Designing capacity : Broadening and deepening design capacity through design education
- Authors: Barron, Deirdre , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at The European Conference on Educational Research: From Teaching to Learning?, Gothenburg, Sweden : 10th-12th September 2008
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- Description: In this paper we canvass a shift in professional practice for teachers and teaching and learning as it focuses on Design Education. We acknowledge that changes in formal educational settings result from the scope and rapidity of changes in emerging technologies and understandings of pedagogical influences on teaching and learning. In canvassing the changes, in this paper we identify issues that emerge in relation a number of proposed solutions in dealing with gaps in teacher education in the field of Design Education. We suggest that these same solutions draw on traditional disciplines which ignore the possibilities of Design to engage 21st Century problems in teaching and learning. We draw attention to a neglect in current teacher education programs in relation to teachers of design and what this may imply for classrooms, teachers, and their work.
- Description: 2003006590
Research experience as professional learning and a change agent for design: two examples of undergraduate participation in design research projects
- Authors: Barnes, Carolyn , Taffe, Simone , Barron, Deirdre , Jackson, Simon , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Design Education (ConnectED 2010), Sydney, Australia, 28 June - 01 July 2010
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- Description: This paper considers the imperatives of professional learning and research experience in design education. It reports on two research projects that included Honours students in the investigation team. Providing undergraduate students with research experience is seen as intrinsic to the pedagogical success and socio-economic value of university education. Including professional learning, where undergraduate students work in an industry context or on real-world projects, is thought to make learning more relevant and better prepare students for work. Offering Honours design students research experience as a special form of professional learning has potential benefits for graphic design. Knowledge in a vocational field like graphic design is mostly practice-driven, graphic design's status diminished by designers' lack of access to systematically produced evidence and exemplars of effective practice. The projects discussed in this paper investigated the use of participatory processes in graphic design. Today, co-creative practices and audiencecreated content are seen as important drivers of economic activity and cultural innovation, but participatory design is rarely used in graphic design since project budgets and time frames allow little scope for rigorous audience research. The nature of participatory design also challenges graphic designers' professional identity as creative and communication experts. Our paper reviews general arguments for the inclusion of professional learning and research experience in undergraduate education, considering their implications for design. The paper's discussion section builds on our findings and relevant literature to present research experience in design education as a potential change agent in graphic design.
- Description: 2014084649
Discourses of deficit in Higher Degree Research Supervisory pedagogies for international students
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2008
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Pedagogies: An International Journal Vol. 3, no. 2 (2008), p. 69-84
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- Description: Global student mobility has placed pressure on western universities to recruit students from non-western, non-English-speaking backgrounds. In this article, we argue that language requirements such as the International English Language Testing System bands are underpinned by discourses that privilege western modes of thought. We go on to argue that English language proficiency underpins discourses of deficit that construct non-western students as less able to undertake research programmes. In exploring pedagogical possibilities, we draw on a published story of an international higher degree research student, called Mei, at an Australian university. We question the idea that a research higher degree is more about linguistic skills than it is about research skills, and we argue that rigour, scholarship, and new knowledge constitute the assessable factors in what international higher degree research students produce.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003006373
From the scriptoria to the printing press : A consideration of scholarship and library
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International Journal of the Book Vol. 6, no. 4 (2009), p. 9-16
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- Description: Ancient social systems have exhibited constructs of scholarships based on social configurations and requirements that have involved tribal, temple, village or palace elders teaching and developing their apprentices using oral communication such as storytelling, recitation of recipes, formulas and chants, plus work in the field itself as young people developed as midwives, shamans, carpenters, and so on. While writing is a mighty technological achievement of some 5,000 years ago, perhaps even mightier is that of the printing press about 500 years ago. It is generally held to be the development that marked the end of Medieaval times, and has had an even more profound an effect than the first moon landing, so much did it shake the foundations of society. For one thing, the same elders entrusted with the education of the young were able to use print as part of their education protocols. This in itself enabled a shift in constructs of scholarship, as it was possible to record in print what had formerly been kept in memory. The possibilities that emerged were those of teaching learners how to develop knowledge from information, and not rely on information alone. Such possibilities have not really been taken up until fairly recent times. Emerging new paradigms present scholarship in the light of information work whose dependence on information storage systems has already transformed the relationship between scholarship and libraries to a stage where the dominant partner is the library, scholarship becoming marginalised in the so-called information age. Such a sea change requires a major adjustment on the part of both partners in what has for so long been a most productive relationship. To be able to understand the magnitude and order of the change, it is necessary to take a close look at what has underpinned it for so long. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Description: 2003007960
To registrate and/or deregistrate : Getting onto and off the postgraduate supervisor register
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2004
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: International Journal of Learning Vol. 10, no. (2004), p. 721-726
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- Description: This paper focuses on the registration of supervisors as a crucial element in constructs and practices of postgraduate studies in Australian universities. It examines two processes in a number of Australian universities postgraduate divisions' practices in compilation of postgraduate supervisor registers-how people get onto the register, and how people get off it. It takes issue with the reliance on custom and tradition as a dominant practice of registration and/or deregistration for supervision of postgraduate research studies. It suggests a model of supervisor registration and deregistration as intentional and systematic intervention, based on literature deriving from research in postgraduate supervision which acknowledges the problematic natures of relationships between teaching, learning and knowledge production. In doing so, it examines issues of discursive practice and the problematic nature of power differentials in supervisor/supervisee relationships and the possibilities presented by both registration and deregistration for such relationships.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003000803
Generic skills training
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Book chapter
- Relation: Doctorates Downunder: Keys to Successful Doctoral Study in Australia & New Zealand Chapter 28 p. 88-94
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- Description: This chapter considers the importance of generic skills (or capabilities) training and reviews some of the reasons why these programs are offered. Including additional skills you will or may have aquired as a result of structured seminars and courses, and provide some suggestions as to what you might actually do with those skills once you have left the doctoral program.
- Description: B1
- Description: 2003001841
Honours : a taken-for-granted pathway to research?
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2009
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Higher Education Vol. 57, no. 5 (2009), p. 567-575
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- Description: In this paper we examine variations in Honours programs in Australian universities and the consequences that this has for students who wish to undertake higher degrees by research after their undergraduate programs have been successfully completed. Our review of universities' Honours programs across rural, regional, and urban Australia has indicated that there is a degree of variation that is localised as far as each university is concerned, and that there is a lack of consistency in various universities' application of policies or procedures in the implementation of their Honours programs. We conclude by calling for greater consistency across universities in Australia in the awarding of Honours, certainly, but also suggesting that a review needs to be undertaken as part of national, systematic and orchestrated project.
Subjects of western education : Discursive practices in western postgraduate studies and the construction of international student subjectivities
- Authors: Barron, Deirdre , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Australian Educational Researcher Vol. 33, no. 2 (2006), p. 77-96
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- Description: This paper focuses on discursive practices of postgraduate research as a crucial element in constructs of international student subjectivities when they undertake postgraduate studies in Australian universities. As such, it focuses on a discursive field emerging within domains of internationalisation, globalisation, and resistance. It examines processes and protocols in a number of Australian universities'postgraduate divisions' practices in the conduct of postgraduate supervision, in the context of increasing pressures towards internationalisation within frameworks of globalising influences. It takes issue with Western custom and tradition as privileged within the field of supervision of postgraduate research studies and suggests a model of postgraduate research supervision as intentional and systematic intervention, based on literature deriving from research in postgraduate supervision which acknowledges the problematic natures of cultural relationships as to teaching and learning and knowledge production, and student resistances within these fields. In doing so, it examines issues of discursive practices and the problematic natures of power relationships in supervisor-supervisee protocols and possibilities suggested by alternative models of postgraduate supervision of international students.
- Description: C1
- Description: 2003001850
A leadership enrichment program for research higher degree students : An experiential learning approach to leadership training
- Authors: Barron, Deirdre , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2006
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Australian Association of Research in Education (AARE) Conference 2006, Adelaide, South Australia : 26th-27th November 2006
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- Description: Enrichment programs for Research Higher Degree (RHD) students are an endeavour undertaken by all Australian Universities. Most of these enrichment programs have in the main been centred on the generic skills required to expedite the research program, for example software skills, information gathering and collating skills, language development programs and seminars on various methodologies. There are some examples where enrichment programs have focused on leadership. These programs often assume not only that leadership can be taught, but also that a traditional seminar/lecture approaches to such a curriculum is a practical, efficient and effective approach to leadership education. This paper questions these assumptions by arguing for a more experientially-based approach to leadership education at the RHD level. This approach has demanded a consideration of pedagogical approaches outside, or peripheral, to the traditional approaches of RHD training. A specific example of a leadership program that incorporates experiential learning in is presented. The paper delineates a brief overview of experiential approaches to education, followed by a more specific review of the potential role these approaches can play in leadership education.
- Description: 2003005532
How do I fault thee? Discursive practices on western higher education studies and the construction of international student subjectivities
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2011
- Type: Text , Book chapter
- Relation: Progress in Education p. 31-52
- Full Text: false
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- Description: In this chapter we focus on discursive practices of research higher degree supervision as crucial elements in constructs of international student subjectivities when undertaking studies in Australian universities. We position our discussion within an Australian context, but we would argue that the issues we raise regarding the supervision of such students are applicable to other western English-speaking countries that attract international Higher Degree Research students. In doing so, we focus on discursive fields emerging within domains of internationalization, globalization, and resistance. We examine processes and protocols in a number of Australian universities postgraduate divisions’ practices in the conduct of research higher degree supervision—in the context of increasing pressures towards internationalization within frameworks of globalizing influences. We take issue with western custom and tradition as privileged within the field of supervision of research higher degree students. We suggest variations of supervision of International candidates as intentional and systematic interventions, based on literature deriving from existing research of supervision which acknowledges the problematic natures of cultural relationships in relation to teaching, learning, and knowledge production, and student resistance within these fields. We examine issues of discursive practices and the problematic natures of power relationships in supervisor/supervisee protocols and possibilities suggested by alternative models of higher degree by research supervision of international students.
- Description: 2003009323
Gatekeepers of knowledge : A consideration of the library, the book and scholar in the western world
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Book
- Full Text: false
- Description: Throughout its history, the western library has played a significant role in bringing the book into the hands of western scholars. This title analyses that history: examining constructs of librarianship, publishing, and scholarship within that history as gate keeping access to knowledge.
- Description: 2003007959
Pedagogical concerns in doctoral supervision : A challenge for pedagogy
- Authors: Zeegers, Margaret , Barron, Deirdre
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Quality Assurance in Education Vol. 20, no. 1 (2012), p. 20-30
- Full Text: false
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- Description: Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to focus on pedagogy as a crucial element in postgraduate research undertakings, implying active involvement of both student and supervisor in process of teaching and learning. Design/methodology/approach: Drawing on Australian higher degree research supervision practice to illustrate their argument, the authors take issue with reliance on traditional Oxbridge conventions as informing dominant practices of supervision of postgraduate research studies and suggest pedagogy as intentional and systematic intervention that acknowledges the problematic natures of relationships between teaching, learning, and knowledge production as integral to supervision and research studies. Findings: The authors examine issues of discursive practice and the problematic nature of power differentials in supervisor-supervisee relationships, and the taken-for-grantedness of discursive practice of such relationships. The authors do this from the perspective of the student involved in higher degree research programs, a departure from the bulk of the literature that has as its focus the perspective of the supervisor and/or the institution. Originality/value: The paper examines the perspective of the student involved in higher degree research programs, a departure from the bulk of the literature that has as its focus the perspective of the supervisor and/or the institution. © Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
Possible futures for doctoral research training in design
- Authors: Barron, Deirdre , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology Vol. 66, no. June (2012), p.
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- Description: In this paper, we argue that Design research is basic to countries' national productivity and competition agendas at the same time that vagaries of research training presents as one of the barriers faced by Design Higher Degree by Research students in engaging those agendas. We argue that, given industry requirements for research-trained recruits, students have the right to expect that research training will provide the foundations of a successful career on an academic or research pathway or a professional pathway, but that universities have yet to address problems in their provision of research training for Design doctoral students. We suggest that to facilitate this, rigorous research conducted on the provision of Doctoral programs in Design would serve to inform future activities in Design research in productive ways.
The role of honours in promoting research literate graduates for, and with, industry
- Authors: Barron, Deirdre , Zeegers, Margaret , Jackson, Simon , Barnes, Carolyn , Taffe, Simone
- Date: 2010
- Type: Text , Conference paper
- Relation: Paper presented at Connected 2010 The University of New South Wales, Kensington Campus Sydney 28th June, 2010
- Full Text: false
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- Description: The paper reports on a program that brings together what is known about active learning in design education, that is, learning by doing, and what is known about communities of practice to address a real concern - the lack of take up of Higher Degree by Research programs within in the discipline of design. The report Building Australia's Research Capacity Report (2008) highlights this problem, stating '...it is evident that postgraduate research is in direct competition with the workforce, particularly at the graduate and entry levels, in the current climate of low professional unemployment' (p.87). To meet such calls, Australian Universities have focused on increasing the completion rates of existing Higher Degree by Research candidates. This paper focuses on the role of honours programs as servig two purposes: first to increase the numbers of undergraduate students taking up Higher Degree by Research programs as a way of increasing the numbers of doctoral qualified workers, and second, to produce research literate honours graduates for industry. At the same time literature around research training identifies the vagaries associated with research (Barron & Zeegers, 2002) as one of the barriers faced by Higher Degree by Research students in their research training. This paper looks to understandings generated through communities of practice and Legitimate Peripheral Participation to argue for a model of honours and Higher Degree by Research training that address such vagaries. The model uses collaboration and working with industry and researchers to establish Active Learning experiences - participants with various levels of research expertise working alongside each other in research clusters on industry projects to experience how methods are employed and problems are addresses and solved. The model argues for a staged, deliberate process of drawing newcomers into a given professional field, where they work with increasing more experienced practitioners as a part of specific communities of practice until they themselves become proficient.
Communities of interest: Three unique studies in wider university and school partnerships in Australia
- Authors: Barron, Deirdre , Zeegers, Margaret
- Date: 2012
- Type: Text , Journal article
- Relation: Proceedings of World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology Vol. 6, no. 6 (June 2012 2012), p. 1009-1013
- Full Text: false
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- Description: In this paper we canvass three case studies of unique research partnerships between universities and schools in the wider community. In doing so, we consider those areas of indeterminate zones of professional practice explored by academics in their research activities within the wider community. We discuss three cases: an artist-in-residence program designed to engage primary school children with new understandings about local Indigenous Australian issues in their pedagogical and physical landscapes; an assessment of pedagogical concerns in relation to the use of physical space in classrooms; and the pedagogical underpinnings of a costumed museum school program. In doing so, we engage issues of research as playing an integral part in the development, implementation and maintenance of academic engagements with wider community issues.