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Abstract Students are typically admitted into doctoral programmes because they have been good course‐takers. Yet, the PhD is awarded for doing independent research and making an ‘original contribution’ to knowledge. Graduate faculty acknowledge that the transition to independent research is hard for many students, and that they cannot predict who will successfully make the transition and complete the doctorate based only on students’ undergraduate records or even their performance in their first year of graduate school. Similarly, many graduate students feel unprepared to make the transition. Drawing on recent work on creativity, this paper provides a theoretical perspective on the factors that facilitate and impede doctoral students’ transition to independent research. Notes * 500 Fifh Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20001, USA. Email: blovitts@nae.edu Additional informationNotes on contributorsBarbara E. Lovitts Footnote* * 500 Fifh Street, NW, Washington, DC, 20001, USA. Email: blovitts@nae.edu
Barbara E. Lovitts (Fri,) studied this question.