Abstract

ABSTRACT This conceptual paper contributes to a broader perspective on doctoral experience via a synthesis of several crucial concepts during the doctoral journey. The first part discusses the core challenges customarily confronting doctoral scholars due to the distinct PhD genre leading to introducing the main conceptual base. Metacognition, being central to doctoral knowledge creation, is explored through the stages of competence development and against the competing notions often faced by PhD scholars: the Imposter Syndrome and the Dunning-Kruger Effect. Drawing upon these metacognitive concepts, the implications of crossing competence stages during lengthy, non-linear doctoral trajectories in a high-performance academic culture are further explored. While recognising associated challenges, this paper also highlights a range of available tools, resources, and skillsets useful for the transitional period, doctoral learning progression and eventual completion. This paper has, therefore, interwoven and unified key doctoral experience concepts with a view to proposing a conceptual framework for a doctoral self-management strategy. This holistic framework, a form of metacognitive scaffolding for navigating the PhD experience, is likened to a ‘compass’ for trekking both the research landscape and the doctoral development landscape. In the absence of a doctoral ‘map’, employing one’s personal metacognitive ‘compass’ can empower doctoral scholars to manage a potentially complex experience – by identifying essential praxes to scaffold the entire doctoral process through iterative cycles of reflection, calibration and recalibration of strategic reflection and personal evaluation of one’s progression.

Highlights

  • Every long journey arguably deserves a map, and this includes doctoral learning journeys

  • Given the unique trajectories fraught with ambiguities, complexities and delightful surprises surrounding the doctoral experience, this paper investigates a conceptual nexus of the doctoral threshold model, prevailing doctoral practices and challenges, and relevant metacognitive concepts

  • A doctoral education is an intellectually and psychologically demanding and complex journey that is filled with excitement

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Summary

Introduction

Every long journey arguably deserves a map, and this includes doctoral learning journeys. A consolidation of the threshold concepts in doctoral education, the stages of competence development and the competing notions of the Imposter Syndrome and the Dunning-Kruger Effect, offer holistic and metacognitive perspectives and subsequently, an insightful appreciation of the complex process characterising each doctoral scholar’s learning journey.

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