Skip to Main Content

Dissertation Resources - Education

Research tools to help you through the dissertation journey

What is a Dissertation?

Dissertation Support

 

A dissertation is an in-depth research project that represents the culmination of your doctoral studies. It demonstrates your ability to identify a problem or question in your field, conduct a thorough review of the literature, design and carry out original research, and contribute new knowledge or insights to the discipline. For EdD and PhD students in education, dissertations often address real-world challenges in teaching, learning, leadership, or policy. The process involves multiple stages—including proposal development, data collection, analysis, and writing—and requires both academic rigor and personal commitment.

IRB (Institutional Review Board)

Pepperdine University Institutional Review Board (IRB) aims to provide a full circle of protection for research participants and researchers by:

  • Promoting and facilitating the protection of rights, welfare, and dignity of human research participants;

  • Helping ensure compliance with federal regulations, state laws, and University policies and national standards for research involving human research participants;

  • Providing timely and directed high quality education, review, and monitoring for human research projects;

  • Assist investigators in conducting ethical, sound research of the highest quality that complies with applicable regulations.

 

When is an application necessary?

When a faculty member, student, and/or employee of Pepperdine University wishes to conduct research, the research proposal must be reviewed by one of the following Graduate and Professional Schools (GPS) IRB

EdD vs. PhD Dissertations: A Comparison

 

Feature

EdD Dissertation

PhD Dissertation

Purpose

Apply research to real-world problems in education

Contribute original theoretical research to the field

Focus

Practical, problem-solving, often site-based

Conceptual, theory-driven, generalizable research

Audience 

Educational practitioners and leaders

Scholars, researchers, academic community

Career Goal

Leadership roles in education (e.g., principal, superintendent)

Academic or research positions (e.g., professor, policy analyst)

Methodology

Often qualitative or mixed methods; practitioner-oriented

Typically more rigorous theoretical frameworks and methods

Outcome

Actionable solutions and applied change

New knowledge and scholarly contribution

 

AI Guidance

For more information and guidance on AI usage, please see the library's AI Learning and Research Guide here.