Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Peer engagement for teaching and learning: competence, autonomy and social solidarity in academic microcultures

Mårtensson, Katarina LU orcid and Roxå, Torgny LU (2016) In Uniped 39(2). p.131-143
Abstract
University teachers’ engagement in teaching is a crucial aspect for the quality of student learning. In this article, we explore where such engagement comes from. We use a sociocultural perspective to investigate how teachers’ colleagues and leaders, in what we call academic microcultures, influence such engagement. A microculture can be a working group such as a teaching team, an educational programme, a department or the like. It consists of a collegial context functioning over time long enough to allow for traditions, recurrent practices and common, often tacit assumptions to evolve. In such environments, certain ways of teaching and assessing students, ways of talking about teaching and students gradually develop. This article draws... (More)
University teachers’ engagement in teaching is a crucial aspect for the quality of student learning. In this article, we explore where such engagement comes from. We use a sociocultural perspective to investigate how teachers’ colleagues and leaders, in what we call academic microcultures, influence such engagement. A microculture can be a working group such as a teaching team, an educational programme, a department or the like. It consists of a collegial context functioning over time long enough to allow for traditions, recurrent practices and common, often tacit assumptions to evolve. In such environments, certain ways of teaching and assessing students, ways of talking about teaching and students gradually develop. This article draws upon two previous studies of five strong and four developing microcultures in a research-intensive Scandinavian university. The results show how engagement for teaching and student learning is highly collegial and very contextualised. (Less)
Abstract (Swedish)
University teachers’ engagement in teaching is a crucial aspect for the quality of student learning. In this article, we explore where such engagement comes from. We use a sociocultural perspective to investigate how teachers’ colleagues and leaders, in what we call academic microcultures, influence such engagement. A microculture can be a working group such as a teaching team, an educational programme, a department or the like. It consists of a collegial context functioning over time long enough to allow for traditions, recurrent practices and common, often tacit assumptions to evolve. In such environments, certain ways of teaching and assessing students, ways of talking about teaching and students gradually develop. This article draws... (More)
University teachers’ engagement in teaching is a crucial aspect for the quality of student learning. In this article, we explore where such engagement comes from. We use a sociocultural perspective to investigate how teachers’ colleagues and leaders, in what we call academic microcultures, influence such engagement. A microculture can be a working group such as a teaching team, an educational programme, a department or the like. It consists of a collegial context functioning over time long enough to allow for traditions, recurrent practices and common, often tacit assumptions to evolve. In such environments, certain ways of teaching and assessing students, ways of talking about teaching and students gradually develop. This article draws upon two previous studies of five strong and four developing microcultures in a research- intensive Scandinavian university. The results show how engagement for teaching and student learning is highly collegial and very contextualised. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
categories
Higher Education
in
Uniped
volume
39
issue
2
pages
131 - 143
publisher
Universitetsforlaget
ISSN
1893-8981
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
748a5916-1f46-4cc3-aae3-87cc0d0a1450
alternative location
https://www.idunn.no/uniped/2016/02/peer_engagement_for_teaching_and_learning_competence_auto
date added to LUP
2018-12-04 10:43:47
date last changed
2020-02-26 09:26:03
@article{748a5916-1f46-4cc3-aae3-87cc0d0a1450,
  abstract     = {{University teachers’ engagement in teaching is a crucial aspect for the quality of student learning. In this article, we explore where such engagement comes from. We use a sociocultural perspective to investigate how teachers’ colleagues and leaders, in what we call academic microcultures, influence such engagement. A microculture can be a working group such as a teaching team, an educational programme, a department or the like. It consists of a collegial context functioning over time long enough to allow for traditions, recurrent practices and common, often tacit assumptions to evolve. In such environments, certain ways of teaching and assessing students, ways of talking about teaching and students gradually develop. This article draws upon two previous studies of five strong and four developing microcultures in a research-intensive Scandinavian university. The results show how engagement for teaching and student learning is highly collegial and very contextualised.}},
  author       = {{Mårtensson, Katarina and Roxå, Torgny}},
  issn         = {{1893-8981}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  number       = {{2}},
  pages        = {{131--143}},
  publisher    = {{Universitetsforlaget}},
  series       = {{Uniped}},
  title        = {{Peer engagement for teaching and learning: competence, autonomy and social solidarity in academic microcultures}},
  url          = {{https://www.idunn.no/uniped/2016/02/peer_engagement_for_teaching_and_learning_competence_auto}},
  volume       = {{39}},
  year         = {{2016}},
}