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Showing 1 to 15 of 37 results Save | Export
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Kinchin, Ian M. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2023
The shift towards an ecological university may be the key to achieving greater levels of social justice within higher education. This assumes that we could change the root metaphor of higher education--away from the current industrial model that is infused with neoliberal ideology and towards a more sustainable ecological model. This change…
Descriptors: Ecology, Universities, Social Justice, Neoliberalism
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Kinchin, Ian M. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
The dominant narratives currently offering critique of the neoliberal university suggest a professional environment that is both uncaring and unhealthy. This paper adopts a Deleuzian gaze on the rhizomatic multiplicity of teaching to identify and reinterpret key lines of flight within this assemblage -- identified as care, pedagogic health and…
Descriptors: Caring, Fundamental Concepts, Well Being, Wellness
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Kinchin, Ian M. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2022
This article presents an ecological frame for reflection on teaching at university. It is suggested here that the process of professional reflection on practice can be better aligned with processes of institutional development by applying the adaptive cycle. This heuristic emerged from the scientific literature on ecosystem maintenance and has…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, College Faculty, Reflective Teaching, Educational Practices
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Kinchin, Ian M. – Oxford Review of Education, 2022
The university-as-ecosystem concept provides a framework for the analysis of the dynamic maintenance of sustainable pedagogies within the university. Application of Holling's adaptive cycle, used to describe the active constructive and destructive processes of stabilisation and destabilisation within an ecosystem, is explored here in the context…
Descriptors: Ecology, Epistemology, Universities, Higher Education
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Kinchin, Ian M. – Journal of Biological Education, 2020
The detailed analysis and scoring of concept maps may not be necessary in order for students to gain from their use in the classroom. A simplified recognition of different types ('species') of map may increase the likelihood of teachers employing maps in their classrooms so that more teachers and students might benefit from concept mapping on a…
Descriptors: Observation, Identification, Concept Mapping, Expertise
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Kinchin, Ian M.; Thumser, Alfred E. – Journal of Biological Education, 2023
This paper uses an autoethnographic case study to analyse the difficulties inherent in the professional journey from bioscience researcher to research-informed, reflective bioscience teacher. This is viewed through a philosophy of becoming. The major demand placed upon the academic to achieve this transition is seen as the conscious adoption of a…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Researchers, Science Teachers, Career Development
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Kinchin, Ian M. – Education Sciences, 2019
This paper explores the development of educational theory (pedagogic frailty) that has emerged through the application of concept maps to understand teachers' conceptions of their roles within the complex higher education environment. Within this conceptual paper, pedagogic frailty is reinterpreted using the lens offered by the concept of…
Descriptors: Educational Theories, Concept Mapping, Teacher Attitudes, Role Perception
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Gravett, Karen; Kinchin, Ian – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
This article proposes a rethinking of the contested concept of teaching excellence within higher education. In order to do, so we engage posthumanist theory to reconsider teaching excellence from a new perspective that shifts the gaze beyond the measured individual to explore our intra-actions within a wider context. Taking Skelton's original…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Higher Education, Instructional Effectiveness, Educational Theories
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Gravett, Karen; Kinchin, Ian M. – Journal of Further and Higher Education, 2021
This article examines teachers' perspectives on a neglected area of practice: academic referencing. Commonly considered a simple skill to learn, we suggest that instead a study of referencing practices enables us to glean valuable insight into the challenges experienced by students when developing a learner identity. Drawing on interviews with…
Descriptors: Citations (References), Self Concept, Student Development, Student Experience
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Rivers, Christine; Kinchin, Ian – Management Teaching Review, 2019
Practitioners consider critical thinking skills to be vital for survival in business. Business schools should use such insight wisely by strategically embedding critical thinking skills in the curriculum at module and program levels. Practitioners even go further and say it is the one aspect that cannot be automated and probably the most valuable…
Descriptors: Critical Thinking, Thinking Skills, Skill Development, Teaching Methods
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Gravett, Karen; Kinchin, Ian M. – Teaching in Higher Education, 2020
This article examines the challenges experienced by students when developing referencing practices. There has been minimal research into students' development of their referencing skills, with referencing often considered a mechanistic skill and not worthy of attention. This paper argues that, rather, referencing is an area of practice imbued with…
Descriptors: Student Empowerment, Student Experience, Plagiarism, Feedback (Response)
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Kinchin, Ian M.; Gravett, Karen – Education Sciences, 2020
This conceptual paper offers a reconsideration of the application of Novakian concept mapping to higher education research by putting to work the Deleuzian concept of the rhizome. We ask: what does thinking with Deleuze's concepts offer researchers interested in concept mapping, and what conceptual, and terminological, obstacles might be created…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Higher Education, Educational Philosophy, Teaching Methods
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Kandiko Howson, Camille; Kinchin, Ian M.; Gravett, Karen – Education Sciences, 2022
This research used Novakian concept mapping and interview techniques to track changes in knowledge and understanding amongst students and their supervisors in the course of full-time research towards a laboratory science-based PhD. This detailed longitudinal case study analysis measures both cognitive change in the specific subjects that are the…
Descriptors: Concept Mapping, Doctoral Students, Knowledge Level, Concept Formation
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Kinchin, Ian M.; Winstone, Naomi E.; Medland, Emma – Studies in Higher Education, 2021
The concept of recipience is emerging within the literature as a useful idea to inform our understanding of student engagement with feedback. In this paper, the applicability of the concept of recipience is broadened from its origins in the literature on student feedback to consider its role in developing student knowledge structures that are more…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Semantics, Educational Philosophy, Learner Engagement
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Kinchin, Ian M.; Wiley, Christopher – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2018
This paper offers an approach to support the development of reflective teaching practice among university academics that can be used to promote dialogue about quality enhancement and the student experience. Pedagogic frailty has been proposed as a unifying concept that may help to integrate institutional efforts to enhance teaching within…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Foreign Countries, Humanities, Humanities Instruction
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