Issue
28(1)
The
Dissertation Journey: A practical and comprehensive guide to planning,
writing, and defending your dissertation.
(2004).
Carol M. Roberts. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin Press. 248 pp., $32.95
(paperback). ISBN 978-0-7619-3887-3.
Review by: Brenda
L. Banks
School of Music
University of Washington
Only
40-50% of doctoral students ever finish their dissertations, becoming
overwhelmed by a momentous task that is not unlike summiting a
mountain. How encouraging, then, to make the climb with this competent
guide. Building this manual around a mountain climbing metaphor,
Professor Roberts, who has some mountaineering training and, more
importantly, years of experience guiding doctoral students at
the University of La Verne’s program in Organizational Leadership,
writes as she directs students to write -- simply, concisely,
and in a natural tone free of jargon.
This
is a useful book both for advisors of doctoral students and for
students themselves. It should help advisors encourage uncertain
students new to dissertation writing, with its detailed advice,
liberal doses of motivational quotes, and an insider’s view of
what faculty expect from the dissertation student. Many tips are
engagingly practical, such as “buy a surge protector” and “do
not borrow software.” A list of “common errors” is also helpful,
allowing students to learn from the mistakes of other students.
The book is comprehensive, moving from how to choose a topic and
a faculty advisor, through preparing the proposal meeting, selecting
a methodology, and constructing the document’s basic components.
The high point of Roberts’ manual is its ultimately empowering
demystification of the oral defense. But she does not stop there;
instead, she goes on to discuss how to overcome the emotional
letdown students can experience after successfully defending and
submitting a dissertation, a topic that other authors might easily
overlook.
Students
who have successfully completed dissertations often point to their
academic advisor as the one person who consistently provided encouragement.
This is unlike faculty committee members whose roles must be to
provide tough critical assessment of the student’s work. Doctoral
student advisors will certainly benefit from the book’s strategies
to better encourage students through this long and arduous process,
even if the advisors will not be as actively involved as the faculty
who will evaluate the dissertation. (Moreover, advisors of doctoral
students should consider reading some of their students’ completed
dissertations and observing a dissertation defense, if they have
not done so. These steps will help advisors better prepare their
students for what is ahead.)
The
Dissertation Journey suffers occasionally
from an overly basic approach that might put off doctoral students
who should know more about graduate-level writing than Roberts
sometimes assumes. Additionally, the mountain climbing metaphor
may be used a little too often. Moreover, although Roberts distinguishes
between the quantitative and the qualitative dissertation, her
background in organizational management necessarily favors the
former. Thus, she may try to cover too much ground here. Those
seeking a practical guide for writing qualitative dissertations
may want to look at Piantanida and Garman's book entitled The
Qualitative Dissertation . But for advisors of students writing
quantitative dissertations, this book provides a wealth of useful
information and motivational strategies to see the task through
to completion.
Reference
Piantanida,
M. & Garman, N. B. (1999). The Qualitative
Dissertation: A Guide for Students and Faculty. Thousand
Oaks , CA :
Corwin Press.