From Paula: I do not understand why on this level
(Ph.D.) – you do not get any feedback about the content of your paper. I am
very passionate about my dissertation topic, but no faculty member/committee
member ever commented on the subject. For me this was/is weird. I do not
advocate for more feedback, but it would help to know this in advance and to
understand the reasons for it.
Interesting issue, Paula, I had to stop and
think about it for a while. I think there are a number of factors involved.
First, unless you just happen to have a chair or committee member very knowledgeable
about the topic (I have only a couple that I can think of), the faculty may not
know a great deal about the subject. This means that their comments will tend
to be related to the logic of the arguments you make and if you appear to have
covered the necessary literature.
A second factor is that there is an underlying
assumption that you are an expert in the area you are addressing. As a
committee member, even if I know something about the topic, in all likelihood I
have not gone into a great deal of detail in the literature of your specific
subtopic. As someone reading the paper, I will look for the student's
understanding of the areas that I do know. I will also look at the type of
references used – are they primarily books or textbooks? This shows the student
has not dug deep enough into the literature.
A third comment, I know for me (and probably
most faculty) I tend to be a generalist in my knowledge, I seem to know a
little about many topics and a great deal about some narrow ones. After
teaching many different psychology courses over the last 25 years (icky to
realize that!), I have learned quite a bit about most areas of psychology. This
means I can generally judge if the content seems adequate or if the student has
misunderstood something important. Also, I find most faculty will ask questions
of the student in the paper rather than make comments on what is written- the
idea is to make you think it through not provide the answers.
A final observation, in general I think what I
look for in content is a logical argument. If you think back to the posts,
where I discussed writing from broad subjects to narrowing it to the subtopics,
this makes sense. An example, if John sends me a draft of his proposal,
examining the elderly's opinion of their medical care, there are certain
content areas I expect to be addressed. He should discuss aging in general,
aging and medical care, patient satisfaction, etc. I want to be educated on the
topic/ subtopics, if I don’t feel like I really understand the rationale, there
is something missing in content.
Do you have an issue or a question that you
would like me to discuss in a future post? Send me an email with your ideas.
leann.stadtlander@waldenu.edu
Next time we will look at being accountable
for your actions. Do
you have an issue or a question that you would like me to discuss in a future
post? Send me an email with your ideas. leann.stadtlander@waldenu.edu
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