Authoring a PhD



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Authoring a PhD How to plan, draft, write and finish a doctoral thesis or dissertation Patrick ... ( PDFDrive )
BOLALAR UCHUN INGLIZ TILI @ASILBEK MUSTAFOQULOV, Ingliz tili grammatikasi
Patrick Dunleavy
January London School of Economics and Political Science
London p.dunleavy@lse.ac.uk
P REF AC EX III div

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Becoming an Author
In writing a problem down or airing it in conversation we let its essential aspects emerge.
And by knowing its character, we remove, if not the problem itself, then its secondary, aggravating characteristics confusion, displacement, surprise.
Alain de Botton
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T
he authoring process involves all the component parts of producing a finished piece of text, that is envisaging what to write, planning it in outline, drafting passages, writing the whole thing, revising and rewriting it, and finishing it in an appropriate form, together with publishing all or parts of your text. At every stage a complex mix of intellectual and logistical issues can crop up. As de Botton suggests of problems in general, often there are genuine (permanent) dilemmas surrounded by more resolvable delaying or distracting factors. Neither the fundamental problems nor their penumbra of aggravations maybe straightforward to resolve, but we can often make progress on the latter by making the issues involved more explicit. My aim here is to shed light on common authoring problems and to point out solutions which others have found helpful and that may also work for you.
I begin by discussing the importance of authoring as a generic set of skills at the doctoral level. A thesis or along dissertation I use these words interchangeably from hereon) forms a critical element in all the main models of PhD education. Some key authoring principles have important application across many
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humanities and social science disciplines. The second section considers the varying authoring tasks involved in the ‘classical’
model of PhD and newer taught PhD models. The third section looks at a foundation skill for becoming a good author,
which is to actively manage your readers expectations.
Authoring is more than just writing
To write is to raise a claim to be read, but by whom?
C. Wright Mills
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To do authoring at doctoral level is to become a qualified (and hopefully published) academic writer. It involves acquiring a complete set of craft skills, a body of practical knowledge that has traditionally been passed on by personal contacts within university departments from supervisors to students. A basic theme of this book is that authoring skills area crucial element to completing a successful doctorate. They are fundamental in achieving a coherent, joined-up argument for your thesis.
Proficiency in authoring can also help you meet the requirements of originality and making a substantive contribution to the development of a discipline, which are still key criteria for awarding a doctorate in good universities. And acquiring authoring capabilities is very important in finishing a doctorate on time and avoiding the long delays for which PhD students were once notorious.
Yet PhD students are only rarely taught authoring skills in an explicit way in universities. The knowledge involved has not often been codified or written down. Great effort is normally put into communicating to students the substantive knowledge of each discipline, with an intense socialization and training in its research methods. By comparison the teaching or training of students in authoring has been given little attention. Partly this reflects a widespread conviction amongst academic staff that at the PhD level becoming an effective writer is completely bound up with becoming a good researcher, and with mastering the subject matter of one individual academic discipline. Authoring a doctorate has often been seen as too diffuse an activity to be
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legitimately or usefully studied in universities. Many, perhaps most, working academics might doubt that much useful can be said about the generic skills involved in authoring – outside the context of each particular discipline. Hence in offering advice about authoring to their students most university teachers and supervisors have had few credible resources to hand. Many advisers must draw largely on their own experience, of supervising earlier students, or perhaps of being a PhD student themselves up to three decades ago. This neglect of authoring skills is not universal. The editors of academic journals and most publishers of university-level books can and do draw a distinction between people’s prowess in a discipline and their proficiency as writers. They recognize that good researchers can be bad writers, and that uninspiring researchers can still be good writers, interpreters and communicators. But the thrust of much doctoral education nonetheless remains that if you get the research right then the writing aspect will somehow just fall naturally into place.
This conventional approach assumes that beginning PhD students will be sustained by discipline-specific study skills inculcated in their earlier education, at first degree or masters level. As their research goes on they will presumably learn how to produce good (or at least acceptable) writing in the style of their discipline via a process of trial and error, learning by doing over successive drafts – first of papers, then of chapters, and ultimately of a complete thesis. Doctoral students are mentored intensively and hence should get detailed criticisms and individual advice from their supervisors and perhaps other colleagues. This advice is always text-specific and discipline-specific, focusing on this or that substantive argument or piece of research, on whether a particular point has been proved sufficiently, or whether a given way of expressing an argument is legitimate or appropriate in its context, and soon. From many repeated instances of these comments and interactions the hope is that students will progressively buildup their own sense of what can and cannot be said,
how it maybe said, and how other professionals in their subject will interpret and react to their text.
In undertaking research and in developing disciplinary knowledge the craft approach to PhD education still works well,
even though it has been extensively supplemented in modern
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times by much more formalized, extensive and lengthier processes of advanced instruction. And on authoring issues,
many students will perhaps be lucky and have sympathetic staff as their supervisors, people who are themselves skilled and experienced authors and who are also prepared to devote a lot of time and effort to inculcating similar authoring skills via individual working with students. In these circumstances the byproduct approach can still deliver outstanding results.
But normally the byproduct model of how students learn and develop is far more problematic in relation to authoring skills. In modern universities the pressures of teaching, research,
publishing and administration on qualified staff frequently cause this model to breakdown in one or several respects.
Doctoral instruction via individual supervision is costly and time-consuming. One of the reasons fora more formal and collective trend in doctoral education has been to reduce the amount of individual teaching needed, with peer group seminars used more to help students to develop their ideas and communication skills. Even in the most traditional view of PhD
education, which still stresses one-to-one induction of each student by a single supervisor, the transmission of authoring skills is vulnerable. Some supervisors maybe indifferent writers, or not very interested in or proficient in developing other people’s authoring capabilities. Their students can find themselves without any fallback source of guidance. Above all, the byproduct way of doing things can be very time-consuming and erratic,
hence worrying and psychologically taxing for students.
Informal or trial and error methods may unnecessarily stretch out the period people take to complete a doctorate. And it may make the process of becoming a competent and talented author in your own right more problematic than it need be.
Here is where this book aims to be useful, in helping PhD students and their advisers to think more systematically about authoring skills. On the basis of supervising my own students over the years, and of teaching a large and intensive course on
PhD drafting and writing at my university for more than a decade, I take what might be labelled an extreme view by more conventional colleagues. I believe that inmost of the social sciences and all of the humanities disciplines, a set of general authoring skills determine around 40 to 50 percent of anyone’s success in completing a doctorate. Of course, your
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ability to complete doctoral-level work will be primarily conditioned by your own research ideas and native originality, and your hard work, application and skill in acquiring specific knowledge of your discipline and competence in its methods.
But unless you simultaneously grow and enhance your authoring abilities, there are strong risks that your ideas may not develop sufficiently far or fast enough to sustain you through to finishing your thesis at the right level and in a reasonable time. Doing good research and becoming an effective author are not separate processes, but closely related aspects of intellectual development that need to work in parallel. I also believe that authoring skills are relatively generic ones, applicable in a broadly similar way across a range of disciplines at doctoral level. Hence this book draws on a wide range of previous writings and insights by earlier generations of university scholars.
Different models of PhD and the tasks of authoring
In contemporary universities there area number of different models of what a doctorate consists of. The way in which you
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