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Introduction - Richard Andrews, Erik Borg, Stephen Boyd Davis,
Myrrh Domingo and Jude England
PART ONE: INSTITUTIONAL PERSPECTIVES
The Thesis: Texts and Machines - Erik Borg and Stephen Boyd
Davis
New Forms of Dissertation - Richard Andrews and Jude England
The Role of Doctoral and Graduate Schools - Richard P.J. Freeman
and Andrew Tolmie
Digital Literacies for the Research Institution - Helen Beetham,
Allison Littlejohn and Colin Milligan
PART TWO: STUDENT PERSPECTIVES
Media Systems, Multimodality and Post-Humanism - Lesley Gourlay
Reframing the Performing Arts - Zoe Beardshaw Andrews
Complexity Theory - June Elizabeth Parnell
Re-Imagining the Conditions of Possibility of a PhD Thesis - Jude
Fransman
Traditional Theses and Multimodal Communication - Dylan
Yamada-Rice
PART THREE: ETHICAL AND INTERCULTURAL ISSUES
Ethics and Representation - Bronwyn T. Williams and Mary
Brydon-Miller
Copyright Managment Approaches - Brian Fitzgerald and Damien
O′Brien
Understanding Identity Representations in Multimodal Research -
Pauline Hope Cheong
The Social Life of Digital Texts in Multimodal Research - Myrrh
Domingo
PART FOUR: MULTIMODALITY,INCLUDING THE REPRESENTATION AND
PRESENTATION OF THESES AND DISSERTATIONS
Researching in Conditions of Provisionality: Reflecting on the PhD
in the Digital and Multimodal Era - Gunther Kress
Practice-as-Research in Music Performance - Mine Dogantan-Dack
Translating Lydia Cabrera: A Case Study in Digital (Re)Presentation
- Anna-Marjatta Milsom
Disciplinary ′Specificity′ and the Digital Submission - Susan
Melrose
Digits and Figures: A Manual Drawing Practice and Its Modes of
Reproduction - Juliet MacDonald
PART FIVE: ARCHIVING, STORAGE AND ACCESSIBILITY IN THE DIGITAL
AGE
The Research Catalogue: A Model for Dissertations and Theses -
Michael Schwab
The Changing Role of Library and Information Services - Joanna
Newman
Animating the Archive - Martin Rieser
Establishing the Cybertextual in Practice-Based PhDs - Lisa
Stansbie
PART SIX: RESEARCH METHODS
A Modern PhD: Doctoral Education in Australian Universities in
Digital Times - Ilana Snyder and Denise Beale
How Changes in Representation Can Affect Meaning - Amy Alexandra
Wilson
Researching Adoloscents′ Literacies Multimodally - Lalitha
Vasudevan and Tiffany DeJaynes
Implication for Research Training and Examination for Design PhDs -
Joyce S.R. Yee
Uncaged Boxed-up - Ralf Nuhn
Index
I focus on research in the fields of language education, argumentation, writing development, multimodality, rhetoric and e-learning. With colleagues I designed the MA in English Education.
′This handbook marks a major turning point in the production of
dissertation and theses. Scholarly communication has been changing
rapidly, embracing the latest in web searching, social media, and
online and open access journals. Yet, attention to the dissertation
- the hallmark of an academic education - has been sorely missing.
This handbook identifies and explores the multiple ways in which
electronic means are becoming an integral part of the production of
dissertations today, as well as looking at the scope in the future
scope for bringing electronic and new media forms into the final
form of the dissertation. The handbook first situates the
dissertation in its historical and institutional perpectives, and
then addresses the transformation from print to digital in
dissertations from supervision to production to archiving and
accessibility. Finally, the handbook wraps up with a section on
research methodologies and methods that rounds out the book with
advice for prospective students on how to be the creator of a
digital dissertation from inception to final delivery. This will be
essential reading for all involved in contemporary university
education′ -
Caroline Haythornthwaite, Director and Professor at the School of
Library, Archival and Information Studies at the University of
British Columbia
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