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Beyond the Robbins trap: reconceptualising academic responses to change in higher education (or....quiet flows the don?)

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Beyond the Robbins trap: reconceptualising academic responses to change in higher education (or....quiet flows the don?). / Trowler, Paul.
In: Studies in Higher Education, Vol. 22, No. 3, 1997, p. 301-318.

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Trowler P. Beyond the Robbins trap: reconceptualising academic responses to change in higher education (or....quiet flows the don?). Studies in Higher Education. 1997;22(3):301-318. doi: 10.1080/03075079712331380916

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@article{44298552c1e9419387756f950c7c896b,
title = "Beyond the Robbins trap: reconceptualising academic responses to change in higher education (or....quiet flows the don?)",
abstract = "This article argues that there is an urgent need to emphasise the role of the academic as an important actor in the study of policy implementation in higher education. It asserts that research into higher education is distinctive in adopting an {\textquoteleft}over-socialised˚s conception of men and women. To demonstrate the actor's importance in the understanding of change the article draws on the results of an ethnographic single-site case study of NewU, a post-1992 university. The locus of the study was the developing {\textquoteleft}mass˚s model of higher education and curricular characteristics associated with that, particularly the credit framework, the constellation of features related to and facilitated by the assignment of credit to assessed learning, considered in a context of relative resource decline and increasing student numbers. The study highlighted the ways in which academics respond to changing contexts and take actions which have the effect, intentionally and otherwise, of changing policy outcomes. A greater understanding of academics' behaviour can be achieved by moving beyond the essentialist position adopted by many higher education researchers which gives explanatory priority to the epistemological characteristics of disciplines. Researchers also need to take account of the organisational, cultural and ideological characteristics of particular contexts and the interests and understandings of actors in them. ",
author = "Paul Trowler",
year = "1997",
doi = "10.1080/03075079712331380916",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "301--318",
journal = "Studies in Higher Education",
issn = "0307-5079",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Beyond the Robbins trap

T2 - reconceptualising academic responses to change in higher education (or....quiet flows the don?)

AU - Trowler, Paul

PY - 1997

Y1 - 1997

N2 - This article argues that there is an urgent need to emphasise the role of the academic as an important actor in the study of policy implementation in higher education. It asserts that research into higher education is distinctive in adopting an ‘over-socialised˚s conception of men and women. To demonstrate the actor's importance in the understanding of change the article draws on the results of an ethnographic single-site case study of NewU, a post-1992 university. The locus of the study was the developing ‘mass˚s model of higher education and curricular characteristics associated with that, particularly the credit framework, the constellation of features related to and facilitated by the assignment of credit to assessed learning, considered in a context of relative resource decline and increasing student numbers. The study highlighted the ways in which academics respond to changing contexts and take actions which have the effect, intentionally and otherwise, of changing policy outcomes. A greater understanding of academics' behaviour can be achieved by moving beyond the essentialist position adopted by many higher education researchers which gives explanatory priority to the epistemological characteristics of disciplines. Researchers also need to take account of the organisational, cultural and ideological characteristics of particular contexts and the interests and understandings of actors in them.

AB - This article argues that there is an urgent need to emphasise the role of the academic as an important actor in the study of policy implementation in higher education. It asserts that research into higher education is distinctive in adopting an ‘over-socialised˚s conception of men and women. To demonstrate the actor's importance in the understanding of change the article draws on the results of an ethnographic single-site case study of NewU, a post-1992 university. The locus of the study was the developing ‘mass˚s model of higher education and curricular characteristics associated with that, particularly the credit framework, the constellation of features related to and facilitated by the assignment of credit to assessed learning, considered in a context of relative resource decline and increasing student numbers. The study highlighted the ways in which academics respond to changing contexts and take actions which have the effect, intentionally and otherwise, of changing policy outcomes. A greater understanding of academics' behaviour can be achieved by moving beyond the essentialist position adopted by many higher education researchers which gives explanatory priority to the epistemological characteristics of disciplines. Researchers also need to take account of the organisational, cultural and ideological characteristics of particular contexts and the interests and understandings of actors in them.

U2 - 10.1080/03075079712331380916

DO - 10.1080/03075079712331380916

M3 - Journal article

VL - 22

SP - 301

EP - 318

JO - Studies in Higher Education

JF - Studies in Higher Education

SN - 0307-5079

IS - 3

ER -