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Education Higher

The Ph.D. Trap Revisited

by (author) Wilfred Cude

Publisher
Dundurn Press
Initial publish date
Oct 2000
Category
Higher, General, Reference
  • eBook

    ISBN
    9781459720794
    Publish Date
    Oct 2000
    List Price
    $8.99
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9781550023459
    Publish Date
    Oct 2000
    List Price
    $22.99

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Description

When The Ph.D. Trap was first published in 1987, it hit academe like a bombshell. Wilfred Cude dared to pull back the veil of graduate school life to expose the harsh realities of modern advanced study. Using statistics, academic history, and diverse intellectual traditions, Cude revealed the Ph.D. program in most disciplines to be savage, mechanical, and cruel - an exploitative construct that often frustrates legitimate intellectual inquiry, shatters viable career expectations, and mangles personal and professional relations.

In the years since, an outpouring of books, articles, and statistical data delineating serious weaknesses in contemporary higher education has provided a wealth of evidence supporting Cude’s original thesis.

The Ph.D. Trap Revisited amplifies Cude’s arguments, with a synthesis and analysis of new data and information. Topics examined include the grad school numbers game, the rogue professor, muddles in methodology, the perils of apprenticeship, ethics and economics, existing alternatives, and recommendations for change.

In an age of increasingly unchecked proliferation of the Ph.D. degree throughout academic institutions in the western world, Cude’s work is a tonic.

About the author

Wilfred Cude is the author of A Due Sense of Differences, The Ph.D. Trap, and numerous scholarly articles on English literature, Canadian history, critical methodology, and educational traditions. He has lectured at colleges and universities across the country. He lives in rural Cape Breton.

Wilfred Cude's profile page

Editorial Reviews

"Cude's writing is engaging throughout, and even his harshest comments are phrased elegantly."

Higher Education Review

"The sound you hear as you read his book is not the hammering of yet another nail into our coffin. He's one of us. It's a wake-up call, a heads-up message to ostriches unaware that they may be in vulnerable position. We would do well to heed it."

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