• Brendan Bartram
    University of Wolverhampton
  • Tanya Hathaway
    The University of New England
  • Namrata Rao
    Liverpool Hope University
In the current higher education (HE) environment, indicators of ‘teaching excellence’ (TE) are increasingly under the spotlight. The literature offers a wide range of models and perspectives, but also highlights the need for greater (comparative) scrutiny of the perceptions of those at the centre – staff teaching across the disciplines in different countries. This article aims to contribute to ongoing debates by investigating and comparing the views of 120 academic staff teaching in one of two countries – England and Australia – in an attempt to deepen our appreciation of their definitions and understandings. The findings from this two-stage enquiry using online questionnaires and interviews indicate broad commonalities in the ways in which academics define TE, centred on facilitative, interactive pedagogy related to individual professional aspirations; they also reveal widely shared reservations about the term’s legitimacy and institutional/marketised (ab)use. As such, the findings offer policy-makers and institutions useful insights at a time when TE definitions and metrics are growing global pre-occupations.

Keywords

  • teaching excellence, higher education, pedagogy, staff perceptions
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1284-1298
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Further and Higher Education
Volume43
Issue number9
Early online date26 Jul 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2018
Externally publishedYes
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