This paper provides an insight into the debate about academic work as a profession. It refers to the sociology of professions and explores how academics in a pre‐1992 university in England understood their work as a profession and how they interpreted their professionalism in the context of an audit culture for teaching. It reveals that academics' professionalism has affected their attitudes towards audit‐related quality mechanisms and resulted in a perceived tension between professional values and the audit. This tension was caused by the perceived bureaucracy of the audit, its time cost and the perception that the audit is a symbol of distrust in the professionalism of academics
Over the last twenty years the liberal university has increasingly been transformed into the neolibe...
This paper reflects upon careering, securing identities and ethical subjectivities in academia in th...
This paper reflects upon careering, securing identities and ethical subjectivities in academia in th...
This paper provides an insight into the debate about academic work as a profession. It refers to the...
Quality audit has become the dominant means of assessing the quality of university teaching and lear...
Proponents of the concept of the audit culture in UK higher education argue that from the late 1990s...
Declining trust in public services has led to increasing calls for higher education to be ‘accountab...
This paper discusses how the audit culture has impacted on UK academics in terms of professional ide...
AbstractRecent changes in the Malaysian academic environment, such as the categorisation of universi...
This article examines the relationship between managerialism and academic professionalism in English...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore the themes of professionalism and managerialism in how academic...
This thesis considers the issue of good practice in learning and teaching within one higher educatio...
The economic imperatives of neoliberalism combined with the technologies of New Public Management ha...
This contribution traces the impact of research and teaching audit on university life in UK. It focu...
This article, using a student outcomes definition of academic standards, reports on academics’ sense...
Over the last twenty years the liberal university has increasingly been transformed into the neolibe...
This paper reflects upon careering, securing identities and ethical subjectivities in academia in th...
This paper reflects upon careering, securing identities and ethical subjectivities in academia in th...
This paper provides an insight into the debate about academic work as a profession. It refers to the...
Quality audit has become the dominant means of assessing the quality of university teaching and lear...
Proponents of the concept of the audit culture in UK higher education argue that from the late 1990s...
Declining trust in public services has led to increasing calls for higher education to be ‘accountab...
This paper discusses how the audit culture has impacted on UK academics in terms of professional ide...
AbstractRecent changes in the Malaysian academic environment, such as the categorisation of universi...
This article examines the relationship between managerialism and academic professionalism in English...
Purpose – This paper aims to explore the themes of professionalism and managerialism in how academic...
This thesis considers the issue of good practice in learning and teaching within one higher educatio...
The economic imperatives of neoliberalism combined with the technologies of New Public Management ha...
This contribution traces the impact of research and teaching audit on university life in UK. It focu...
This article, using a student outcomes definition of academic standards, reports on academics’ sense...
Over the last twenty years the liberal university has increasingly been transformed into the neolibe...
This paper reflects upon careering, securing identities and ethical subjectivities in academia in th...
This paper reflects upon careering, securing identities and ethical subjectivities in academia in th...