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The American Chemical Society's Office of Graduate
Education (1) is one of many recent
manifestations of renewed interest in and scrutiny of graduate
education in the U.S. In January's editorial I mentioned results
of two surveys of recent recipients of the Ph.D. (2).
These provide an overview of what a self-selected group thinks
about the graduate education they received. Within the past
few years, the ACS has surveyed Ph.D. recipients and collected
information about Ph.D. programs and M.S. programs in chemistry.
Results are available at the Web site of the Office of Graduate
Education (1) by choosing Special
Reports/Surveys. The Chemical Sciences Roundtable has published
a report of a workshop on graduate education in the chemical
sciences that identified problems and opportunities (3).
The Carnegie Initiative on the Doctorate has recently begun
a major project intended to enrich and invigorate the education
of graduate students (4). The Preparing
Future Faculty program and its ACS branch aim to enhance the
preparation of graduate students who aspire to be faculty
members (5). There are probably other
studies, surveys, and programs either completed or under way
that I am unaware of, but those listed here are sufficient
to document the attention currently being paid to graduate
education.
The Chemical Sciences Roundtable states, "the
approach to graduate study in the chemical sciences has changed
very little in the last 40 years, but the research and education
environment is evolving at a rapid pace." Perhaps our
approach to graduate study in chemistry still works quite
well in the new environment, but many suggest that a different
approach could work even better. To decide whether that is
true we need criteria on which to base evaluations of graduate
education, and these are often obscured in the flurry of activity
required to accomplish the short-term goals that constantly
face us.
Both the Chemical Sciences Roundtable and the
Carnegie Initiative on the Doctorate suggest that departments
and faculty should carefully consider what they believe to
be the purpose of the graduate enterprise. The Carnegie Foundation
provides a useful suggestion: Graduate education should prepare
scholars who are "stewards of the discipline". These
are people who can maintain and enhance "the vigor, quality
and integrity of the field." This requires generating
new knowledge through creative research, understanding the
history and epistemology of the discipline in order to cull
and conserve valuable ideas, and communicating, teaching,
and applying those ideas. In this view a Ph.D. is not just
a ticket to a better-paying, higher-level job, but also an
initiation into a long tradition of shared knowledge and values
that constitute the discipline of chemistry.
Note that stewardship of a discipline implies
far more than creating new knowledge. In considering the health
of a field, a steward needs perspective from the past and
vision for the future. It is essential to be able to communicate
within and across disciplinary boundaries and to surmount
the information-transfer barriers that separate technical
experts from laypersons and novices. In other words a steward
must be an excellent teacher as well as an excellent practitioner.
And it is extremely important that a steward participate in
recruiting and preparing subsequent generations of leaders
who will carry the discipline to its next level of accomplishment.
Will all of the attention currently being paid
to graduate education result in real change? The mentoring
that is a major aspect of nearly every graduate degree in
chemistry is a very personal process, so it is difficult to
define in general terms how to change it or improve it. And
it is difficult to monitor or influence how individual mentor-student
interactions transpire. Nevertheless, it is essential that
we continually scrutinize and evaluate both what we do as
individuals and what general principles and habits of thought
we apply to graduate education. Out of our graduate programs
come the leaders and innovators—"stewards of the
discipline"—who will enhance both research and
education in chemistry for many years to come.
Literature Cited
1. Newsletter,
ACS Office of Graduate Education, Volume 1, Number 1, Spring
2002.(accessed Aug 2002).
2. a. Golde,
C. M.; Dore, T. M, At Cross Purposes: What the Experiences
of Doctoral Students Reveal about Doctoral Education (accessed
Aug 2002). Philadelphia, PA: A report prepared for The Pew
Charitable Trusts, 2001; b. National
Association of Graduate and Professional Students, The 2000
National Doctoral Program Survey (accessed Aug 2002).
3. Chemical Sciences Roundtable,
Board of Chemical Sciences and Technology, Commission on Physical
Sciences, Mathematics, and Applications, National Research
Council, Graduate Education in the Chemical Sciences–Issues
for the 21st Century, 2000, National Academy Press, Washington,
DC.
4. A description of the program
is available from The Carnegie Foundation
(accessed Aug 2002).
5. More information is available
from the Preparing
Future Faculty program and its ACS
branch (accessed Aug 2002).
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