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This book focuses on using faculty mentoring to empower doctoral
students to successfully complete their doctoral studies. The book
is a collection of mentoring chapters showcasing professors and
dissertation advisors from the most prestigious universities in the
United States. They provide an extraordinary range of mentoring
advice that speaks directly to the doctoral student. Each chapter
addresses a professional or personal component of the doctoral
process that represents how these exceptional faculty best mentor
their doctoral students. Faculty contributions exemplify diverse
perspectives of mentoring: (a) Some faculty are direct and
forthright, pointing the mentee toward his/her destination; (b)
some faculty share personal experiences-offering mentoring advice
from the perspective of someone who traveled a similar path; and
(c) some faculty structure a dialogue between the faculty as mentor
and you as the doctoral student. In all cases, they open
possibilities for achieving success in doctoral studies. Students
discover clues to follow during their doctoral journey. Whether the
student is just beginning to think about entering a doctoral
program, presently taking course studies, under stress, and doesn't
know what the future offers, this is an ideal book because it maps
the entire doctoral process.
One of the best kept secrets about doctoral education is the large
proportion of students who are mid-career. Yet, few researchers
focus on these students. Daring the Doctorate is the first major
work to address the life circumstances of these mid-career doctoral
students. Based on the experiences of fifteen successful graduates,
the author develops perspectives and frameworks to assist those
contemplating doctoral study, as well as faculty and staff advisors
and even recent graduates who wonder whether only they found the
road to graduation so complicated. In this thorough guide to the
doctorate degree, study participants speak freely about their
reasons for pursuing doctorates, as well as the financial,
personal, intellectual and professional challenges they faced.
Their circumstances reflect a variety of situations: single,
married and partnered; some mothers and fathers; male and female;
some as young as twenty-six, and others approaching their middle
ages. We learn about their passion for learning, about guilt and
isolation, the time pressures, the exhilaration, and key supporting
roles played by family, peers, advisors, mentors, Wizards and
Guardians. We come away with a profound appreciation of the courage
and tenacity of these talented individuals and a better
understanding of how to help others like them succeed.
This book focuses on using faculty mentoring to empower doctoral
students to successfully complete their doctoral studies. The book
is a collection of mentoring chapters showcasing professors and
dissertation advisors from the most prestigious universities in the
United States. They provide an extraordinary range of mentoring
advice that speaks directly to the doctoral student. Each chapter
addresses a professional or personal component of the doctoral
process that represents how these exceptional faculty best mentor
their doctoral students. Faculty contributions exemplify diverse
perspectives of mentoring: (a) Some faculty are direct and
forthright, pointing the mentee toward his/her destination; (b)
some faculty share personal experiences-offering mentoring advice
from the perspective of someone who traveled a similar path; and
(c) some faculty structure a dialogue between the faculty as mentor
and you as the doctoral student. In all cases, they open
possibilities for achieving success in doctoral studies. Students
discover clues to follow during their doctoral journey. Whether the
student is just beginning to think about entering a doctoral
program, presently taking course studies, under stress, and doesn't
know what the future offers, this is an ideal book because it maps
the entire doctoral process.
Throughout the world, corporations are experiencing the second
major transition in corporate governance of this century. The
nature of the relationship between the corporation and the rest of
society is changing fundamentally. The corporate board has unique
responsibilities during this transition, but as it tries to respond
directors are faced with destabilizing paradoxes: resolving who is
in control--management or the board, achieving critical judgment
while maintaining detachment, and avoiding becoming either a cozy
club or a collection of all-stars. Written for practitioners, this
book addresses corporate governance and the role of the board of
directors in multinational corporations. Based on interviews with
71 directors serving on more than 500 boards in eight countries,
this book highlights the nature of the challenges and suggests ways
to analyze and confront them. This major international study
compares the experiences of board members in Canada, Finland,
France, Germany, Great Britain, the Netherlands, Switzerland, and
Venezuela. Based on practical experience, The Corporate Board will
prove indispensable to executive and non-executive directors,
corporate secretaries, bankers, institutional investors,
policymakers, stock brokers, and specialists in mergers and
acquisitions, as well as academics and stockholders concerned about
corporate accountability.
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