Changing professional views of continuing professional development doctorates in educational psychology

Authors: Cameron, R. J.1; Frederickson, Norah1; Lunt, Ingrid2; Lang, Jane1

Source: Educational Psychology in Practice, Volume 24, Number 3, September 2008 , pp. 251-267(17)

Publisher: Routledge, part of the Taylor & Francis Group

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Abstract:

Continuing professional development (CPD) doctorate programmes may not be the only learning and development opportunities which universities and other organisations can provide for educational psychology practitioners (EPs). However, as Morris and Brightman pointed out in 2006, they are likely to continue as important sources for professional development for some years to come. Such programmes serve the purposes of providing continuing professional development for individuals, conferring higher status on the professional group and, for some, developing specialist skills and knowledge. This paper reports on two studies carried out nearly a decade apart. The first involved the collation of data from eight focus groups in London and the Home Counties who discussed the costs and benefits of setting up part-time doctoral programmes for experienced practitioners in 1998, as discussed by Cameron in 1999, and the other was a small-scale follow-up survey in 2007 using a questionnaire which was based on the issues arising from the earlier focus group discussions and which was designed to explore consistent, changed and evolving views and opinions of practitioner EPs towards this extended form of EP professional training. While both studies uncovered evidence of the research-practice divide which has been a feature of EP practice for many decades, it was clear from the 2007 survey that much of the ambivalence of practitioners to the “academic dimension” of training, present in the first investigation, had dissipated and that national doctorate programmes for experienced practitioners had become a familiar feature of the educational and child psychology landscape. Some theory/research versus practice tensions still remain, however, and these, together with their likely implications for current and future developments in the profession, are also considered. Finally, some key issues arising from both the 1998 and the 2007 studies are used to illuminate the potential role of CPD doctorates in enabling EPs to address future challenges in the practice context.

Keywords: educational psychology; continuing professional development; doctoral courses; survey data

Document Type: Research article

DOI: 10.1080/02667360802256824

Affiliations: 1: Department of Psychology, University College London, London, UK 2: University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

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