“…In his paper, Golde articulates a belief that although the training in professional knowledge areas, research, and pedagogy is a necessary and minimal requirement of doctoral education, this training should be motivated toward the greater purpose of preparing doctoral-level trained individuals to continue to grow and protect their respective professions. As the culminating research product, doctoral dissertations provide the discipline with information on the research interests and sophistication of the researchers entering the profession (Tansey, Zanskas, & Phillips, 2012). Historically, doctoral dissertation research has been analyzed and summarized in peer-reviewed journals to identify research trends, enhance the accessibility of research, and propose areas for future research (Beck, Janikowski, & Stebnicki, 1994, 1996; Leahy, Habeck, & Fabiano, 1988, 1989; Leahy, Habeck, & Van Tol, 1992; Leahy, Van Tol, & Habeck, 1990; Lofaro, 1981a, 1981b, 1982, 1983a, 1983b; Tansey et al, 2012).…”