The impact of governance on teaching excellence in academic microcultures
(2018)- Abstract
- Torgny Roxå and Katarina Mårtensson note that the achievement of teaching excellence is intrinsically linked with organizational structures that recognize and reward excellence. They suggest that understanding organizational structures is important in the extent to which they have the potential to either promote or jeopardize excellence. Using the three principles for governance – collegial, managerial and bureaucratic – and based on their own previous research into microcultures that have been defined as excellent both within and outside their own institution, they caution against models that primarily promote managerial and bureaucratic governance. Whilst these types of governance will always be found in any academic microculture,... (More)
- Torgny Roxå and Katarina Mårtensson note that the achievement of teaching excellence is intrinsically linked with organizational structures that recognize and reward excellence. They suggest that understanding organizational structures is important in the extent to which they have the potential to either promote or jeopardize excellence. Using the three principles for governance – collegial, managerial and bureaucratic – and based on their own previous research into microcultures that have been defined as excellent both within and outside their own institution, they caution against models that primarily promote managerial and bureaucratic governance. Whilst these types of governance will always be found in any academic microculture, collegiality is the key to producing sustainable excellent teaching practices and outcomes, and the need for organizational structures to provide space for critical conversations to take place is paramount. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/c4157e23-37be-403a-8b3a-f8515c53628c
- author
- Roxå, Torgny LU and Mårtensson, Katarina LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2018
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- host publication
- Global Perspectives on Teaching Excellence: A new era for higher education
- editor
- Broughan, Christine ; Steventon, Graham and Clouder, Lynn
- pages
- 12 pages
- publisher
- Routledge
- ISBN
- 9781315211251
- 9781351812139
- 9780415793155
- 9780415793148
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- c4157e23-37be-403a-8b3a-f8515c53628c
- date added to LUP
- 2018-12-04 11:36:25
- date last changed
- 2023-03-08 02:54:12
@inbook{c4157e23-37be-403a-8b3a-f8515c53628c, abstract = {{Torgny Roxå and Katarina Mårtensson note that the achievement of teaching excellence is intrinsically linked with organizational structures that recognize and reward excellence. They suggest that understanding organizational structures is important in the extent to which they have the potential to either promote or jeopardize excellence. Using the three principles for governance – collegial, managerial and bureaucratic – and based on their own previous research into microcultures that have been defined as excellent both within and outside their own institution, they caution against models that primarily promote managerial and bureaucratic governance. Whilst these types of governance will always be found in any academic microculture, collegiality is the key to producing sustainable excellent teaching practices and outcomes, and the need for organizational structures to provide space for critical conversations to take place is paramount.}}, author = {{Roxå, Torgny and Mårtensson, Katarina}}, booktitle = {{Global Perspectives on Teaching Excellence: A new era for higher education}}, editor = {{Broughan, Christine and Steventon, Graham and Clouder, Lynn}}, isbn = {{9781315211251}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{Routledge}}, title = {{The impact of governance on teaching excellence in academic microcultures}}, year = {{2018}}, }