2015
DOI: 10.5430/ijhe.v4n2p172
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The Added Value of a PhD in Medicine - PhD Students’ Perceptions of Acquired Competences

Abstract: PhD in the field of medicine is more common than in any other domain. Many medical doctors are driven towards PhD, but also students with other backgrounds (usually MSc) are conducting a PhD in medical schools. Higher education has invested a lot in developing generic and research competences. Still little is known about how PhD students themselves perceive the competence of future PhDs'. The aim of this study is to determine how medical PhD students perceive their future competences and whether there is a dif… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(46 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…Shavers and Moore (2014)Black female voices: Self-presentation strategies in doctoral programmes at predominately white institutionsUSA15 PhD studentsQualitative11. Anttila et al (2015)The added value of a PhD in medicine—PhD students’ perceptions of acquired competencesFinland163 PhD studentsQualitative/Quantitative12. Hunter and Devine (2016)Doctoral students’ emotional exhaustion and intentions to leave academiaNine countries (most participants from Canada and the USA)186 current or recently graduated PhD studentsQualitative/quantitative13.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Shavers and Moore (2014)Black female voices: Self-presentation strategies in doctoral programmes at predominately white institutionsUSA15 PhD studentsQualitative11. Anttila et al (2015)The added value of a PhD in medicine—PhD students’ perceptions of acquired competencesFinland163 PhD studentsQualitative/Quantitative12. Hunter and Devine (2016)Doctoral students’ emotional exhaustion and intentions to leave academiaNine countries (most participants from Canada and the USA)186 current or recently graduated PhD studentsQualitative/quantitative13.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although well-being was not defined in the original article presenting NORD MED, it was measured by a total of 13 items, including questions regarding stress, exhaustion, lack of regulation, anxiety, and lack of interest (based on Elo, Leppänen, & Jahkola, 2003; Mäkinen, Olkinuora, & Lonka, 2004; Maslach & Jackson, 1981; Vermunt & Van Rijswijk, 1988). In the articles included in this review, 10 items were used to investigate doctoral student well-being, including one item question on stress, four item questions on exhaustion, two item questions on anxiety (the question “ I (often) have to force myself to work on my thesis” was reported to belong to different constructs such as a lack of interest scale, anxiety scale and cynicism scale depending on which of the three articles it was used in), and three item questions on lack of interest (Anttila, Lindblom-Ylänne, Lonka, & Pyhältö, 2015; Pyhältö & Keskinen, 2012; Stubb, Pyhältö, & Lonka, 2012). Yet another study investigated experienced well-being in terms of stress, exhaustion, and cynicism in PhD studies (Cornér, Löfström, & Pyhältö, 2017).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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