{"title":"Letter from the editors","authors":"P. Bentley, Carroll Graham","doi":"10.1080/1360080X.2022.2159114","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Dear Colleagues, Welcome to 2023, and for Australian higher education policy wonks and managers, what a big year it will be! A still new(ish) Australian Government has announced a fullscale review of higher education with a renewed focus on student equity. Appropriately we open this issue with three articles from Australia on this topic. Dollinger, Finneran and Ajjawi provide evidence that students with a disability face significant and unique barriers to work-integrated learning, an important contributor to the government (and student) employability agenda. Disability does not discriminate – anyone in society can be impacted – and their research also identifies the additional challenges of multiple disadvantages, such as having a disability and being in a regional or remote area. Harpur, Szucs and Willox take this further examining university strategic and policy responses to the challenges of ‘intersectionality’. Students from refugee and asylum-seeking backgrounds are not formally identified as equity students for university funding purposes in Australia, but as discussed by Berg, Grüttner and Baker, they almost certainly face intersectional educational disadvantage. From an international comparative perspective, including government and universitylevel policy analyses in Australia and Germany, their research suggests how such students could be better supported. Equity and support are also concerns for academics. In China, at least according to Jinghui Si’s interviewees, the tenure track has exposed young academics to an ‘involuted managerial culture’ of overwork and metrics-based competition to decide who is promoted or eliminated. For Cuong Huu Hoang and Marianne Turner, this may be characterised in their framework as ‘high scholarly expectations’ but with variable levels of institutional commitment to research. Their framework for understanding the experiences of expatriate academics returning to Vietnam (but applicable elsewhere in Asia) suggests that there is a risk of (re-)expatriation if academics with international options feel under-supported. Support for junior staff through mentoring is the focus of Freeman Akama and John Stephen Keenan’s study in Ghana. Their findings are not promising. Formal academic mentoring appears to be a ‘luxury that cannot be afforded’ by most colleges in Ghana. Where it is available, it tends to be a top-down, skills transfer approach. But there is room for some optimism. Ayesha Abdulla and colleagues find that academics that enrolled in a leadership development programme in the UAE report strong knowledge and competency development. They attribute this to a ‘social constructivist’ and ‘systemic framework’ and offer insights for other practitioners developing similar programmes. Finally, we have three book reviews spanning a range of higher education topics: Chan, Bista and Allen’s Online Teaching and Learning in Higher Education during COVID-19; Federico Cosenz’s JOURNAL OF HIGHER EDUCATION POLICY AND MANAGEMENT 2023, VOL. 45, NO. 1, 1–2 https://doi.org/10.1080/1360080X.2022.2159114","PeriodicalId":51489,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management","volume":"45 1","pages":"1 - 2"},"PeriodicalIF":2.7000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management","FirstCategoryId":"95","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/1360080X.2022.2159114","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"教育学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Dear Colleagues, Welcome to 2023, and for Australian higher education policy wonks and managers, what a big year it will be! A still new(ish) Australian Government has announced a fullscale review of higher education with a renewed focus on student equity. Appropriately we open this issue with three articles from Australia on this topic. Dollinger, Finneran and Ajjawi provide evidence that students with a disability face significant and unique barriers to work-integrated learning, an important contributor to the government (and student) employability agenda. Disability does not discriminate – anyone in society can be impacted – and their research also identifies the additional challenges of multiple disadvantages, such as having a disability and being in a regional or remote area. Harpur, Szucs and Willox take this further examining university strategic and policy responses to the challenges of ‘intersectionality’. Students from refugee and asylum-seeking backgrounds are not formally identified as equity students for university funding purposes in Australia, but as discussed by Berg, Grüttner and Baker, they almost certainly face intersectional educational disadvantage. From an international comparative perspective, including government and universitylevel policy analyses in Australia and Germany, their research suggests how such students could be better supported. Equity and support are also concerns for academics. In China, at least according to Jinghui Si’s interviewees, the tenure track has exposed young academics to an ‘involuted managerial culture’ of overwork and metrics-based competition to decide who is promoted or eliminated. For Cuong Huu Hoang and Marianne Turner, this may be characterised in their framework as ‘high scholarly expectations’ but with variable levels of institutional commitment to research. Their framework for understanding the experiences of expatriate academics returning to Vietnam (but applicable elsewhere in Asia) suggests that there is a risk of (re-)expatriation if academics with international options feel under-supported. Support for junior staff through mentoring is the focus of Freeman Akama and John Stephen Keenan’s study in Ghana. Their findings are not promising. Formal academic mentoring appears to be a ‘luxury that cannot be afforded’ by most colleges in Ghana. Where it is available, it tends to be a top-down, skills transfer approach. But there is room for some optimism. Ayesha Abdulla and colleagues find that academics that enrolled in a leadership development programme in the UAE report strong knowledge and competency development. They attribute this to a ‘social constructivist’ and ‘systemic framework’ and offer insights for other practitioners developing similar programmes. Finally, we have three book reviews spanning a range of higher education topics: Chan, Bista and Allen’s Online Teaching and Learning in Higher Education during COVID-19; Federico Cosenz’s JOURNAL OF HIGHER EDUCATION POLICY AND MANAGEMENT 2023, VOL. 45, NO. 1, 1–2 https://doi.org/10.1080/1360080X.2022.2159114
亲爱的同事们,欢迎来到2023年,对于澳大利亚高等教育政策专家和管理者来说,这将是多么重要的一年!澳大利亚新政府宣布对高等教育进行全面审查,重新关注学生公平。我们恰当地以澳大利亚关于这一主题的三篇文章来开启这个问题。Dollinger、Finneran和Ajjawi提供的证据表明,残疾学生在工作综合学习方面面临着重大而独特的障碍,这是政府(和学生)就业议程的重要贡献者。残疾没有歧视——社会上的任何人都可能受到影响——他们的研究还发现了多重不利因素带来的额外挑战,例如残疾和生活在地区或偏远地区。Harpur、Szucs和Willox进一步研究了大学应对“交叉性”挑战的战略和政策对策。来自难民和寻求庇护背景的学生在澳大利亚没有被正式认定为大学资助的公平学生,但正如Berg、Grüttner和Baker所讨论的那样,他们几乎肯定会面临跨部门的教育劣势。从国际比较的角度来看,包括澳大利亚和德国政府和大学层面的政策分析,他们的研究表明如何更好地支持这些学生。公平和支持也是学术界关注的问题。在中国,至少根据思静惠的受访者的说法,终身制让年轻的学者暴露在一种“内卷化的管理文化”中,即过度工作和基于衡量标准的竞争,以决定谁被提拔或淘汰。对于Cuong Huu Hoang和Marianne Turner来说,这可能在他们的框架中被描述为“高学术期望”,但机构对研究的承诺水平不同。他们对返回越南(但适用于亚洲其他地方)的外籍学者经历的理解框架表明,如果有国际选择的学者感到支持不足,就有(再次)外籍的风险。通过辅导为初级员工提供支持是Freeman Akama和John Stephen Keenan在加纳研究的重点。他们的发现并不乐观。正规的学术指导似乎是加纳大多数大学无法负担的奢侈。在可用的情况下,它往往是一种自上而下的技能转移方法。但仍有乐观的空间。Ayesha Abdulla及其同事发现,在阿联酋参加领导力发展项目的学者报告称,他们的知识和能力发展很强。他们将其归因于“社会建构主义”和“系统框架”,并为其他制定类似计划的从业者提供了见解。最后,我们有三本涉及高等教育主题的书评:Chan、Bista和Allen的《新冠肺炎期间高等教育的在线教学》;Federico Cosenz的《2023年高等教育政策与管理杂志》,第45卷,第1期,第1-2页https://doi.org/10.1080/1360080X.2022.2159114
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Higher Education Policy and Management is an international journal of professional experience and ideas in post-secondary education. It is a must read for those seeking to influence educational policy making. The journal also aims to be of use to managers and senior academic staff who seek to place their work and interests in a broad context and influence educational policy and practice.