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Shaping a culture: oral histories of academic development in Australian universities
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Shaping a culture: oral histories of academic development in Australian universities

Alison Lee, Catherine Manathunga and Peter Kandlbinder
Higher Education Research & Development, Vol.29(3), pp.307-318
2010
url
https://doi.org/10.1080/07294360903252128View
Published Version

Abstract

Education academic development activism history Research service
Academic development has had an approximately forty-year history within Australian higher education, paralleling the major expansions and changes in the sector, both nationally and internationally. Its principal concerns have been the improvement of teaching and the professional development of the academics who teach. The history of academic development has gone largely undocumented and unexamined at a national level, in Australia and elsewhere. However, as university teaching has increasingly become important in relation to quality in higher education, academic development has become a central player in the work of universities. It becomes of particular importance at this time to garner a more thorough understanding of the continuities as well as the discontinuities in the meanings and practices of university teaching and in the work of those whose role has been to support its development. This article presents a discussion of two key themes identified from a set of oral history interviews conducted with early leaders in academic development in Australia. These themes offer different insights into issues and understandings of academic development in today's university. The first concerns a perennial issue in academic development - the struggle to define academic development's emerging ethos in relation to research and service to the broader university's endeavour. The second theme represents an issue that has been forgotten or marginalised in the official accounts of academic development but which lives on in the 'lore' of the field - the role of activism in the shaping of university teaching and academic development.

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Domestic collaboration
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Education & Educational Research

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#3 Good Health and Well-Being
#4 Quality Education

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