What is the role of a professor? How does someone achieve professorial
status? What do non-professorial colleagues think about professors?
How do professors themselves perceive their roles? What are the bases
of these perceptions, and what are their implications for the
professoriate's evolving role both within the neoliberal university,
and in the approaching post-neoliberal era? Professors as Academic
Leaders draws on a wealth of data not only to explore what it is to be
a professor but also to consider how professors are perceived by
others. Linda Evans presents the findings from four studies, with a
combined data base of over 2,400 questionnaire responses and over 90
interview transcripts, and discusses their implications for the future
development of the UK-based professoriate and academic leadership in
higher education. She analyses the concepts of leadership and of
professionalism, and illustrates how, in trying to meet people's
expectations of them, professors' 'enacted', professionalism is shaped
by the professionalism that others demand of them. Professorship is
revealed to be demanding, at times stressful and morale-sapping, and
at times exhilarating and rewarding. Linda Evans questions whether
universities are making best use of their most senior academics, and
proposes ways of refashioning professorship.
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Expectations, Enacted Professionalism and Evolving Roles
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781474270489
Publisert
2018
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter