It really is black and white when you look at it like this : reporting on a study into Australian professors' research and teaching priorities


Autoria(s): Edwards, Sylvia L.; O'Shea, Peter J.; Cretchley, Patricia; Narayan, Bhuva
Data(s)

26/09/2010

Resumo

Despite optimistic claims about the research-teaching nexus, Australian academics still face tension between research and teaching. The teaching and research priorities, beliefs and behaviours of 70 Professorial and Associate Professorial academics in Science, Information Technology and Engineering were examined in this study. The academics from 4 faculties in 3 Australian universities, were asked to rank 16 research activities and 16 matched learning and teaching (L&T) activities from each of three perspectives: job satisfaction, leadership behaviour, and perceptions of professional importance. The findings, which were remarkably consistent across the three universities, were unequivocally in favour of Research. The only L&T activity that was ranked consistently well was “Improving student satisfaction ratings for Teaching”. The data demonstrates that Australian government and university initiatives to raise the status of L&T activity are not impacting significantly on Australia’s future leaders of university learning.

Formato

text/html

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40095/

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40095/1/48.asp

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/40095/2/c40095a.pdf

http://www.chemeca2010.com/

Edwards, Sylvia L., O'Shea, Peter J., Cretchley, Patricia, & Narayan, Bhuva (2010) It really is black and white when you look at it like this : reporting on a study into Australian professors' research and teaching priorities. In Chemeca 2010 : Engineering at the Edge, 26-29 September 2010, Hilton Adelaide, Adelaide, SA. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2010 The Authors

Fonte

Faculty of Built Environment and Engineering; Faculty of Science and Technology

Palavras-Chave #130300 SPECIALIST STUDIES IN EDUCATION #Research-Teaching Nexus #Australian Universities #HERN
Tipo

Conference Paper