Doing educational development ambivalently: Applying post-colonial metaphors to educational development?


Autoria(s): Manathunga, Catherine
Data(s)

01/08/2006

Resumo

Post‐colonial theories about liminality, hybridity, unhomeliness, and identity form a novel lens through which to re‐theorise educational development work. Applying these conceptual frameworks allows practitioners and the academics they work with the opportunity to problematise some of educational development’s colonial underpinnings and assumptions. They also enable an exploration of the states of betweenness that form educational developers’ identities and impact implicitly and explicitly upon the nature of their changing practices. This paper seeks to read educational development and research supervisor development in particular “against the grain”. It also seeks to illustrate these concepts through some vignettes of my academic development practice.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:83353

Publicador

Routledge

Palavras-Chave #C1 #740301 Higher education #330199 Education Studies not elsewhere classified
Tipo

Journal Article