This 12-tasks course on 'Rebuilding your Thesis - addressing major changes' has been specifically designed to provide guidance and direction to all those that passed the Viva with major changes. The course is particularly addressing Viva key concerns that often lead to the awarding of major revisions, such as the absence of a problem focus, no clear common theme or narrative, or a lack of showing how the different parts of the research belong together.
The main purpose of this 12 tasks course is to provide you with a clear understanding and actionable guidance on what needs to be done so to realize the expected changes that are put forward in the Viva examination report, and to realize these in time.
While the change requests in the Viva examination report are usually very detailed, it might be however less clear on how to realize such changes. The point here is that the Viva examination report, like your thesis, is very much written in a linear way. But for most thesis projects, your research was not linear, and likewise the chapters were not completed by you in a linear way. And quite similar to your thesis development, the different points put forward in the Viva examination report might thus not be addressed in a linear way and in isolation. If the Viva examination report puts forward, for example, as main concerns that there is an absence of a problem focus, no clear common theme or narrative, or a lack of showing how the different parts of the research belong together, then isolated actions are perhaps not enough to do the expected changes. Instead, responding to the change requests would require you to exactly work out the exact research problem, to then craft the research questions that your data is addressing, and to amend the narrative through your thesis accordingly. Therefore, instead of working by the checklist, you might want to start by addressing the crucial underlying issues that the examiners saw within your thesis, and to which this course attempts to provide some guidance on.
The course syllabus has been handcrafted for common Viva concerns that lead to the award of ‘major changes’, such as the absence of a problem focus, no clear common theme or narrative, or a lack of showing how the different parts of the research belong together. The syllabus of the fully tutor-supported format departs from the subsequently presented syllabus of the self-study edition and will be adapted in accordance to the student’s respective Viva examination report recommendations and thesis.
Through the course you will work over a template that we would expect you to have completed by the end of Task 12. This template then forms the base and narrative for you so to rewrite your entire thesis in accordance to the concerns put forward in your Viva examination report.
As the very term ‘getting majors’ notes, to rework your thesis will be something that likely will take more than twelve tasks. Therefore, the focus of this course is NOT on rewriting your thesis within a twelve tasks’ timeframe. But, instead, the principle objective and prime learning outcome of this course is to put you into a position where you have a clear understanding about your research and how to present it, and what are the general shortcomings in it. For the majority of cases, getting major changes implies that the work has not been up to the standard, and thus it likely suffered from what could be called ‘avoidable mistakes’, and which by the end of this course you should clearly see and understand yourself. Those that are interested in getting individual support on how to address the Viva examination report change requests, might consider using the DoctorateHub’s mentoring and coaching services.
Participants in this twelve tasks course will:
Research methods and tools covered or trained in the course:
Data collection techniques covered or trained in the course:
Course is suitable for the following doctoral journey steps:
This course is made of the following tasks:
Task 1: Initial Issue/Problem Framing
Task 2: Final Problem Understanding
Task 3: Key Evidence Analysis
Task 3 aims to advance the understanding on how well the collected evidence is supporting the articulated problem understanding. You are asked to critically look at the evidence base collected by you so to understand how well the evidence that you have been collecting is supporting your current problem understanding.
Task 4: Causal Relations and Belonging
Task 5: Key Literature Identification
Task 6: Conclusions Revisited
Task 6 asks you to derive some conclusions now that you have been analysing the data– in-itself as well as against the literature, what is the data telling you? Does it provide answers to your initial research question? Or does it provide answers to questions not initially thought about?
Task 7: Research Question Framing
Task 7 works out the research question/s the problem asks and attempts to identify literature sources that have studied such research question/s before. What are the research question/s the problem and findings ask for, and who has previously asked and answered such questions? Please make sure that you derive the possible research question/s that your work could explore from the Task 2 problem/s statement.
Task 8: Literature Coverage
Task 9: Your Methodology & Related Studies
Task 10: Thesis Narrative and Key Terms
Task 11: Viva Examination Report Analysis
In Task 11 you are asked to conduct a point by point analysis of the change requests from your Viva examination report and to work out where in the thesis these change requests need to be addressed. In Task 11 you also will be provided with a Viva outcome example where the student has been receiving major amendment requests and showing how the students have been approaching and implementing such change requests.
Task 12: Major Revision Roadmap
Research methods and tools covered or trained in the course:
Data collection techniques covered or trained in the course:
Course is suitable for the following doctoral journey steps:
Research methods and tools covered or trained in the course:
Data collection techniques covered or trained in the course:
Course is suitable for the following doctoral journey steps:

Select course edition
Use Brain Coins for on-demand support
Our Advanced Courses come in three formats: as a free self-study with peer support, as a fully coach supported edition or with flexible on-demand feedback whenever you need it. You can select the option that suits your learning needs best.
Brain Coins (BCs) are a currency used at the DoctorateHub to pay for on-demand services in a flexible way. You can purchase BCs at a discount and use them across the system in the combination it suits you best. BCs are valid for 12 months after the first BC has been spent.
Self-paced
Self-study with peer support. We provide the structure, you focus on your thesis research.
Ideal for those who prefer to advance on their own schedule or who are on a budget.
Duration: “As long as it takes you“
Learning at your own pace, in your own time.
No tuition fee
Dedicated coach
Fully supported by a DoctorateHub coach dedicated to the course topic.
Ideal for those who prefer tight guidance to progress through their research and thesis development.
Start “Whenever you want“
Courses are 8 or 12 weeks long.
Detailed information is available in the course detail view.
Tuition fee
2,950.00€
Club Support
Join one of our Clubs to get started.
Ideal for those who have unpredictable agendas, or that just need some orientation.
Duration: “As long as it takes you“
Learn at your own pace in a peer environment, with optional Pro and Pro light support subscriptions.
Explore the Clubs
Schedule video-orientation call
Good for: One video-orientation call to discuss a task or assignment and to understand how to take your research further.
1 BC
Get written orientation feedback
Good for: One-time written feedback on a course task assignment of around 2.500 words in length.
1 BC
Get one Research Mentoring month
Good for: One Research Mentoring month with written feedback and video-orientation calls.
12 BC
Jim W.
Thesis stage: Viva & Graduation
I would highly recommend working with DoctorateHub. In the past, I have benefitted from the webinars that DoctorateHub organises periodically. When the time came for me to prepare for the final submission of my thesis as well as my viva voce, I reached out to the team at DoctorateHub to see about a more formal engagement that might allow me to prepare for my upcoming viva. Over the course of eight weeks, I had the opportunity to work with a viva coach who challenged my research through a close examination of my write-up and in a series of mock viva engagements. All of this was done in a tough but collaborative way with my viva coach. As a result, I feel more prepared and grounded going into my viva. My thesis write-up is better now too. For me, the timing was perfect as I was able to go through the entire eight weeks before the final submission date of my thesis write-up. Overall, my viva coach helped me to see things through the eyes of the examiner and what they would likely question in the document and, importantly, in the context of the viva examination. I found the programme well worth the investment of time, effort, and treasure.
Noeleen
Thesis stage: Research execution: Data collection and analysis
The course has been invaluable in:
Despite the difficulty in balancing work, completing the Thesis and the course, at first the 8 weeks could appear to others as taking time away from Thesis development, but actually, it enhanced mine.
I would highly recommend it. Thank you. I do wish you the best with taking the course forward.
Viji
Thesis stage: Research execution: Data collection and analysis
It was a good 8 weeks, though I would have loved to have had this module during my DBA programs theoretical stage ...or even during one of the DBA DDP’s (Doctoral Development Plan).
A key learnings for me was to keep the focus on the problem, and not get diverted towards a solution based approach.
The mirroring technique and the table shared in the module will be an useful tool for candidates to compare and ensure that relevant points have been reflected on and addressed in the respective sections of the thesis.
I see myself using the table for communicating how triangulation has been supportive both at the data collection and analysis stage of the thesis.
I would like to take this opportunity to thank you and the team at the DoctorateHub for your time and patience and appreciate your feedback and comments that have ensured further clarity in my thesis. Wishing everyone the best in their future endeavours.
Bongi
Thesis stage: Research execution: Data collection and analysis
Thank you for your invaluable input on my thesis journey.
I acknowledge the sacrifice in time and effort you made to help me grow as I learn to adopt an academic perspective of my work-based problem.
It was rigorous but worth it.
May your journeys yield great success.
Douglas
Thesis stage: Research execution: Data collection and analysis
The learning on this course has been phenomenal as it has brought to view a number of blind spots in research, in fact they are not even blind spots, they were complete unknowns. The main one relates to what is broken in any given situation, if there is nothing broken then it is unlikely that it worth researching, at least for a DBA. Finding the broken pieces, added to the rigorous challenges from yourself, have highlighted my shift in thinking about problems in general, particularly digging deeper into the problem by asking why of the problem. I moved out of a comfort zone around what I have interpreted as action research. The why RQ allows for the superficial or surface layer problem to be problematised with relevant stakeholders, who in turn, (and as a collective) can penetrate to the deeper domains with a view to establishing the actual causes of such problems. In other words, the problem can be properly 'ventilated and saturated' which I have termed as key to staying on the problem side instead of jumping into the solution without properly understanding the problem. All of which is key learning for me and for participants involved in the exercises on this course.
Once I shifted away from strategy formation (rejected by supervisor) and shifted to observing what was going on in practice, and ended up on a lack of strategic thinking and had to source the literature for what was a new topic for me, I battled timewise to shift gears from strategy formation and strategic thinking literature and would have preferred more time to get immersed in the new literature to get the 'objects' under control through reading. I felt that I rushed it and it became messy. The strategic thinking literature that I have been immersing myself in is highly theoretical and conceptual which worries me as there is very little in terms of experiential. This is likewise with already established RQ's, there are none that I have found, and also, the literature refers to hypothesis testing which petrifies me as there is a fairly big chunk that is quants orientated.
I won't go as far as saying that the above didn't work out well when it actually has, I have learned about how the mirroring and juggling works in practice.
In all, I have learned more about problem identification, RQ's and framing than on all of the earlier coursework in this doctoral program - I am very grateful for your time and efforts, Sir. Much appreciated!
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