There’s a disease
spreading in graduate schools known as “ABD.” It affects students
nearing a doctorate, targeting the overworked, the uninspired and the
unsure.
Carriers are easy to spot. They’re usually teaching assistants or young
professionals who vaguely cancel plans, mumbling something about
working on a project.
Diagnosis consists of one question: Are you finished with school?
“All But Dissertation,” they reply.
JoBeth Allen, a professor in UGA’s
Department of Language and Literacy Education, is as close to a faith
healer as these students need. For the past six years, she’s led groups
of graduate students to the mountaintop for a week with the goal of
making them write. And write and write and write.
The retreat is a seven-day May term course in which 15 graduate
students from a range of disciplines trek to Amicalola Falls State Park
to get away from distractions and put their fingers to the keyboard.
Each of the students is required to have collected qualitative
data—interviews, images, “numberless” data—and be in the process of
converting that information into a paper, usually a dissertation or
article.
“One of the things we saw was that after students collected all their
data there was this question ‘What do I do now?’” Allen says. “The
other impetus for us is that everybody—faculty, grad students, doctoral
students—has trouble making time to write. So this was our solution.”
Under her guidance, students shrug off television, telephones and
e-mail and fit their data into chapters and publishable narratives. She
expects each student to spend six to eight hours writing per day.
But that’s not all. In addition to writing, she asks the students to
bring along written material, from their own discipline and others, to
use for inspiration and guidance. She also urges students to use the
landscape.
“I advise everyone to take a hike or something throughout the day,”
Allen says. “It’s beautiful, and that’s really part of getting away to
write. Everyone usually hikes the waterfall once while we’re at
Amicalola.”
It’s this pairing of nature and nurture that works to inspire and
develop the students’ writing, she says. There’s nowhere like the
wilderness to grow.
Every day the students meet with Allen for 30 minutes apiece. They
bring her their work and tell her where they need help. They also have
writing partners or groups for additional feedback.
“There’s a very strong belief, in our department especially, that
writing is a community process and not an isolated, individual
process,” she says.
Allen, a published author herself, has benefited from a similar
experience. She and research colleagues have hit the beach to put their
research together and start the word flow.
Getting feedback and finding inspiration isn’t only good for students’
egos, it can also help to develop a creative streak. When the students
get together with peers outside their department, they get turned on to
new ideas or ways of displaying information that can add a lot to a
thesis or article, according to Allen.
In the old days all graduate writing “was so impersonal, so objective,
so scientific sounding even if it wasn’t scientific. And in qualitative
research especially, there are many more ways to do that,” Allen says.
By the time the students emerge from their chrysalis, most are packing
at least one more chapter or first draft of a professional article.
“And none of them think they can do it,” Allen says, a sly smile
spreading on her face.
The effects of the course are apparent in its students. In interviews,
they heaped praises upon their teacher, many giving Allen credit for
their ability to finish their dissertations.
“She bridges a diverse community of junior researchers within a very
short time. She crafts writers and spirits,” says doctoral student
Rachelle Washington.
Language and literacy student Jeff Orr, who also took the course, says,
“(Allen) really balances encouragement and critique with the
expectation of quality writing and productive creation of text. There’s
such a concentrated period of writing and thus a real need for what she
does.”
The only problem with the course is that it fills up quickly, often
days after the sign-up sheet hits the door. Word has gotten out that
it’s a big help and that’s a real draw, Washington says.
She should know. Washington took the course twice. She’s almost
finished with school now, but she knows that her need to write
academically isn’t going to stop, which has led her to hope a new
course is added.
“I will graduate in May, and wonder when there will be a similar
retreat designed for those of us heading to university posts. Any
ideas, Dr. Allen? I’m hopeful,” she says.
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