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Recent Comments in this Document
February 8, 2020 at 4:42 pm
Note to readers: a number of people have visited looking for the materal on definitions of artistic research. It is in the chapter “Fourteen Reasons”; scroll down to numbered para. 90.
And as always, comments are welcome!
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June 10, 2013 at 6:43 pm
There is some material on tuition — I think it’s at the end of the “Reasons to Mistrust” chapter? — anyway it’s difficult to get that information because supposedly inexpensive EU institutions charge a lot for non-EU students, but those fees are meliorated by grants, etc. The best I’ve been able to do is estimate.
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June 10, 2013 at 6:41 pm
Yes, another nice addition, thanks so much! I wonder what the best book on this might be.
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June 10, 2013 at 6:40 pm
You’re right, from the point of view of the graduates; I was thinking of the administrators’ and institutions’ perspective! I’ll add something to balance that out.
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June 10, 2013 at 6:39 pm
Thanks, that’s an excellent suggestion to help broaden the discussion.
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June 10, 2013 at 3:27 pm
“How to determine if the studio practice is at PhD level?” is not a different question from “Is this faculty member tenurable?” The answer is either criteria-based assessment (hello, audit culture) or peer-review (“I’d never want to be a member of a club that accepted me as a member…”).
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June 10, 2013 at 3:22 pm
It is crucial to point out that North American PhDs in the end are examined by the Committee who has been advising the candidate all along. There is a public defense, but the final decision is by the Committee established at the beginning of the research. Elsewhere, PhDs are examined externally.
An important point: part of the infrastructure established at RMIT, one of the leaders in practice-based (design) research, was what was known as the GRC – Graduate Research Conference (it is now called something different). Every 6 months, every candidate, no matter where he or she was in their candidacy was required to present on their progress before their peers and a panel of experts external to their supervision. This meant that everyone involved – candidates, prospective candidates, supervisors, externals – was exposed to the collective process of evaluating practice-based research. The intense weekend events were a combination of boot-strapping and quality assurance, with benchmarking possible between different disciplines (landscape, architecture, fashion, visual communication, etc) and between different stages of the process (seeing a candidate’s first progress review vs a candidate’s ‘penultimate’ review, prior to submitting for examination). The weekend was bookended by public defenses on the Friday and Monday. As a result, I believe that RMIT would strongly push back on your claim that ‘no one knows how to assess the (practice-based) PhD.’
The GRCs I attended were the richest aspects of my academic career to date and I miss them so much that I am now determined to establish the ritual as part of practice-based design PhDs at CMU (having failed to get up design PhDs at Parsons).
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June 10, 2013 at 3:05 pm
Barbara Bolt’s work is useful on this:
http://www.barbbolt.com/publication.htm
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June 10, 2013 at 2:44 pm
MA or MFA?
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June 10, 2013 at 2:43 pm
In design, there is a significant body of literature building on Hubert Dreyfus’ Heideggerian/Merleau-Pontian account of expertise development. The argument provides a useful (and I believe phenomenologically accurate) explanation for the role of the dialectic of self-consciousness/incorporation. In short, it is not that mastery = less self-consciousness, but ratherĀ pattern-based metaconceptual capacities.
The larger context here could be the attempt to recover phronesis (the ‘art’ of judgement?) from the dominance of techne.
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