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Date

2009

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Education can be a lonely business. Teachers and administrators


are often separated from other adult professionals in isolated


classrooms, offices, and administration buildings. Geographic


remoteness only exacerbates personal seclusion, preventing


collaboration concerning how to foster student learning and wellbeing.


Bringing a disparate group of potentially isolated educational leaders


together, in 2005 the Educational Administration Department (EAD) at


Central University in the United States created a local/distance (mixed)


PhD cohort. Pathways, a special unit embedded within EAD,


spearheaded the plan; infused the curriculum with collaborative


community literature; intended to enhance student administrative


expertise; and, if desired, prepared students for the college professorate.


I was a cohort member, and my co-author taught four research courses


scattered throughout the program. Classes are over now, and 13 out of


14 original members are defending prospecti and dissertations.


For the most part Pathways realized its expectations, and the


group became a professional learning community (PLC). This study


produced three thematic lenses through which to see the cohort's


evolution: job-related challenges, technology struggles, and interpersonal


relationships. This methodology centers on a phenomenological


dramaturgy. Cooley (1922) and Mead (1934/1967) guided our view of the


phenomenon as the cohort's historical group development toward each


individual's evolving professional- and self-perceptions within a


community context. We present the findings in a four-act play


(Goffman,1959). Our special attention to students speaks to future virtual


and local doctoral cohort developers and those who theorize about


successful doctoral education. Being a good educator means paying


attention to details--in this case, the ever-changing social selfconstructions


that can make or break a student's experience.

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Keywords

Distance education--Drama, Universities and colleges--Graduate work--Drama, Doctoral students--Drama, Didactic drama

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Sponsorship