Unpacking our experiences as trainee researchers navigating a global pandemic; in this research four researchers identify and interpret otherwise individual experiences through a collective lens. These shared responses are collated and understood through the multivocal method of what we term a “feminst collaborative auto-ethnography.” Relational ethics using a praxis of care, in line with feminist epistemology underpin the systematic analysis of our shared experiences to enhance intersubjectivity and the co-construction of knowledge. Individual reflections and collaborative sessions were utilized to immerse ourselves both situationally and critically into the pool of data. Concurrently creating and analyzing our collaborative inquiry. We ut...
In this chapter we collaboratively consider some doubts, tensions and anxieties around Marton’s PhD ...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Simone Fullagar, Adele Pa...
In this paper, we reflect upon our experiences and those of our peers as doctoral students and early...
Unpacking our experiences as trainee researchers navigating a global pandemic; in this research four...
Aim/Purpose: This paper identifies and examines cross-cutting experiences from the perspec-tive of t...
As doctoral students, we were well aware of the social, cultural, and economic isolation experienced...
Bringing our collective experiences of past collaborations through a virtual connection, we created ...
This collaborative autoethnography (Bochner and Ellis, 2016) has created a space for three women aca...
As doctoral students, we were well aware of the social, cultural, and economic isolation experienced...
Working as women in academia may still be regarded as “complex and fraught with myths, gross general...
Doctoral students represent the fresh and creative intellectuals needed to address the many social, ...
This study utilizes critical collaborative autoethnography to explore the development, identity, and...
The inequities rooted in our education systems and wider societies have been thrown into relief by r...
Adopting an intersectional feminist lens, we explore our identities as single and co‐parents thrust ...
The world is currently experiencing the unimaginable impact of a pandemic. From one day to the other...
In this chapter we collaboratively consider some doubts, tensions and anxieties around Marton’s PhD ...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Simone Fullagar, Adele Pa...
In this paper, we reflect upon our experiences and those of our peers as doctoral students and early...
Unpacking our experiences as trainee researchers navigating a global pandemic; in this research four...
Aim/Purpose: This paper identifies and examines cross-cutting experiences from the perspec-tive of t...
As doctoral students, we were well aware of the social, cultural, and economic isolation experienced...
Bringing our collective experiences of past collaborations through a virtual connection, we created ...
This collaborative autoethnography (Bochner and Ellis, 2016) has created a space for three women aca...
As doctoral students, we were well aware of the social, cultural, and economic isolation experienced...
Working as women in academia may still be regarded as “complex and fraught with myths, gross general...
Doctoral students represent the fresh and creative intellectuals needed to address the many social, ...
This study utilizes critical collaborative autoethnography to explore the development, identity, and...
The inequities rooted in our education systems and wider societies have been thrown into relief by r...
Adopting an intersectional feminist lens, we explore our identities as single and co‐parents thrust ...
The world is currently experiencing the unimaginable impact of a pandemic. From one day to the other...
In this chapter we collaboratively consider some doubts, tensions and anxieties around Marton’s PhD ...
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Simone Fullagar, Adele Pa...
In this paper, we reflect upon our experiences and those of our peers as doctoral students and early...