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Teaching excellence is a topic of international significance,
having importance for higher education worldwide, yet is generally
considered to be poorly defined and understood. The current
discourse of teaching excellence is narrowly framed, instrumental
and performative, with an onus on measurement and quantification.
Wood and Su investigate and rethink excellence in higher education,
connecting this to the understanding of the role and purpose of
higher education. Stakeholder perspectives on teaching excellence
are explored, and the authors argue that it is through engaging
with higher education constituencies, to examine teaching
excellence from different angles and stances, that more inclusive
understandings may be built. These stakeholder perspectives, which
form the central chapters of the book, include higher education
institutions, academics, students, employers and parents. The
importance of a commitment to engaging with understandings situated
in the diverse experiences and contexts of stakeholders for an
'inclusive perspective' on teaching excellence is affirmed. At the
close of the book, the Coda examines some of the implications of
the responses to the COVID-19 global pandemic for inclusive
perspectives on teaching excellence in higher education.
This book presents accounts of the repositioning of higher
education institutions across a range of contexts in the East and
the West. It argues that global governance, institutional
organisation and academic practice are complementary elements
within the process of institutional repositioning. While systems,
institutions and individuals in the different contexts are
subjected to similar global trends and pressures, the reorientation
of higher education takes diverse forms as a result of the
particularities of those contexts. That reorientation cannot be
explained in terms of East-West dichotomies and divisions, but only
with reference to the interflow across and within systems.
Globalisation necessitates complex interconnectivities of
regionality, culture and geopolitics that this book explores in
relation to specific cases and contexts.
This journal-like book series includes edited volumes to rapidly
report and spread the latest technological results, new scientific
discovery and valuable applied researches in the fields concerning
offshore robotics as well as promote international academic
exchange. We aim to make it one of the premier comprehensive
academic publications of world offshore vehicle and robotics
community. The audience of the series will include the scholars,
researchers, engineers and students who are interested in fields of
autonomous marine vehicles and robotics, including autonomous
surface vehicles, autonomous underwater vehicles, remote operation
vehicles, marine bionics, marine vehicle modeling, guidance,
navigation, control and cooperation and so on.
This book explores what academic leadership in higher education
might mean in the cosmopolitan and increasingly globalised 21st
century through individual academics' narrative accounts drawn from
a range of international contexts. The book shows that academic
leadership is key to an individual's development and that it could
mean different things in different settings as academics operate
across the levels of professional practice, institutional
organisation, sector-wide systems and international networks. This
book argues for the importance of cosmopolitan perspectives on
academic leadership which are developed from the particularities of
local and everyday situated experience. Part I of the book explores
key theoretical perspectives; Part II provides first-hand accounts
from the contributors of their own development as academic leaders;
and Part III discusses some of the implications for those with
responsibility for academic development and for all those concerned
with developing the qualities necessary for leadership practices.
This book presents accounts of the repositioning of higher
education institutions across a range of contexts in the East and
the West. It argues that global governance, institutional
organisation and academic practice are complementary elements
within the process of institutional repositioning. While systems,
institutions and individuals in the different contexts are
subjected to similar global trends and pressures, the reorientation
of higher education takes diverse forms as a result of the
particularities of those contexts. That reorientation cannot be
explained in terms of East-West dichotomies and divisions, but only
with reference to the interflow across and within systems.
Globalisation necessitates complex interconnectivities of
regionality, culture and geopolitics that this book explores in
relation to specific cases and contexts.
This journal-like book series includes edited volumes to rapidly
report and spread the latest technological results, new scientific
discovery and valuable applied researches in the fields concerning
offshore robotics as well as promote international academic
exchange. We aim to make it one of the premier comprehensive
academic publications of world offshore vehicle and robotics
community. The audience of the series will include the scholars,
researchers, engineers and students who are interested in fields of
autonomous marine vehicles and robotics, including autonomous
surface vehicles, autonomous underwater vehicles, remote operation
vehicles, marine bionics, marine vehicle modeling, guidance,
navigation, control and cooperation and so on.
Teaching excellence is a topic of international significance,
having importance for higher education worldwide, yet is generally
considered to be poorly defined and understood. The current
discourse of teaching excellence is narrowly framed, instrumental
and performative, with an onus on measurement and quantification.
Wood and Su investigate and rethink excellence in higher education,
connecting this to the understanding of the role and purpose of
higher education. Stakeholder perspectives on teaching excellence
are explored, and the authors argue that it is through engaging
with higher education constituencies, to examine teaching
excellence from different angles and stances, that more inclusive
understandings may be built. These stakeholder perspectives, which
form the central chapters of the book, include higher education
institutions, academics, students, employers and parents. The
importance of a commitment to engaging with understandings situated
in the diverse experiences and contexts of stakeholders for an
'inclusive perspective' on teaching excellence is affirmed. At the
close of the book, the Coda examines some of the implications of
the responses to the COVID-19 global pandemic for inclusive
perspectives on teaching excellence in higher education.
This book explores what academic leadership in higher education
might mean in the cosmopolitan and increasingly globalised 21st
century through individual academics' narrative accounts drawn from
a range of international contexts. The book shows that academic
leadership is key to an individual's development and that it could
mean different things in different settings as academics operate
across the levels of professional practice, institutional
organisation, sector-wide systems and international networks. This
book argues for the importance of cosmopolitan perspectives on
academic leadership which are developed from the particularities of
local and everyday situated experience. Part I of the book explores
key theoretical perspectives; Part II provides first-hand accounts
from the contributors of their own development as academic leaders;
and Part III discusses some of the implications for those with
responsibility for academic development and for all those concerned
with developing the qualities necessary for leadership practices.
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