about the impacts of structural and process features of graduate teacher education on in-service teachers’ teaching practices is underdeveloped. This proposed study was designed to contribute to an empirically driven knowledge about the degree to which graduate teacher education programs support in-service teachers’ classroom needs and guide them diligently to deal with professional challenges. Mixed methodology approach including survey questionnaire (quantitative) and interview (qualitative) was used, and 34 in-service from 15 different teacher education programs of five different Upper Midwest states responded to the survey questionnaire. However, only two teachers participated in the interview process. Quantitative data from survey questionnaire revealed that most teacher participants perceived that graduate teacher education program had positive impact on their teaching practices.
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An exploratory study of the use of a psychometric battery as a method of selection of graduate students of social workUnknown Date (has links)
"Being a member of an embryonic graduate school of social work, the author became well acquainted with the difficulties of selection of students of Florida State University. As a result of the relatively undefined method of selection, the author became aware of the factors which caused students to withdraw from school. The faculty agreed with the author that there is much need for work in the relatively unexplored area of methods of selection"--Introduction. / Typescript. / "May, 1950." / "Submitted to the Graduate Council of Florida State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a Master of Science under Plan II." / Advisor: Margaret B. Bailey, Professor Directing Paper. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves 52-56).
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Higher education as a field of study at historically black colleges and universitiesBarnett, Nicole C. January 2007 (has links)
Higher education as a field of study has an extensive history in the United States of America. However, regrettably, this history has segments working in obscurity. One such segment was the work of graduate programs in the field of higher education at Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs). The purpose of this study was to trace the program development of graduate certificate, concentration, and degree programs in the field of higher education at HBCUs. This study was driven by one research question. What is the history of higher education as a field of study at Historically Black Colleges and Universities?This investigation unearthed eight universities confirmed to have held, or currently hold, the nine graduate programs in the field of higher education at HBCUs. The eight universities listed chronologically by inception of their graduate programs in the field of higher education were Tuskegee University (1965), Texas Southern University (1974), Alabama Agricultural and Mechanical University (1980), Hampton University (1980s), Grambling State University (1986), Tennessee State University (1998), Morgan State University (1998/1999 & 2001), and Jackson State University (2004).This study used a blended research design. A historical organizational case study (Bogdan & Biklen, 2003) and a multi-case study (Bogdan & Biklen, 2003) were blended into what proceeded as a historical organizational multi-case study. Additionally, grounded theory methodology was used to detail what drove the development of those graduate programs in the field of higher education at HBCUs.Findings of the study revealed that graduate program development in the field of higher education at HBCUs generally began with internal and/or external overtures with the purpose of developing a current body of practitioners with specialized knowledge in the areas of student personnel, as managers and higher education leaders. Key individuals were typically recruited to write or initiate the programs with the major market being the immediate geographic area; but as programs developed, their markets expanded. Some of the consequences of delivering these established programs were being both visible and vulnerable, although the programs had an opportunity to serve as resources to their institutions and other communities. / Department of Educational Studies
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The experience of African-American faculty in adult education graduate programsSmith, Sherwood E. January 1996 (has links)
The current data (Otuya, 1994) show that African-Americans represent less than two percent of the male full professors and less than seven percent of the female full professors. "Demographicchanges provide compelling reasons for increasing concern about the continuing under-representation of ethnic and racial minorities in adult and continuing education programs"(Ross-Gordon, 1990; p. 13).The purpose of my research was to investigate the frustrations and rewards of African-American faculty (AAF) in Adult Education programs of graduate study. Adult educators were defined as fulltime graduate faculty teaching in adult education programs. Individual semi-structured telephone interviews were used to gather the evidence from the total population of eight individuals. Resumes served as further sources of evidence. Domain analysis was used to organize the evidence. The information serves to aid in the retention and tenuring of more African-Americans and informing non-African-American faculty. The evidence collected showed the experience of AAF to have important themes on frustrations and rewards:1.Lack of senior faculty who share their research interests or as specific role models within the field and institution,2.Committee and student involvement expectations that were perceived as different for AAF then their White peers3.Daily challenges to their knowledge by students and peers were presented in the conversation as events during which "people tried to dismiss or diminish them." Success in meeting these challenges was often a validating experience for AAF4. The positive feelings of seeing their students succeed5. Being true to the African-American community, their family, their personal values and God was important to AAF.The research indicated that African-Americans as faculty experienced a wide range of frustrations and rewards. For these AAF the frustrations and rewards did not cause them to leave the profession. Many of the frustrations presented were items that could be address by the employing universities. Many of the rewards were perceived as not receiving sufficient recognition in the tenure or professional development processes and both internal and external frustrations and rewards were important to these AAF. / Department of Educational Leadership
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