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Featured researches published by Joanna Gilmore.


Science | 2011

Graduate Students’ Teaching Experiences Improve Their Methodological Research Skills

David F. Feldon; James Peugh; Briana E. Timmerman; Michelle Maher; M. Hurst; Denise Strickland; Joanna Gilmore; Cindy Stiegelmeyer

Teaching is not wasted time. Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) graduate students are often encouraged to maximize their engagement with supervised research and minimize teaching obligations. However, the process of teaching students engaged in inquiry provides practice in the application of important research skills. Using a performance rubric, we compared the quality of methodological skills demonstrated in written research proposals for two groups of early career graduate students (those with both teaching and research responsibilities and those with only research responsibilities) at the beginning and end of an academic year. After statistically controlling for preexisting differences between groups, students who both taught and conducted research demonstrate significantly greater improvement in their abilities to generate testable hypotheses and design valid experiments. These results indicate that teaching experience can contribute substantially to the improvement of essential research skills.


The Journal of Higher Education | 2015

The relationship between undergraduate research participation and subsequent research performance of early career STEM graduate students

Joanna Gilmore; Michelle Vieyra; Briana E. Timmerman; David F. Feldon; Michelle Maher

Undergraduate research experiences have been adopted across higher education institutions. However, most studies examining benefits derived from undergraduate research rely on self-report of skill development. This study used an empirical assessment of research skills to investigate associations between undergraduate research experiences and research skill performance in graduate school. Research experience characteristics including duration, autonomy, collaboration, and motivation were also examined. Undergraduate research experience was linked to heightened graduate school performance in all research skills assessed. While autonomy and collaboration were highlighted in student interviews, duration was most strongly correlated to significant increases in research skill performance. Based on these findings, we advocate for the inclusion of research experiences into the undergraduate science curriculum coupled with the creation of centralized offices of undergraduate research and faculty incentives for involving undergraduates in their research.


International Journal for Researcher Development | 2016

Factors associated with novice graduate student researchers’ engagement with primary literature

Sarah M. Urquhart; Michelle Maher; David F. Feldon; Joanna Gilmore

Purpose Using the threshold concepts framework, this paper aims to explore how differences in the ability to meaningfully apply relevant literature to one’s research are reflected in descriptions of graduate training undertaken in an academic year. Design/methodology/approach This paper used a sequential-explanatory mixed method design. Phase I analysis used quantitative performance data to differentiate research skill threshold crossers from non-crossers. Phase II analysis used qualitative interview data to identify common and differentiating themes across and between the two groups. Findings Participants identified coursework, research activities and teaching assignments as primary research skill development sites. However, only the patterns of mentorship and engagement with literature within the context of supervised research activities consistently differentiated threshold crossers from non-crossers. All non-crossers reported having full autonomy in their research endeavors, whereas all crossers articulated reliance on supervising mentor guidance. Similarly, most non-crossers did not frame research as incremental contributions to existing literature, while most crossers did. Research limitations/implications The study sample size is small (n = 14), and the study is exploratory in nature. Practical implications The importance of exploring the factors that actually indicate and lead to research skill development is highlighted. Originality/value Few studies address graduate student research skill development, although this skill development is a core goal of many graduate programs. This study does so, using performance rather than self-report data.


International Journal of Doctoral Studies | 2016

The Flip Side of the Attrition Coin: Faculty Perceptions of Factors Supporting Graduate Student Success

Joanna Gilmore; Annie M. Wofford; Michelle Maher

Doctoral attrition consistently hovers around 50% with relevant literature identifying several mediating factors, including departmental culture, student demographics, and funding. To advance this literature, we interviewed 38 graduate faculty advisors in science, engineering, or mathematics disciplines at a research-extensive university to capture their perceptions of factors supporting graduate student success. Using a constant-comparison method, we found that faculty perceptions aligned within three major categories, termed: motivated student behaviors, formative student learning experiences, and essential student knowledge and skills. Student motivation was most prominently represented in findings. This aligns with prior studies showing that faculty tend to identify the cause of graduate student failure as lying within the students themselves and rarely discuss their role or the department’s contribution to attrition. Thus findings offer an opportunity to reflect and improve upon practice. The study also highlights actions graduate students can take to increase success, such as developing collegial relationships and early involvement in research and scholarly writing. We encourage graduate faculty advisors and others to identify ways to help graduate students overcome common obstacles to enduring and succeeding within graduate programs. Faculty perceptions are also examined by discipline and faculty rank, and directions for future research are offered.


The International Journal for Educational Integrity | 2010

Weeds in the flower garden: An exploration of plagiarism in graduate students' research proposals and its connection to enculturation, ESL, and contextual factors

Joanna Gilmore; Denise Strickland; Briana E. Timmerman; Michelle Maher; David F. Feldon


Studies in Higher Education | 2013

Performance-Based Assessment of Graduate Student Research Skills: Timing, Trajectory, and Potential Thresholds.

B. Timmerman; David F. Feldon; Michelle Maher; Denise Strickland; Joanna Gilmore


Journal of Research Practice | 2013

Cognitive Apprenticeship and the Supervision of Science and Engineering Research Assistants.

Michelle Maher; Joanna Gilmore; David F. Feldon; Telesia E. Davis


Studies in Higher Education | 2014

Exploration of factors related to the development of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics graduate teaching assistants' teaching orientations

Joanna Gilmore; Michelle Maher; David F. Feldon; Briana Timmerman


Archive | 2006

Patterns in children’s online behavior and scientificproblem-solving: A large-N microgenetic study

David F. Feldon; Joanna Gilmore


Archive | 2009

PROFESSIONAL IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT IN TEACHERS OF SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY, ENGINEERING, MATH, AND SCIENCE AND MATH EDUCATION

Joanna Gilmore; M. Hurst; Michelle Maher

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Michelle Maher

University of South Carolina

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David F. Feldon

University of South Carolina

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Briana E. Timmerman

University of South Carolina

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Denise Strickland

University of South Carolina

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M. Hurst

University of Virginia

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Telesia E. Davis

University of South Carolina

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B. Timmerman

University of South Carolina

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James Peugh

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Michelle Vieyra

University of South Carolina Aiken

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