| Description |
? What is the current state of higher education internationally? ? How may we construct an alternative vision for higher education? ? What might such an alternative look like? Within the knowledge economy, higher education has expanded and changed through policies and practices of audit, performativity and `market? values. In the face of such shifts, Reclaiming Universities from a Runaway World contributes to a timely and important debate around the civic function and democratic values of universities. The book is divided into three parts: ? `Dark Times? critiques the effects of contemporary higher education on professional life, research and curricula. ? `Languages of Reconstruction? explores alternative conceptualisations of what universities and higher learning are for, reaffirming difference, deliberative dialogue and the intrinsic goods of learning. The book argues that different languages enable different ways of thinking about university life. ? `Pointing to Hope? builds upon the foundations of the previous section to demonstrate how practices in pedagogy, new technologies, management, research and scholarship can be developed. This book offers a compelling and workable new vision for higher education. It is unique in bringing together critique with alternative ways of thinking about and doing higher education, providing theoretical and empirical grounding and focusing on international issues. With its international authorship, it provides insight for anyone interested in debates about the directions of higher education, including students, researchers, higher education managers and policy makers.
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| Author Biography |
Editors:Melanie Walker is Reader, and Professor Jon Nixon, both in the Department of Educational Studies, University of Sheffield. Contributors: 1. Ronald Barnett is Professor of Higher Education at the Institute of Education, University of London
Jean Barr is Professor of Adult and Continuing Education at the University of Glasgow Marie Brennan is Professor of Education and Dean of Education at the University of South Australia, Colin Bundy is Director of SOAS, Morwenna Griffiths is Professor of Educational Research at Nottingham Trent University, Lisa Lucas is a Lecturer in the Graduate School of Education, University of Bristol, Michael Peters is Professor of Education at the University of Glasgow, Steven Selden is Professor in the Curriculum Theory and Development Program at the University of Maryland College Park, USA. Rob Walker is Professor of Education at the University of East Anglia, Lew Zipin is lecturer in sociology/policy of education at the University of South Australia.
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| Table of Contents |
Contents Notes on Contributors Preface Introduction Melanie Walker and Jon Nixon Part 1: `Dark Times? 1 Managerial Governmentality and the Suppression of Ethics Lew Zipin and Marie Brennan 2. Reclaiming Academic Work from Regulation and Relegation Lisa Lucas 3 The Neo-Conservative Assault on the Undergraduate Curriculum Steven Selden 4 Higher Education, Globalization and the Knowledge Economy Michael Peters Part 2: Languages of Reconstruction 5 Training the Imagination to Go Visiting Jean Barr and Morwenna Griffiths 6 Sitting Uneasily at the Table Judyth Sachs 7 Learning the Language of Deliberative Democracy Jon Nixon Part 3: Pointing to Hope 8 Pedagogies of Beginning Melanie Walker 9 The New Media in an Old Institution: Implementing Change/Containing the Potential for Transformation Rob Walker 10 Under New Management? A Critical History of Managerialism in British Universities Colin Bundy 11 Beyond the Impossibly Good Place: Research and Scholarship Melanie Walker Epilogue Reclaiming Universities from a Runaway World Ron Barnett Index |



