Artigo Revisado por pares

Another Matrix Revolution? The Overlap of University Work.

2014; Volume: 56; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

ISSN

2208-5394

Autores

Carroll Graham,

Tópico(s)

Education, Leadership, and Health Research

Resumo

There may be a perception among academic staff that professional staff are remote from academic activities (Wallace and Marchant, 2011), however, recent research demonstrates that professional staff, across a range of roles and seniority levels, are interested and engaged in supporting positive student learning outcomes (Graham, 2012, 2013a, 2013b). The improved understanding of the work of professional staff that is emerging provides opportunity for substantial changes to practice and policy. Building on Whitchurch's (2008a, 2009) typology of bounded, cross-boundary, unbounded and blended professionals, this research shows that professional staff span all four professional identities and show movement towards the third space (Graham, 2013a). Although Whitchurch (2008a) developed her framework for professional staff at management levels, this research extends the framework to more junior roles, reinforcing Whitchurch's contention that third space work is 'indicative of future trends in professional identities' (2008b, p. 377). Yet, like the overlap model (Schneijderberg and Merkator, 2013), the Whitchurch typology describes a linear continuum of professional identities from routine professionals through to traditional academics. This limitation may miss a deeper complexity of higher education professional identities, which is addressed in the proposed matrix model.

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