Abstract
This paper examines some of the ways in which subject review can contribute to the scholarship of teaching. Subject review was a quality assessment process conducted under the auspices of the UK's Quality Assurance Agency for Higher Education. A preliminary discussion considers the potential and pitfalls of using subject review as a basis for learning about current academic practice. The analysis draws on 162 institutional reports, covering business and management provision and produced during the period 2000–1. The pedagogic principles that underpinned subject review judgements, such as flexibility, transparency and pedagogic pluralism, are identified. These suggest that, while ‘fitness for purpose’ was the explicit criterion for judging institutional standards, in practice, reviewers were guided by a series of implicit evaluative principles. To some extent, these principles may be linked to learning theory and the ongoing debate concerning the scholarship of teaching.
Notes
The aim of the project was to capture and disseminate ‘the richness of academic practice identified’ in these reports (CitationBEST, 2002). This involved identifying examples of good practice that were deemed worthy of wider dissemination and following this up with the institutions concerned in order to research them more fully. Attention was also given to areas of weakness and poor performance and issues for business educators, which BEST might take the lead in addressing. Inherent in the project was the view that, whatever its limitations, subject review does have something to contribute to the wider academic community, particularly with respect to scholarship.