ABSTRACT

Research in the creative fields of architecture, design, music and the arts has experienced dynamic development for over two decades. The research in these practice- and arts-based fields has become increasingly mature but has also led to various discussions on what constitutes doctoral proficiency in these fields. The term ‘doctorateness’ is often used when referring to the assessment of the production of doctoral research and the research competence of research students, but in architecture and the arts, the concept of doctorateness has not yet attained a clearly articulated definition. The assessment of quality has been practiced by way of supervising, mentoring and the evaluation of dissertations but much less discussed.

This book offers perspectives on how to qualify and assess research in architecture, music and the arts. It creates a broader arena for discussion on doctorateness by establishing a framework for its application to creative fields. The book is grouped into three sections and includes contributions from international experts in the various fields working in Australia, Belgium, Brazil, Canada, Norway, Sweden, Switzerland, Spain, the Netherlands and the UK. The first section offers general frameworks for further conceptualising doctorateness in the fields in question. It is followed by a section that describes and discusses various experiences, concerns and visions on the production and assessment of doctoral research reporting from doctoral programmes in different stages of development. The third section includes future-oriented perspectives on knowledge-building processes, and asks how the ongoing, profound changes in academia could influence the concept of quality in both doctoral process and product.

The book presents different perspectives on research assessment practices and developments of relevant criteria in the practice-based and creative fields of architecture and the arts. The contributions propose ways of framing this issue conceptually, show the need for awareness of the specific context and tradition programmes develop and give proposals for various potential trajectories for the future.

section 1|48 pages

Framing ‘doctorateness’

chapter 1|12 pages

Doctorateness

Where should we look for evidence?

chapter 2|18 pages

Emerging epistemic communities and cultures of evidence

On the practice of assessment of research in the creative fields

chapter 3|16 pages

Setting the scene

The development of formal frameworks for doctorates in Europe

section 2|96 pages

Various experiences, cases and concerns

chapter 4|18 pages

Criteria for ‘doctorateness’ in the creative fields

A focus on architecture

chapter 6|16 pages

Design practice research in architecture and design at RMIT University

Discovery, reflection and assessment

chapter 8|15 pages

Exploring, enhancing and evaluating musical ‘doctorateness’

Perspectives on performance and composition

chapter 9|16 pages

Constructing publics as a key to doctoral research

A discussion of two PhD projects engaging in societal issues with artistic and design-based methods

section 3|45 pages

Doctorateness to come?

chapter 10|12 pages

Non-observational research

A possible future route for knowledge acquisition in architecture and the arts

chapter 11|16 pages

When will it thunder? 1

chapter 12|15 pages

Precision

The compositional accuracy of artistic judgement