TY - JOUR
T1 - Collaborative reflections on using island maps to express new lecturers' academic identity
AU - King, V.
AU - Garcia-Perez, A.
AU - Graham, R.
AU - Jones, Charlotte
AU - Tickle, A.
AU - Wilson, Louise
PY - 2014/2/27
Y1 - 2014/2/27
N2 - New lecturers may find the notion of academic identity difficult to grasp, yet it potentially provides them with a means of revealing issues of self, career and work-life balance. In this paper, we introduce an innovative research strategy and democratic research framework which have enabled us to explore new lecturers’ academic identities in self-revelatory ways. This collaborative inquiry was undertaken by two teaching staff and four former students of a postgraduate certificate in higher education professional practice at a UK post-92 university. Through our innovative research strategy, one’s academic identity is conceptualised as the map of an island featuring actual or potential personal characteristics, qualities and interests. The visual metaphors and clustering of these attributes, together with individuals’ reflective commentaries on creating their own academic identity maps, lead us tentatively to characterise four alternative expressions of identity: the multifaceted whole, the layered self, the interlinked self and the fragmented self.
AB - New lecturers may find the notion of academic identity difficult to grasp, yet it potentially provides them with a means of revealing issues of self, career and work-life balance. In this paper, we introduce an innovative research strategy and democratic research framework which have enabled us to explore new lecturers’ academic identities in self-revelatory ways. This collaborative inquiry was undertaken by two teaching staff and four former students of a postgraduate certificate in higher education professional practice at a UK post-92 university. Through our innovative research strategy, one’s academic identity is conceptualised as the map of an island featuring actual or potential personal characteristics, qualities and interests. The visual metaphors and clustering of these attributes, together with individuals’ reflective commentaries on creating their own academic identity maps, lead us tentatively to characterise four alternative expressions of identity: the multifaceted whole, the layered self, the interlinked self and the fragmented self.
UR - https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/14623943.2014.883311
U2 - 10.1080/14623943.2014.883311
DO - 10.1080/14623943.2014.883311
M3 - Article
SN - 1462-3943
VL - 15
SP - 252
EP - 267
JO - Reflective Practice
JF - Reflective Practice
IS - 2
ER -