How shall we know them? Capturing the diversity of difference in Australian doctoral candidates and their experiences
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 09:18authored byMargot Pearson, Jim Cumming, Terry Evans, Peter Macauley, K Ryland
Although there is general agreement that doctoral students and their experiences are
diverse, in what respect this is true is in question. Most institutional practices in the
collection of data in this regard have been established to satisfy government reporting
requirements and concerns, such as funding, participation and equity, and efficiency.
Missing is more detailed and nuanced quantitative data and analysis, complementary
to those of qualitative studies, to illuminate the nature and extent of doctoral student
diversity and the effects on the quality of their candidacy. Drawing on select data and
findings from a national survey of Australian doctoral candidates conducted in 2005,
the article questions the utility of commonly used categories for quantitative data
collection and analysis, and their use as the basis of (sub)groupings to represent
doctoral diversity. In so doing, it presents a more complex picture of doctoral
candidature that depicts the idiosyncrasy of the individual experience, as well as
generic characteristics. Central to the argument is that doctoral candidates are
diversely different, bringing varying goals, expectations, career histories and
family and community responsibilities beyond the academy, that shape their
engagement with their candidacy.