This paper explores the impact of lecturers’ individual current doctoral study on their own and collective constructions of self in a changing Higher Education (HE) policy context. It focuses on how lecturers, drawn from a professional knowledge background, make sense of new institutional requirements for new lectures to have doctorates. The lecturers themselves, through ‘facilitated collaborative auto-ethnography’, generate the substantial data and analysis for this research. This study exposes the enormous pressure of the doctorate on their lives and reveals different ways in which they resist particular forms of language, affiliations and positioning within their institution. However, of particular significance in this study is their own...
This research explores the experiences of five professional practitioners from disciplines including...
Changes within the higher education sector have had significant effects on the identity of the indiv...
Higher educational research has been bashed for its aloofness and isolation as individuals question ...
This paper explores the impact of lectures’ individual current doctoral study on their own and colle...
Within the context of a competitive UK Higher Education (HE) environment, this paper explores the tr...
This article focuses on identity flux and related negotiations that occur for doctoral students who ...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Education.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. Access is restricted ...
This study explores the identity of Higher Education Lecturers in UK Further Education Colleges [HE ...
Leadership, downshifting and the experience of power in higher education Copyright © 2015 Rachel C...
This article shows part of the results of a research project: The Impact of Social Change in Higher ...
This study explores the identity of Higher Education Lecturers in UK Further Education Colleges [HE ...
This research explores the formation of academic identities in a large, northern post-1992 UK univer...
The principal rationale for this research paper is to discuss the link between a lecturers Doctoral ...
Purpose The study aims to analyse international studies on the impact that new forms of control and...
Following on from a recent study into the impact of automation of student support on facultys’ ident...
This research explores the experiences of five professional practitioners from disciplines including...
Changes within the higher education sector have had significant effects on the identity of the indiv...
Higher educational research has been bashed for its aloofness and isolation as individuals question ...
This paper explores the impact of lectures’ individual current doctoral study on their own and colle...
Within the context of a competitive UK Higher Education (HE) environment, this paper explores the tr...
This article focuses on identity flux and related negotiations that occur for doctoral students who ...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Education.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. Access is restricted ...
This study explores the identity of Higher Education Lecturers in UK Further Education Colleges [HE ...
Leadership, downshifting and the experience of power in higher education Copyright © 2015 Rachel C...
This article shows part of the results of a research project: The Impact of Social Change in Higher ...
This study explores the identity of Higher Education Lecturers in UK Further Education Colleges [HE ...
This research explores the formation of academic identities in a large, northern post-1992 UK univer...
The principal rationale for this research paper is to discuss the link between a lecturers Doctoral ...
Purpose The study aims to analyse international studies on the impact that new forms of control and...
Following on from a recent study into the impact of automation of student support on facultys’ ident...
This research explores the experiences of five professional practitioners from disciplines including...
Changes within the higher education sector have had significant effects on the identity of the indiv...
Higher educational research has been bashed for its aloofness and isolation as individuals question ...