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Teacher Development
An international journal of teachers' professional development
Volume 10, 2006 - Issue 2
221
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Original Articles

New lecturer development programmes: a case study of Scottish higher education institutions

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Pages 207-231 | Published online: 18 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

This article examines key issues in lecturer development programmes (LDPs) in Scottish higher education institutions, within the context of the national standards established recently for those who teach in United Kingdom higher education (HE). Many of the LDPs were developed in response to the Dearing Committee recommendations that university lecturers should receive training in teaching and learning and that this should be delivered through accredited programmes. The article presents four different programme models that emerged within the sector in terms of programme structure and delivery, participant support and institutional factors, and explains the wide variety of provision in terms of cultural factors and the nature of the national framework for HE teacher development. The article will be of interest to those who are involved in the policy and practice of lecturer development, in the challenges posed in the implementation of LDPs and the future of such initiatives. Although the research was carried out in Scotland, consultation with educational developers in England revealed similar trends there. Given similar lecturer development initiatives in other countries (e.g. Sweden, Norway and Australia), the application of the research goes beyond the geographical area described.

Notes

1. The Dearing Committee, the National Committee of Inquiry into Higher Education reported in 1997 on how the purposes, shape, structure, size and funding of UK higher education should develop over the next 20 years. Further information at: http://www.leeds.ac.uk/educol/ncihe (accessed 31 July 2004).

2. Although the Dearing Report talked of staff ‘training’, this term has connotations of lower‐level skill acquisition; most educational developers prefer the term ‘development’, and this is the term used in this article.

3. The ILTHE was the professional institute for those who teach and support learning in higher education in the UK. In 2004 it was subsumed within the newly established Higher Education Academy: http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/

4. A 60‐credit postgraduate certificate requires 600 hours of notional study time. For details of the Scottish Credit and Qualifications Framework, see http://www.scqf.org.uk

5. Pre‐92 universities received their charter before the expansion of the university sector in 1992.

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