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Coming to know in higher education: theorising faculty entry to new work contexts

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Coming to know in higher education: theorising faculty entry to new work contexts. / Trowler, Paul; Knight, Peter T.
In: Higher Education Research and Development, Vol. 19, No. 1, 05.2000, p. 27-42.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Trowler, P & Knight, PT 2000, 'Coming to know in higher education: theorising faculty entry to new work contexts', Higher Education Research and Development, vol. 19, no. 1, pp. 27-42. https://doi.org/10.1080/07294360050020453

APA

Vancouver

Trowler P, Knight PT. Coming to know in higher education: theorising faculty entry to new work contexts. Higher Education Research and Development. 2000 May;19(1):27-42. doi: 10.1080/07294360050020453

Author

Trowler, Paul ; Knight, Peter T. / Coming to know in higher education : theorising faculty entry to new work contexts. In: Higher Education Research and Development. 2000 ; Vol. 19, No. 1. pp. 27-42.

Bibtex

@article{d87dc68b113148998c2b845b256ea712,
title = "Coming to know in higher education: theorising faculty entry to new work contexts",
abstract = "This research contributes to practice in the induction of faculty staff entering new work contexts and identifies theories that are worth further testing. Lightly structured interviews with 24 new entrants to the academic profession were complemented by re-analysis of transcripts from another interview study with 50 faculty members and by appraisal of data from three North American studies. The account of the processes of socialisation into academic life that was developed from repeated analysis of these data sets leads to some propositions about better induction. As the emerging account was repeatedly tested by appraising it for goodness of fit with the data, it was found that activity system theory and the idea of communities of practice contributed to a fuller and more coherent position. Consequently, it is argued that there is value in treating these two notions as heuristics that can evoke fresh understandings of higher education practices.",
author = "Paul Trowler and Knight, {Peter T.}",
year = "2000",
month = may,
doi = "10.1080/07294360050020453",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
pages = "27--42",
journal = "Higher Education Research and Development",
issn = "0729-4360",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Coming to know in higher education

T2 - theorising faculty entry to new work contexts

AU - Trowler, Paul

AU - Knight, Peter T.

PY - 2000/5

Y1 - 2000/5

N2 - This research contributes to practice in the induction of faculty staff entering new work contexts and identifies theories that are worth further testing. Lightly structured interviews with 24 new entrants to the academic profession were complemented by re-analysis of transcripts from another interview study with 50 faculty members and by appraisal of data from three North American studies. The account of the processes of socialisation into academic life that was developed from repeated analysis of these data sets leads to some propositions about better induction. As the emerging account was repeatedly tested by appraising it for goodness of fit with the data, it was found that activity system theory and the idea of communities of practice contributed to a fuller and more coherent position. Consequently, it is argued that there is value in treating these two notions as heuristics that can evoke fresh understandings of higher education practices.

AB - This research contributes to practice in the induction of faculty staff entering new work contexts and identifies theories that are worth further testing. Lightly structured interviews with 24 new entrants to the academic profession were complemented by re-analysis of transcripts from another interview study with 50 faculty members and by appraisal of data from three North American studies. The account of the processes of socialisation into academic life that was developed from repeated analysis of these data sets leads to some propositions about better induction. As the emerging account was repeatedly tested by appraising it for goodness of fit with the data, it was found that activity system theory and the idea of communities of practice contributed to a fuller and more coherent position. Consequently, it is argued that there is value in treating these two notions as heuristics that can evoke fresh understandings of higher education practices.

U2 - 10.1080/07294360050020453

DO - 10.1080/07294360050020453

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:0141648265

VL - 19

SP - 27

EP - 42

JO - Higher Education Research and Development

JF - Higher Education Research and Development

SN - 0729-4360

IS - 1

ER -