Beyond the Dissertation: Original Scholarship, Publication, and Academic Leadership
The dissertation is not the end of research — it is the beginning of a scholarly life, and what you build after it is the contribution that matters.
A doctoral passage into the life of the independent scholar — from the honest brick of original contribution and the disciplined lens of theory and framework, through the printed conversation of journals and the letter that stings, the asking for means and the hand on a student's shoulder, the weight of the discipline's trust and the fences worth crossing, to the scholar's name, the conference room, and at last the research agenda that is entirely your own — closing, as the Research Series must, on its deepest conviction: a researcher ultimately creates knowledge that benefits others.
Course Overview
RES 501 is the final course in the University's Research Series — an eight-lesson doctoral-level course in becoming an independent scholar. It moves through four modules: from what an original contribution to knowledge truly is, through theory development and conceptual frameworks, into the scholarly conversation of journal publication, peer review, grant writing, and the supervision of student research, and onward to advanced research ethics, interdisciplinary collaboration, the academic profile, and the conference room — closing with the transition to independent scholarship and a capstone portfolio in which you chart your own scholarly career. Where RES 422 taught you to design evidence worth believing, RES 501 teaches you to create knowledge that benefits others.
Faculty & Resources
Recommended Books & Publications
All publications below are included with your course purchase at no additional cost.
This Course Costs an Affordable Fee of
ONLY $250.00
ONE-TIME
OR CHOOSE YOUR PAYMENT PLAN


