“…It has further been linked to their longer-term professional success, to strong degree completion, and to good job placement, as demonstrating their development of socialization and identification with the professional community that is their eventual destination on graduation (e.g., Gardner & GoPaul, 2012;McAlpine & Turner, 2012). Studies of interdisciplinary graduate students returning from professional practice have extended elements of graduate student identity development to factors such as metacognitive and conceptual self-awareness, linked to graduate school identities such as scholar-researcher (Davis & Lester, 2016), as well as specific alignment with professional preparation (e.g., Hardré & Chen, 2006;Mevorach & Miron, 2011).…”