The Scholarship Without Borders Journal
Abstract
This study examines how narrative storytelling functions as a pedagogical mechanism for advancing systems thinking in doctoral education. Drawing on a qualitative narrative synthesis of publicly available scholarly literature, the analysis explores how narrative practices support sensemaking, complexity integration, and collaborative learning among doctoral students. Grounded in Senge’s (2006) learning organization framework, the study investigates how storytelling contributes to the development of mental models, shared vision, personal mastery, and team learning in advanced academic contexts. Findings indicate that narrative engagement enhances cognitive integration, deepens understanding of systemic interdependence, and strengthens collaborative discourse among emerging scholars. The study extends leadership and doctoral education scholarship by theorizing narrative storytelling as epistemological scaffolding through which systems thinking becomes cognitively accessible and pedagogically actionable in leadership preparation environments.
Recommended Citation
Weber, Ryan Charles and Scott, Kathleen Teresa
(2026)
"Utilizing Research Narratives to Advance Systems Thinking in Doctoral Education,"
The Scholarship Without Borders Journal: Vol. 4:
Iss.
2, Article 12.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.57229/2834-2267.1093
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.pepperdine.edu/swbj/vol4/iss2/12