1st Edition

Changing Identities in Higher Education Voicing Perspectives

Edited By Ronald Barnett, Roberto Di Napoli Copyright 2008
244 Pages
by Routledge

240 Pages
by Routledge

240 Pages
by Routledge

In this timely and innovative book scholars from Europe, the UK, North America and Australia, explore their own sense of identity, reflecting both on their research and scholarly interests, and their work experiences. Taking the form of a debate, Changing Identities in Higher Education helps to widen the contemporary space for debates on the future of higher education itself. The book is... Read more

Introduction.  Higher Education: Why Identities and Voices?  Preamble: Knowledge Identities  Part 1: Identities and Voices in Higher Education  1. Being an Academic Today  2. Have Students got a Voice?  3. Identities of Academic Developers: Critical Friends in the Academy?  4. The Changing Voices and Identities of Professional  Administrators and Managers  5. Managers: Academics and/or Business People?  Part 2: Perspectives  6. The Managers’ Perspectives  7. The Academics’ Perspectives  8. The Staff Developers’ Perspectives  9. The Students’ Perspectives.  Conclusions.  Changing voices and Identities in Higher Education?

Biography

Professor Ronald Barnett is Pro-Director for Longer Term Strategy and Professor of Higher Education at the Institute of Education, University of London.

Roberto Di Napoli is Senior Lecturer in Educational Development at Imperial College London. He has extensive teaching experience in higher education, both in the UK and other parts of Europe.

This is a timely book of exploration that seeks illumination from experiences as well as theories. It moves forward studies of academic identities in a number of critically important ways. Taking as its point of departure the supercomplexity confronting and pervading contemporary higher education, it locates studies of identities firmly in the diversity of actors that shape and are shaped by it.

Mary Henkel, Professor Associate, Brunel University, UK

I was captivated by this book's vibrant expression of fragmented identities. It's wide variety of voices speak of the complexity of higher education with authenticity and candour and without easy simplifications. A good read that left me much to ponder over.

Stephen Rowland, Professor of Higher Education, University College London, UK