With regard to tensions in the transition from practitioner to researcher:
I mentioned during our class discussion that I pursued a Master’s degree in journalism before I worked full-time as a staff reporter for a newspaper. So, an experience that’s sort of the opposite of what a teacher embarking on doctoral-level study in education might have.
One of the reasons I chose to go to graduate school was that my undergraduate experience had been so practical – it was a great education, I think, and one that provided really superior preparation for the kind of work I would someday do. But I also wanted to understand better the mechanisms that drive journalism – I didn’t want to take for granted that the conclusions I/we reach about what news is and how news is made are the best conclusions, the only conclusions, or the inevitable conclusions.
And, I think my graduate studies in journalism gave me a way to think critically about those overarching (and underlying) concepts. As I said in class, though, I’m not sure, in the day-to-day work of reporting and writing, that I often stepped back to consider how the concepts and theories i had engaged as a student might be at play in my own work or the work of my colleagues. I can say, however, that having a more nuanced understanding of journalism, language and communications certainly made me a better, more critical consumer of media, if not necessarily a better, more critical practitioner of media. And that might be important too – especially in thinking about how we might use research in practice and vice versa.