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An Academic Life: A Handbook for New Academics PDF

206 Pages·2010·3.088 MB·English
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C S . I Academic life is complex and adjusting to life as a new academic requires a range of skills and E M A D E abilities to fulfi l the multiple roles the academic must play as researcher, teacher and administrator. I H T D An Academic Life assists in the process of orienting new academics to the nature of academic E A D A life, particularly greater accountability in all aspects of academic life, growth in the numbers of N academic staff, and increasing demands and expectations from the growing student population. B C D Y This title addresses the key areas of academic work: teaching and learning; research, research A B C training and publication; administration and community service; and the social and cultural A O N aspects of academic life. W O T eduRcaotboersrt fCroamnt aw evall raientdy oJifl ld Siscceivpalikn eh abvaec bkgrorouugnhdt st otgo eptrhoevri dnee wcl eaacar daenmd ipcrsa acntidca el xinpseigrihetnsc iendto the WE EN R O F K L journey of entering the world of academic life. Any new academic will fi nd this book an invaluable L resource for conceptualising and contextualising the academic world they are now part of. & S C E V At one time, every new lecturer thinks, ‘I wish there was a handbook on how to A be an academic’. With the publication of An Academic Life there fi nally is! The K case studies add hugely to the accessibility of the theoretical materials and help A C A D E M I C to limit the isolation of the new academic feeling, ‘Why does this only happen to me!’ The book provides the foundational questions a new staff member should think about when constructing courses, organising their workload and thinking a L i f e strategically about a long-term academic career. I would highly recommend it. n DR KATHLEEN BUTLER A Senior Lecturer, Centre for Teaching and Learning, University of Newcastle C A Dr Robert H. Cantwell is a Senior Lecturer Dr Jill J. Scevak is a Senior Lecturer at the D in Education at the University of Newcastle. University of Newcastle in the discipline of His research interests lie in the broad fi eld educational and developmental psychology. E of learning theory and its applications to She is also a registered psychologist in NSW, M educational and professional settings. a member of the Australian Psychological His specifi c interests lie in the area of Society (APS) and an executive member I metacognition and learning, with a focus of the Newcastle branch of the APS. Her C on how individuals think about and respond research interests are in the fi eld of cognitive to the complex intellectual and affective psychology and, in particular, individual l demands of learning and professional differences in the management of cognition, i practice. metacognition and affect in learning across f a variety of learning contexts: primary, secondary, tertiary and professional. e ISBN 978-0-86431-908-1 9 780864 319081 EDITED BY ROBERT H. CANTWELL & JILL J. SCEVAK c s . i m a e d h a a n c d a b o w o e k n ro f An Academic Life a handbook for new academics edited by robert h. cantwell & jill j. scevak acer Press First published 2010 by ACER Press, an imprint of Australian Council for Educational Research Ltd 19 Prospect Hill Road, Camberwell Victoria, 3124, Australia www.acerpress.com.au [email protected] Text copyright © Robert H. Cantwell and Jill J. Scevak 2010 Design and typography copyright © ACER Press 2010 This book is copyright. All rights reserved. Except under the conditions described in the Copyright Act 1968 of Australia and subsequent amendments, and any exceptions permitted under the current statutory licence scheme administered by Copyright Agency Limited (www.copyright.com.au), no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, transmitted, broadcast or communicated in any form or by any means, optical, digital, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without the written permission of the publisher. Edited by Maureen O’Keefe Cover design and typesetting by Mason Design Cover image © Doug Plummer/Photonica/Getty Images Printed in Australia by BPA Print Group National Library of Australia Cataloguing-in-Publication data: Author: Cantwell, Robert Harley. Title: An academic life: a handbook for new academics / Robert H. Cantwell and Jill J. Scevak. ISBN: 9780864319081 (pbk.) Subjects: College teaching—Vocational guidance—Australia. College teachers—Australia. Other Authors/Contributors: Scevak, Jill Janina. Dewey Number: 378.120994 Foreword I was initially employed in my first academic appointment on a two-year contract and when I sat in my office I was greeted with two thin manila folders and a few loose unrelated pages regarding the course I was about to teach. This evidence was contrary to the information provided during a coffee shop interview, when I was informed that the units were well developed and organised, and I’d have very little to prepare! I faced 60 undergraduate students four weeks after this event. I recall during my first week of this first job being taken aside and given three pearls of advice in hushed tones some 31 years ago at a Canadian university. 1. Don’t have an affair in your office because the walls are thin and everyone will know about it! 2. Be careful of the dragon secretary in the front office. 3. Don’t get too close to students as they will turn on you. In retrospect, the words of advice and the assurances were the sum total of my official induction, some may say more like a baptism of fire! Gone are the days when it was believed that good teachers were born and not made. And it is said less often these days that university teachers who can’t teach do research. University academics are familiar with such jibes from guests at cocktail parties about having extensive holidays, a stress-free and protected environment, living in an ivory tower, and of students needing to get out and work in the ‘real’ world. One of the solid contributions of An Academic Life: A handbook for new academics is that many of these myths are dispensed through carefully crafted, informative, balanced and timely advice laced with thoughtful wisdom based on the extensive experience of the 24 Australian and New Zealand authors. This book is about the intentionality of practice and attests to the position that the style, persona, activities and contribution of beginning university academics can be crafted, shaped through modelling, instruction, supervision, feedback, encouragement and demonstration. This text also expounds the value of self- reflection and of planning, the role of motivation and, that one vital characteristic, personal resourcefulness. Sound scholarship in teaching and research is never haphazard for it has purpose, intent and is goal directed. The beginning university academic also needs to be prepared to manage interpersonal obstacles, regular distractions, occasional red herrings, student discipline and equity issues, appeals to grades and dealing with non-committed students. All this and more competes with the mantra of developing a ‘track record’, learning the subtleties of the discipline and staff whims and outside interests, getting along with support staff and of surviving probation. iii FOREwORD An Academic Life: A handbook for new academics represents part of a growing field of antipodean publications devoted to improving the experience of our university students, research candidates and their supervisors, and new academ- ics. The 21 chapters are informative and practical, and are structured around core components of the academic curriculum vitae: teaching, research, administration and community involvement. I commend the editors in devising a text that will be highly beneficial as foundational reading in courses on university teaching and learning, and induction programs for new academics. This text offers to the often-struggling new academic a sense of hope, struc- ture, an understanding of the rhythm of university life and a useful tool that will serve to set the template for a long and fruitful academic career. There is no doubt that the first five years of academic life is transformational, over-flowing with opportunities for intellectual and personal growth, active learning, and a chance to understand and engage with the political structures within the university system. Alongside my two manila folders those years ago I yearned for a companion text to guide me though, to assist my thinking, support my ideas and to help me cope with the daily tough decisions that had to be made. An Academic Life: A handbook for new academics would have been of immense value and will no doubt well serve the next generation of recently graduated research candidates, and new and beginning university academics. Adjunct Professor Carey Denholm Past Dean and Professor of Graduate Research Teaching Excellence Awardee and Registered Psychologist University of Tasmania iv Contents Foreword iii About the editors vii Authors viii chapter 1 Some introductory thoughts 1 Robert H. Cantwell and Jill J. Scevak SECTION 1 Stories of new academics chapter 2 Learning how to be an academic – The story of a new academic in the sciences 6 Danielle Skropeta chapter 3 Learning how to be an academic – The story of a new academic in education 10 Kelly Freebody SECTION 2 teaching and learning chapter 4 Aligning intellectual development with curriculum, instruction and assessment 16 Robert H. Cantwell, Jill J. Scevak and Robert J. Parkes chapter 5 The nature of academic learning 25 Robert H. Cantwell chapter 6 Assessment: Principles and practice 35 Gavin T. Brown chapter 7 Lectures 45 Jill J. Scevak chapter 8 The tutorial as cognitive apprenticeship: Developing discipline-based thinking 55 Robert J. Parkes and Nona Muldoon v CONTENTS Supporting scholarly tutors to conduct effective tutorials 65 chapter 9 Kathryn Sutherland Teaching and learning in a laboratory setting 75 chapter 10 Siegbert Schmid and Justin R. Read Teaching online: Issues and challenges for chapter 11 on-campus and distance instruction 83 Caroline Steel Teaching within diversity 97 chapter 12 Nina Burridge and Richard walker SECTION 3 research and research training Preparing for a career as a researcher 110 chapter 13 Sid Bourke and Allyson Holbrook Writing for publication 120 chapter 14 Pamela J. Green and John A. Bowden Research training: Supervising chapter 15 and managing research students 130 Pamela J. Green and John A. Bowden SECTION 4 administration and community service Academic administration: Becoming involved 140 chapter 16 Stephen Crump Professional activities and community service 150 chapter 17 Clare McBeath SECTION 5 academic workplace Academic life: An interpersonal dimension 160 chapter 18 Jane Goodman-Delahunty and Ben walker A lifeline for emerging academics 173 chapter 19 Dawn Garbett and Belinda Tynan Academic work: A developmental perspective 182 chapter 20 Gerlese Åkerlind Some concluding thoughts 192 chapter 21 Jill J. Scevak and Robert H. Cantwell vi About the editors Dr Robert H. Cantwell is a Senior Lecturer in Education at the University of Newcastle. His research interests lie in the broad field of learning theory and its applications to educational and professional settings. His specific interests lie in the area of metacognition and learning, with a focus on how individuals think about and respond to the complex intellectual and affective demands of learning and professional practice. Dr Jill J. Scevak is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Newcastle in the discipline of Educational and Developmental Psychology. Jill is also a registered psychologist in NSW, a member of the Australian Psychological Society (APS), and an executive member of the Newcastle branch of the APS. Her research interests are in the field of cognitive psychology: in particular, individual dif ferences in the management of cognition, metacognition and affect in learning across a variety of learning contexts (primary, secondary, tertiary and professional). vii Authors (listed alphabetically) Gerlese Åkerlind is Associate Professor and Director of the Centre for Educational Development and Academic Methods (CEDAM) at the Australian National University (ANU). CEDAM supports the enhancement of educational quality and standards at ANU, including educational development for academic staff. Gerlese’s research and scholarship primarily focuses on the nature, and changing nature, of higher education and academic work. This includes inves- tigations of the academic experience of teaching, research, academic free dom, academic development and career development for early-career academics. She is an honorary Research Associate of the Oxford Learning Institute, University of Oxford, and a member of the Editorial Boards for the journals Educational Research Review, Learning and Teaching in Higher Education and the International Journal of Researcher Development. Sid Bourke is a Professor in Education at the University of Newcastle, and currently teaches research methods to graduate students and supervises several PhD students. He has been responsible for international and several national projects, including projects supported by Australian Research Council (ARC) Discovery and Linkage grants. Recent publications have focused on PhD completion, attrition and thesis assessment, and his current major studies are concerned with the criteria thesis examiners use, and the metacognitive attri butes of PhD candidates. John A. Bowden is Professor Emeritus at RMIT University and Adjunct Professor at Swinburne University where he collaborates with Pam Green in the Postgraduate Research Education Program. He has over 150 publications including The University of Learning: Beyond quality and competence (with Ference Marton) and Doing Developmental Phenomenography (edited with Pam Green). Gavin T. Brown is an Associate Professor and Associate Head of the Department of Psychological Studies at the Hong Kong Institute of Education. His research interests are in the psychology of assessment with a major focus on measuring viii AUTHORS academic performance, affective attitudes, and investigating how students’ and teachers’ understandings of assessment affect practices and outcomes. His book on this last topic is Conceptions of Assessment: Understanding what assessment means to teachers and students, published by Nova Science Publishers in New York. Nina Burridge is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Technology, Sydney. Her main research interests centre on Indigenous education and, more recently, ethno-cultural diversity and education. Her work explores the challenges and opportunities faced by educational institutions and their related communities as the impacts of globalisation and ethno-cultural diversity become a reality for many countries. Robert H. Cantwell is a Senior Lecturer in Educational Psychology at the University of Newcastle. His research is in the area of learning theory and its applications to higher educational and professional settings. He has published widely in many aspects of student and professional learning. Stephen Crump is the Pro Vice-Chancellor and Director of the Central Coast Campuses and a Professor in Education at the University of Newcastle. He is an internationally renowned scholar in educational policy. His recent research has been in regional and remote area education, with a focus on both the development of e-learning capability and the identification and development of employment- related skills in regional areas. These have been supported by a number of ARC grants. Kelly Freebody is a Lecturer in Drama and English Education in the Faculty of Education and Social Work, University of Sydney. Her teaching and research interests include drama; secondary English; literacy; social justice; and quali tative research methods, particularly conversation analysis and membership categorisation analysis. Dawn Garbett is a Principal Lecturer and Associate Dean, Teaching and Learning in the Faculty of Education, University of Auckland, New Zealand. She is an award-winning teacher educator and foundation member of Ako Aotearoa Academy of Tertiary Teaching Excellence. Her research interests focus on en han- cing the quality of teaching and learning for tertiary students. Jane Goodman-Delahunty is a Professor at Charles Sturt University in the School of Psychology and Australian Graduate School of Policing. A former President of the American Psychology-Law Society and Editor of Psychology, Public Policy and Law (2001–2006), she is a Commissioner with the NSW Law ix

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Most books are stored in the elastic cloud where traffic is expensive. For this reason, we have a limit on daily download.