EBOOK: Educational Development·What do educational developers see as the main issues to be tackled within their work? · How does the educational context and culture in which they work affect the practice of educational developers? ·How do educational developers perceive change occurring within higher education organisations? In higher education institutions worldwide, issues relating to quality in teaching and learning have gained prominence over the last two decades as student numbers, and the need to be publicly accountable, have increased. During this time a sizeable community of educational developers has emerged whose work and research focuses on the enhancement of the student experience in higher education. A significant issue for these developers is how change can be effected in organisations with well-established academic cultures and practices, beset by many other priorities and pressures. This first book-length analysis of developers as a community of practice illustrates in their own words the issues they face, their differing orientations to development (given their differing organisational cultures), and how they see their institutional role. What emerges is the contested notion of ‘development’ itself, and a tribe of developers who, though fragmented, offer a rich variation in their discourse, identity and practice. Drawing upon developers’ own voices, the book offers a lively and accessible narrative approach to this rapidly evolving area. It is a useful guide to help individual developers compare their own practice with that of others, and development teams to map the effectiveness of their own centre’s provision. Educational Development is essential reading for educational developers, teaching and learning co-ordinators and teaching fellows, as well as senior managers with remits for academic development, and directors of quality assurance. It is also of interest to those in higher education who are concerned with bringing about organisational or cultural change. |
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In order to compete successfully within a globalized economy, there are pressures for the higher education (HE) curriculum to become more vocational, for HE to be more closely linked to the needs of a global economy and employability ...
... accountability factor is the still controversial issue of the accreditation of academic staff in terms of teaching and learning, recommended in the UK by the Dearing Report (Dearing 1997). Whilst many developers have become involved ...
Such competition operates in tandem with the marketization and incipient consumerism that has become an increasing feature of higher education during this same period. The debate concerning the charging of variable tuition fees that has ...
... and non-instrumental forms of reason, arguing that in many of the human transactions of modern society – bureaucratic, technocratic and generally strategic transactions – instrumental reason has become the dominant form of reason.
It has, probably for the latter reason, become a significant area of curriculum development, and one in which many educational developers have invested considerable effort. Employability remains for many academics, however, ...
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12 | |
Chapter 02 Stances on Change | 129 |
The Educational Developer and Academic Cultures | 161 |
Postscript | 191 |
Educational development and modernism | 192 |
Community diversity and fracture | 193 |
Vocation and professional status | 196 |
References | 200 |
Index | 209 |
SHRE | 217 |
Back Cover | 219 |