Part-time research students: the`reserve army` of research students for universities


Autoria(s): Evans, Terry
Contribuinte(s)

Kiley, Margaret

Mullins, Gerry

Data(s)

01/01/2002

Resumo

Over the past twenty years, in Australia, there has been a steady growth in the numbers of part-time research students. However, they have generally been invisible in government policy on research training, and have rarely been the focus of specific treatment in universities, where the full-time scholarship-holder is taken as the norm. Yet, these are people who often undertake their research in their workplaces on problems germane to their work. They do so with relatively less ‘drain on the public purse’ and they are well-placed to ensure their research has effect. This paper suggests that this ‘reserve army’ of research labour—part-time research students—could benefit from the integration of the perspectives that have driven other aspects of adult education with those, often economic rationalist perspectives, that have driven research training policy. In this way, government policy-makers may appreciate that this ‘reserve army’ provides good value, and universities may shape their research training policies and practices to provide support, infrastructure and supervision that matches the needs and contexts of part-time students, and which facilitates ‘technology transfer’ and links between universities and industries and the professions.<br />

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30004668

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Centre for the Enhancement of Learning, Teaching and Scholarship (CELTS), University of Canberra

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30004668/evans-parttime-2002.pdf

http://www.qpr.edu.au/2002/evanst_2002.pdf

Direitos

2002, University of Canberra, Centre for the Enhancement of Learning, Teaching and Scholarship (CELTS)

Palavras-Chave #Universities and colleges -- Graduate work #Education, Higher
Tipo

Conference Paper