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Articles

Examining the doctoral thesis: a discussion

Pages 365-374 | Published online: 10 Oct 2008
 

Abstract

The examination of doctoral theses controls an important academic threshold, yet practices are often private, codes non‐specific, and individuals isolated. This article adds to recent investigation of the examination culture by reporting informal panel discussion amongst a total of 23 University of Auckland (New Zealand) faculty members as to their experiences of examining the written doctoral thesis and of being the oral examiner. Some of the examiners’ comments concur, and some differ, with the gap between subjective opinions as valuable as the points of concurrence in profiling covert criteria and closed‐door decision‐making practices. Doctoral examiners, higher education professionals, supervisors and doctoral candidates will find these perspectives useful towards considering their own role in this ritual.

Acknowledgements

I would like to express my gratitude to the Auckland Masonic Education Foundation for part‐funding the doctoral students’ forum from which the comments reported in this article were gathered. The generosity of academic colleagues with their time enabled this research: in particular I thank Gina Wisker for encouragement and suggestion; the anonymous readers and my reading group for their focusing advice; and Barbara Grant for her generously given insight.

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