Abstract

Synthesizing academic literature into new knowledge through writing is a core skill that doctoral students engaged in research must learn. However, developing efficacy in synthesis skills as an academic writer is a culturally and cognitively demanding process that occurs over many years, requires abstraction, and draws upon critical reading skills. Doctoral reading is an invisible part of training, despite large reading loads in doctoral coursework. Further, reading, writing, and researching skills are co-constructed at the doctoral level as previously described by Kwan (2008). The purpose of this essay is to describe how the primary author used her experience as an EdD student, science teacher, and writer to develop a method that addresses doctoral reading challenges. The novel method described here combines categorical reading strategies with social collaborative annotation (SCA). This method centers on active, categorial reading to deconstruct arguments in the primary literature by identifying claim, evidence, reasoning, implications, and context (CERIC), which can serve as a critical reading pedagogy in existing courses, reading clubs, and seminars. Combining CERIC with SCA tools—ranging from homemade variations of Google Suite to purposeful annotation software, such as Hypothes.is.—can support an efficient doctoral reading process. This essay illustrates several worked examples and explores how this process supports retrieval, engagement, collaboration, inclusion, and community, particularly in online learning environments. Significant implications of this work are to make hidden reading expectations explicit and transform professor-centered transmission models of learning to student-centered sociocultural models of learning. The essay proposes next steps for testing the approach's effectiveness in online doctoral learning.

Highlights

  • KEYWORDS critical reading skills, categorical reading method, doctoral education, reading for writing, sociocultural theory, social collaborative annotation, In graduate education, writing to create new knowledge is a primary learning objective most often assessed by a written dissertation

  • Critical reading skills are the basis for doctoral students’ critiques of primary research literature, which is fundamental to developing academic writing skills

  • The programmatic assumption is that doctoral students can locate and evaluate scholarly arguments, synthesize the research in the field, and apply that understanding to a dissertation topic (Boote & Beile, 2005)

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Summary

This journal is published by the University Library System of the

Critical reading of the primary research literature, whose context and methods beginning doctoral students may be unfamiliar with, is a challenging skill set to acquire. This essay demonstrates how an individual Ed.D. student's struggle with managing a heavy reading load, combined with research and writing, generated a creative solution in the form of a categorical reading method combined with social collaborative annotation (SCA) tools. This approach allows for the development of multiple core doctoral skills, beginning with critical reading of the primary research literature. The method can be integrated into existing instruction with primary literature to increase student engagement and build a learning community

THEORETICAL AND CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
Reading Research for Writing
LITERATURE REVIEW
Course Discussions
Reading and Writing
Social Annotation
IMPROVING READING RESEARCH FOR WRITING SKILLS
CERIC Element Claim
Annotation Prompt
CERIC Element Reasoning Implications
Interface low distraction moderate distraction high distraction
Export no cloud apps
Natural Learning Laboratories
Worked Examples in Graduate and Professional Education
General Research Examples
Advanced Research Example
IMPLICATIONS AND NEXT STEPS
Findings
CONCLUSION

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