Becoming A Doctor: A Collaborative Autoethnography

Authors

  • Jayrome L. Nunez Tafe Arabia Higher Education, Dammam City, Sharqiyyah Province, Saudi Arabia
  • Louie Petere Gula Saint Joseph College, Maasin City, Southern Leyte, Philippines

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7111165

Keywords:

doctorate, higher education, autoethnography, distance education, lifelong learning

Abstract

An educator, to climb up into academic ranking must take a longer route of getting formal education such as master’s or doctorate. In this paper, the authors discuss their journey, challenges, and aspirations in taking postgraduate studies like the Doctor of Education (EdD). Using autoethnography as the research design, which allow writers to narrate their personal experiences and used thematic analysis to analyze them. The authors experienced hardship in finding universities that would fit to their need especially that one of them graduated with a non-thesis master’s degree. The other author, who is overseas found it also difficult to look for a university that would accept his situation and could offer flexibility in attending the classes due to the time zone difference and workday schedule. While both authors are enrolled in private education financing the studies could be a burden to one of the authors, so he sought support from his employer and agreed to render a service after, while the other one can cover the fees from his overseas job

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Published

2022-09-29

How to Cite

Jayrome L. Nunez, & Louie Petere Gula. (2022). Becoming A Doctor: A Collaborative Autoethnography . Partners Universal International Research Journal, 1(3), 26–33. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.7111165

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Section

Articles