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Cultivating communities of teaching practice through HEA subject centres

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Title: Cultivating communities of teaching practice through HEA subject centres


1
Cultivating communities of teaching practice
through HEA subject centres
  • Philippa Hunter-Jones, Stuart McGugan, Heather
    Farley and
  • Carol Reid

2
Structure of Presentation
  • Learning in workplace settings.
  • BMAF New Lecturers Project
  • Overview
  • Methodology
  • Stages
  • Findings.
  • Conclusions.
  • Contact details.

3
Learning in workplace settings
  • transmission model.
  • competence or outcomes based model.
  • experiential model.
  • learning as participation in a community of
    practice.

4
Community membership is socially negotiated
  • If a community of practice (...) rejected a
    newcomer for some reason, that person would have
    a hard time learning (...) legitimacy can take
    many forms being useful, being sponsored (...)
    being the right kind of person (...) Granting the
    newcomers legitimacy is important because they
    are likely to fall short of what the community
    regards as competent engagement. Only with enough
    legitimacy can all their inevitable stumbling and
    violations become opportunities for learning
    rather than cause for dismissal, neglect, or
    exclusion.
  • (Wenger, 1998, p.101).

5
Communities of Practice Short and long term
value to community members (Wenger et al, 2002,
p.16)
6
The BMAF Project Overview
  • Aim of the study
  • To identify what the needs of new teaching staff
    in BMAF disciplines are and to ascertain how BMAF
    can best offer support to individuals,
    departments and universities.
  •  
  • Working definition of a New Lecturer (NL)
  • Permanent full-time or part-time contract as a
    lecturer, even if fixed term
  • Employed in a BMAF discipline area, ie not
    economics, law or hospitality
  • Within the first 3 years of their first academic
    post, possibly just into the 4th year, if
    required to achieve numbers
  • Not Graduate Teaching Assistants (GTAs).

7
Methodology
  • Semi-structured interviews with a target
    population.
  • Strategic Dean or Associate Dean and senior
    management with overall responsibility for
    academic staff resourcing, quality management and
    learning and teaching within the business school.
    The Head of the Educational Development Unit
    (EDU) or equivalent.
  •  
  • Operational 2-3 programme directors/module
    leaders within the business school and the EDU
    lead for the HEI Certificate in HE teaching.
  •  
  • New Academics 6-8 new academic staff, i.e.
    within 3-4 years of their first academic post,
    with a sample selected to reflect where possible,
    subject specialism, career stage, gender and
    contract type in the HEI.

8
Stages
  • Pilot Stage
  • September December 2008.
  • University of Liverpool University of Ulster.
  • Main Stage
  • Launched January 2009 (-June 2009).
  • 6 institutions.

9
Findings
  • Induction
  • Formal processes different levels different
    forms.
  • It is impractical to expect new lecturers to
    meet everyone in the building, but if a meeting
    or coffee could be organised with some key people
    who the new lecturer should know then that would
    be grand.

10
Findings
  • Mentoring
  • Role of mentor protection circumvent the
    system
  • Mentoring () formal face and it can be
    unhelpful sometimes
  • Seen as a means to establishing informal
    relationships
  • I was assigned a mentor formally () it didnt
    hugely take up that much time () but it did lead
    onto social relationships and really thats what
    it is all about the social relationships I think.

11
Findings
  • CPD/Training
  • Workshops research supervision student
    retention Web CT international collaboration
    research methods.
  • Certificate in Professional Studies/PGCHEP.
  • SEDA modules.
  • Training leads to informal networking
    opportunities we all liked working together and
    meeting up and we still meet up for coffee.

12
Conclusions
  • Purposeful learning is derived by newcomers
    through participation (with others) in
    activities, tasks, habits of the work community.
  • Challenge how to enrich the work community.
  • Open dialogue between inside and outside
    perspectives (Wenger, 2002).

13
What new BMAF teachers asked for
  • Provision of both generic and subject specific
    networking events for New Lecturers.
  • Support for the transition of international staff
    joining the UK Higher Education system.
  • Development of mechanisms to expose new staff
    with no industrial experience to the corporate
    environment.
  • Provision of training and resources to support
    the e-learning agenda.
  • Subject linked resource database linked to other
    relevant databases including case studies.
  • Checklist of generic issues a New Lecturer might
    encounter within their initial period of
    appointment, including for example teaching
    related issues module specification assignment
    documentation deadlines for examination papers
    external examiner requirements class lists
    timetable of Departmental/School meetings with
    requirements for attendance, etc.
  • Subject linked on-line support modules.

14
Contact details
  • Philippa Hunter-Jones, University of Liverpool.
  • E P.Hunter-Jones_at_liverpool.ac.uk.
  • Stuart McGugan, University of Liverpool.
  • E s.mcgugan_at_liverpool.ac.uk.
  • Heather Farley, University of Ulster.
  • E H.Farley_at_ulster.ac.uk.
  • Carol Reid, University of Ulster.
  • E CI.Woodside_at_ulster.ac.uk.

15
Acknowledgements
  • We would like to thank Richard Atfield (BMAF) and
    fellow members of the Project Steering Committee
    for their help and support throughout this
    project.
  • We would also like to thank staff, at both pilot
    institutions, who willingly gave up their time to
    participate in the research.
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