Improving Doctoral Educator Development: A Scaffolding Approach

Author:

Pittaway Luke A.1,Tantawy Maha M.2ORCID,Corbett Andrew C.3,Brush Candida4

Affiliation:

1. Ohio University, Athens, Canada

2. University of Windsor, ON, Canada

3. Babson College & Nord University, Arthur M. Blank Center, Wellesley, MA, USA

4. Babson College, Nord University and Dublin City University, Arthur M. Blank Center, Wellesley, MA, USA

Abstract

In response to a need for improved training of business school teaching, this research explores US doctoral programs in management and finds a need to purposefully embed scaffolding—the process of gradually enabling the doctoral student to take on more challenging aspects of teaching—into doctoral program design. We also recommend a more influential role to be played by professional organizations to address doctoral educator development. As we followed a grounded theory approach, our methodology started with an analysis of program marketing documents and materials followed by behavioral event interviews (BEIs) and perceptual interviews (PIs) with doctoral students in management. Following coding, we reviewed the literature on doctoral education to explore how our emergent data mapped against prior research. By also taking into consideration the lived experience of students, the study data provides evidence that doctoral programs are not properly designed to support educator development. We discuss our findings related to what programs do to support students and what students do to support themselves. Theorizing from our data, we present our model that illustrates how programs could embed scaffolding to support programs’ commitment to develop future educators.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

General Business, Management and Accounting,Education

Reference69 articles.

1. AACSB. (2002). Management education at risk. Report of the Management Education Task Force to the AACSB – International Board of Directors. https://www.aacsb.edu/-/media/publications/research-reports/management-education-at-risk.pdf?la=en

2. 2015 Presidential Address: Our Teaching Mission

3. A Pluralist Conceptualization of Scholarly Impact in Management Education: Students as Stakeholders

4. Teacher training for PhD students and new faculty in economics

5. The Role of Teaching and Teacher Training in the Hiring and Promotion of Ph.D. Economists

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