Title: Literacy practices, academic identities
1Literacy practices, academic identities
development
- SRHE Academic Practice Network
- 13th February 2009
- Lesley Gourlay
- Coventry University
2Background
- Funded by Preparing for Academic Practice CETL
, Oxford University - Focus on experience of early career academics
- To gain understanding of how literacy practices,
roles identities are interrelated - Questioning dominant models of transition
3Transitions
- Development tended to focus on generic principles
of teaching learning - Assumption academic practices known from PhD /
communicated in discipline. - Research into academic role Trowler Knight
1999, Barkhuizen 2002, Knight, Tait Yorke 2006 - Transition theorised in apprentice-master or
communities of practice model (e.g Warhurst
2008) assuming novice will learn via legitimate
peripheral participation (Lave Wenger 1998). - However, transition more challenging complex in
contemporary HE, identities increasingly fluid
contested (Barnett Di Napoli 2007, Clegg 2008,
Archer 2008)
4Tacit knowledge practices
- Transition experiences often characterised by
confusion - Tacit knowledge (Polanyi 1966) of disciplinary
norms (Becher Trowler 2001) - engagement with valorised literacy practices of
discipline tend not to be explicitly developed
(Murray Moore 2008) e.g. writing journal
articles - But also normally overlooked everyday literacy
practices (Steirer Lea 2008) - Linked to identity work presentation of self in
transition Â
5Archer 2008
- Investigation of nature formation of
contemporary academic identities - Semi-structured interviews
- 8 younger academics
- 6 female, 2 male
- 4 Russell group, 1 pre 92, 3 post 92
6Boundaries of authenticity
- Archer authenticity legitimacy central to
formation of social relations in academy - Bourdieu 2001
- HE particularly dependent on how it is
represented by its agents, so is both object and
subject of rival / hostile representations - Looks at how boundaries of authenticity /
legitimacy are set up, enacted, policed by
powerful actors - Archer less powerful social actors position
themselves in debates around authenticity - (Literature of authenticity reviewed by Kreber et
al 2007)
7Nexus of competing discourses
- Younger academics at nexus of competing
discourses around what it means (or might mean)
to be an academic (Archer 2008 387) - Uses Colley James (2005) notion of
professional identities as disrupted processes
involving becoming and unbecoming - Emphasis on context, role of age, ethnicity,
class, gender status
8Inauthenticity
- Experiences of inauthenticity were exacerbated
by - Dominant performative ethos, need for fabrication
(Ball 2003) - Age, ethnicity, class, gender status
- Struggles for authenticity and success a desired
yet refused identity - Attempts at becoming / threat of unbecoming
9Inauthenticity performativity
- Archer pressure to produce the right outputs
- Neoliberal surveillance, audit assessment
(Davies Petersen 2005) - Self-governance (Butler 1997)
- Governmentality of the soul (Rose 1990)
- 4 RAE-able publications, bids subject as set
of outcomes (Archer 2008 390) - Unfulfilling soul-destroying, symbolic attacks
- Threatening to authenticity, marginalising
unbecoming of subject
10Personal projects
- they constructed their academic identity as a
form of principled personal project (Clegg
2008 17) underpinned by core values of
intellectual endeavour, criticality, ethics and
professionalism. Professionalism was evoked as
the embodying of a principled, ethical and
responsible approach to work and work
relationships, and they all espoused collegiality
and collaboration (Archer 2008 397)
11Feeling academic involved
- Being intellectual, critical knowledgeable
ethical, professional respectful
collaborative, collegiate part of wider
community - Having insider knowledge, credentials
- Doing research-related activities, writing
publications delivering conference papers
12To explore
- How do literacy practices in particular relate to
this process (particularly doing)? - How they relate to emergent identities?
- Issues different for mid-career new / lecturers
in practice professional disciplines in post-92
context? - What are orientations towards literacy practices,
academic discourses symbolic artefacts?
13Methodology
- 5 new lecturers recruited via PgCert at UK
post-92 university, to recruit 5 more - Initial interviews career histories, feelings
experiences of transition - Audio journals over 2 two-week periods, focused
on day-to-day practices, experiences of new post
identity. - Audio likely to be less onerous than text, may
combine with further evidence - Journals basis for two semi-structured
qualitative interviews to provide participant
perspective. Case study thematic analysis. - Volunteers offered transcripts to edit, can use
as evidence in Pg Cert portfolio. - Small-scale opportunity sample. However, hope
depth of qualitative data semi-longitudinal
nature will generate implications/ resonances
beyond context / with literature.
14Participants
- Sophie experienced healthcare practitioner,
going back to practice as experience of HE so
negative. - Patrick was senior manager at another university
in UK, now lecturer in practice discipline. MA in
humanities subject, MSc by research in practice
discipline. - Joanne was healthcare practitioner in another
part of England. - Grace was specialist nurse. Has Law degree and
MSc in Nursing. - Jane East Asian engineering professional, has
MSc PhD in her specialist field. Lived in UK
several years.
15Academic literacy practices
- RAE / bidding for funding not mentioned
- Research reading writing not engaged in except
by Jane - Clever and scary, something to be tackled
- Desirable but indulgence or selfish
- time away from family needs (Patrick)
- should be married with kids instead (Grace)
- should be 100 devoted to patients instead
(implied by Grace) - Some interest in pedagogic research
- Reading writing practices orientated to
providing good teaching / materials - Emphasis on minimal / skim reading to keep up
with good practice, using theory to enhance
practice
16Data handout
- Transitions crises
- Transition calling
- Reactions to academic discourses
- Sophies article
17Boundary literacy practices
- Patrick reads publishes fiction, competes with
demands of academic reading writing. MA on
literature themes of exile, he identifies with
due to working class background educated away
from my roots - Grace Always having a book on the go lead to
marginalisation resentment in practice setting.
Published ebook for patients 'It was a cathartic
exercise for us because we sat, and you know we
stood on our soapboxes so long that we decided we
needed to do it - Jane struggles with academic reading writing
in English threaten her sense of legitimacy as an
academic
18Textual enactments of academic life
- The authoring and authorising of text is the
issue in education Ruth (200899) - Account of production of portfolio, preparation
of CV and submission of research assessment
report as textual enactments of academic life
(99) - Illustration of the terrors of performativity
(Ball 2003)
19Exiles, imposters, traitors, intermediaries?
- Isolated, alone in rooms, not seeing anyone all
day lost, exiled, in a halfway house, at
the bottom of the tree, in the dark, in this
glass bowl, on the moon, at sea - Not clever enough, How did I get here?, sink
or swim, need a guidebook, there arent any
rules - Selfish, different, stuck-up, special, family
pride - Liminal intermediaries between practice
academia - Translators of terminology specialist
discourses - Interpreters of academic literacies to
practitioners
20Hybridity / ambiguity
- Data highlights issues for mid-career, practice
discipline lecturers - Hybridity
- Motivations for taking up roles
- Values
- Complex, situated, personal pressures
- Fragility of identities / authenticity
- More subtle forms of performativity/governance at
play - Roles, practice values vs. academic values
- Comfort with practice discourse vs. academic
speak - Orientation towards / presentation of self via
range of literacy practices (research writing/
teaching writing / boundary literacies/reflective
writing)
21Academic literacies wider theory
- Maybin (2000) literacy practices Foucauldian
concepts of discourse (1980), Bahktins notion of
intertextuality (1980) Faircloughs Critical
Discourse Analysis (1992) - Bartlett Holland (2002) literacy practices
linguistic habitus (Bourdieu 1993) - Collins Blott (2002) practice-based forms of
analysis link them to wider social contexts
22Models/lenses on transition
- Communities of practice inadequately theorises
writing (Lea 2005) - Liminality thresholds purchase on role
ambiguity /struggle in transition (Van Gennep
1909, Turner 1969) - Educational habitus strong explanatory framework
for social class (Bourdieu 1993) - Framing (Goffman 1974) notion of structures of
expectation (Tannen 1993) may hold potential for
transitions (Penman Gourlay 2007)
23Implications for development of academic practice
- Certainties / cognitive focus in much HE
research increasingly contested (e.g. Malcolm
Zukas 1999, Hussey Smith 2002, Haggis 2003) - Meaningful academic development socially
situated sensitive to variation hybridity of
lecturer identities - Orientations to literacy practices - how new
lecturer constructs self in relation to
institution / field / power / communities? - Issues of literacies, discourse, power identity
foregrounded? - Avoid managerialist / audit discourses
- More recognition of increased staff diversity?
- Reflective portfolios more governance of the
soul?
24Thank you