探花直播

Managing professional literacies in HE: transitioning from workplace literacies to vocationally orientated lecturing in HE

Blog

This paper draws on the personal accounts of HE lecturers who have transitioned from careers in teaching, social work, or early years into vocationally orientated academic lecturing in those areas. Working within a teaching-focussed School of Education and Social Work (SoESW), in a post 鈥92 University, our participants often found the transition from workplace literacies to HE lecturing, and the literacies that involves, to be both disconcerting and disorientating.

and Victoria 探花直播聽- 探花直播

Professional identities are continually being made and re-made through a process of negotiation and struggle between the past and current members of the disciplinary/faculty/institutional communities in any given university.

Vocational lecturers, such as those involved in this research, are often crossing boundaries to other workplaces and communities of practice, for example, in teacher education and social work, when mentoring and observing students on their placements.

Teachers, nurses and social workers have historically developed their professional literacies, often informally, through workplace experiences and training. Today, largely because these vocational students achieve professional status through a university education, employers expect HE tutors to take responsibility for their academic and professional work based literacy development.聽 The particular demands of the theory-practice divide in vocational courses and that fact that many teaching, nursing and social work lecturers have come to higher education directly from professional practice means that they do not often have a background in developing academic literacies/pedagogies, much less how they might intersect and interact with professional work based literacies/pedagogies

This research draws broadly on a multiliteracies/ New Literacy Studies (NLS) theoretical framework (Lea &Street, 1998; New London Group, 1996)

NLS does not treat literacy as one self-evident set of skills which allows people to engage in reading and writing.聽 Rather, it argues that people use many literacies (different kinds of reading and writing) in their everyday lives.

This approach provides an insight into the complexity of practices around聽 different forms of professional/workplace 聽and academic writing and in particular those 鈥渉idden鈥 literacy practices and events that distinguish them from other kinds of literacy.

Expertise, in any professional practice, is a situated and imbued with tacit assumptions and 鈥榳ays of doing and knowing鈥 (Polanyi, 1966; Andersson and 脰stman, 2015) which are informed by the environment within which they take place (Brookfield, 2017). The tacitness of established professional practices, like any social practices:

[...]become deposited inside persons in the form of lasting dispositions, or trained capacities and patterned propensities to think, feel and act in determinate ways, which in turn guide them in their creative responses to the constraints and solicitations of their extant milieu (Wacquant, 2016: 65).

The accounts discussed in this paper reflect Clegg鈥檚 observation that lecturers鈥 highly differentiated academic identities are:

part of the lived complexity of a person鈥檚 project and their ways of being in those sites which are constituted as being part of the academic environment [鈥鈥 (Clegg 2008: 329).

Such 鈥榣ived complexity鈥 means that academic identity is best understood as a process of 鈥榖ecoming鈥 and/or 鈥榰nbecoming鈥 over time. (Colley et al., 2005). Far from being a smooth, progressive trajectory towards a fixed professional status, negotiating transitional professional academic identities can be experienced as a dislocating process, characterised by ontological uncertainty and feelings of inauthenticity

Using focus groups and interviews, participants were asked to discuss their experiences of transitioning into HE from vocational occupations. From their accounts we suggest that there is a need, one might say institutional imperative, to theorise how vocational lecturers and the students that they teach can be helped to transition effectively from their first profession into a lecturing role in HE, a process which requires a conscious form of professional identity renegotiation and an understanding of the different literacies involved.聽

A professional literacies/pedagogies framework for HE would critically interrogate and address emerging questions about how lecturers, students and practitioners alike can understand the continuities and discontinuities between the academic literacies and work based literacies required by different higher education degrees and their associated professional work based contexts.聽

In practical terms it could also explore how individual students might manage, and be helped to practically manage, the different literacy practices operating between, and arising in and out of their developing academic and professional roles in nursing, social work and teacher training.

We conclude that the process of transitioning into HE requires safe and supportive institutional spaces for vocational lecturers to familiarise themselves and gain confidence with the new literacies that HE pedagogies, curricula and assessment require.聽 Finally, we propose ways to formally facilitate the formation of effective hybrid academic/vocational professional literacies for 鈥榙ual career鈥 lecturers entering HE.

cspace blog 852 x 335

Find out more about CSPACE

CSPACE supports the development and fruition of the research ideas of BCU staff, students and people from the communities that the University serves.

More about CSPACE