Abstract

With a core identity as working professionals, education doctoral students struggle with seeing themselves as researchers. Because research is essential in a doctoral program, the sooner doctoral students include researcher as an identity, the smoother and more successful their journey will be. To support doctoral student researcher identity development, we focused on scaffolding and embedding academic writing experiences in the first year seminar in a U.S. doctoral program. The purpose of this study was to describe and explain doctoral students’ development of a researcher identity as measured by the Draw-a-Researcher Test (DART). In the fall and spring, we collected drawings and narrative reflections about their drawings of researchers from nine students. We created a five-dimension DART scoring guide. In the fall, the drawings revealed students’ uncertainty about the agency and the research process dimensions; in the spring, however, the drawings showed students’ clearer understanding of these two dimensions. In the narrative reflections, students noted the influence of writing expectations and experiences on their role identity as researchers. Implications, as measured by the DART, are that an embedded writing support model seems to assure the development of doctoral students’ core identity as researchers during the first year of the program.

Highlights

  • As the sugar maple trees shook off their golden leaves in the fall, our new cohort of education doctoral students stepped into their first research seminar

  • Those who study doctoral education have asserted that the doctorate is as much about developing an identity as a researcher as it is about being a knowledgeable consumer of research (Colbeck, 2008; Green, 2005)

  • Given our interest in fostering researcher identity, we focused on understanding the development of doctoral students’ role identities as researchers

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Summary

Introduction

As the sugar maple trees shook off their golden leaves in the fall, our new cohort of education doctoral students stepped into their first research seminar. As seminar leaders over the first two years of the program, our job was to guide this diverse group of doctoral students along the path to have the tools, skills, and dispositions to design and conduct a research project. Those who study doctoral education have asserted that the doctorate is as much about developing an identity as a researcher as it is about being a knowledgeable consumer of research (Colbeck, 2008; Green, 2005). Researcher identity is a central developmental challenge for students

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