Title: WE HAVE COME THIS FAR QUALITY ASSURANCE IN TRANSITION
1WE HAVE COME THIS FAR QUALITY ASSURANCE IN
TRANSITION
2Managing Institutional Performance best
practice for senior management
- Simeon Underwood
- London School of Economics
- 5 July 2004
3Describing quality assurance I
- We knew that the islands were beautiful
- somewhere round about here where we are
groping - a little lower or a little higher,
- the slightest distance.
- from Mythistorema 8, George Seferis
4Describing quality assurance II
- Still, a light wash of grey is on things,
- A scumbling. It said these places were new
- Just last year
- And still are, in places. Yet there is nowhere
- To hide this year, and the newness
- Keeps coming on. No one explained to it. Is
encroaching. - from Fall Pageant, John Ashbery
5Quality assurance in transition
- The lighter touch ?
- Audit back to basics
- Doing quality assurance themes and players
- What have we done to ourselves ?
- Where do we go from here ?
6The lighter touch ?
- An end to subject level review (?)
- Significant differences in institutional exposure
to external inspection - Reliance on institutional internal systems
- Marginalisation of the QAA
- No return to over-bureaucratic practices
7The lighter touch ?
- Enhanced Institutional Audit (with Discipline
Audit Trails) - plus the quality infrastructure
- plus student input
- plus Teaching Quality Information
- plus the National Student Survey
- plus thematic enhancement
- plus Bologna
8The lighter touchthe academic infrastructure
- Qualifications framework
- Subject benchmark statements
- Programme specifications
- Codes of practice
- Progress files (?)
- TQI (?)
- Variant version for the Bologna process
9The lighter touchthe received wisdom
- It was suggested to us that, while QAA
Institutional Audits are much less burdensome
than the previous QAA regime, the total effort on
teaching quality management required to satisfy
the expectations of external reviewers was not
less than before, it has merely been
internalised within the institutions own
quality management programme. New requirements
such as TQI reports similarly go beyond the
information that institutions might otherwise
collect and publish. - -- Better Accountability Revisited, PA Consulting
for HEFCE, 2004
10The lighter touch debating the process
- One or two questions to start with --
- Are intended learning outcomes an appropriate
model for QA in higher education? - Is the priority given to assessment over teaching
and learning appropriate ? - If programme specifications didnt exist, would
we invent them for ourselves ? - Left to our own devices, what weight would we
attach to feedback from students ?
11Audit back to basics I
- the pervasive feature of the new wave of
audits is that they work not on primary
activities but rather on other systems of
control. This gives the audit a more remote
assurance role that is often understood by the
publics which they are intended to serve. This
policing of policing distinguishes the audit
explosion from an older tradition of
engineering-based quality control and its
statistically grounded methods. - -- Power, The Audit Explosion, p.6
12Audit back to basics II
- Audits have the remarkable capacity of being
invulnerable to their own failure. Instead,
where audit fails, the common response has been
to call for more of it. - -- Power, p.7
13Audit back to basics III
- Far from being passive, audit actively
constructs the contexts in which it operates.
The most influential dimension of the audit
explosion is the process by which environments
are made auditable, structured to conform to the
need to be monitored ex-post.. - Audits do as much to construct definitions of
quality and performance as to monitor them. - -- Power, p.8 and p.33
14Audit back to basics IV
- One could argue that, given the right
information is made available to students, there
may be no need for institutional quality
assurance audits. Students would in effect
provide the quality assurance themselves through
informed choice Those HEIs providing poor
quality education would find students preferred
other places, and would be forced to improve in
order to attract students. Those already
providing good quality education would seek
further improvements to maintain their share of
the market. - -- Better Regulation Task Force report, July
2002, p.29
15Doing quality assurancesome themes
- Players, processes and possibilities
- Implementation as an act of management
- Implementation as internal relationships
- Implementation in a context of institutional
individuation - Implementation in relation to quality enhancement
- Implementation as a linguistic exercise
16Doing quality assurancea linguistic exercise
- Staff have developed bi-lingualism --
maintaining both the language and practices of
audit and their own professionalism side by side
. Perhaps this is more appropriately termed
professional schizophrenia as the lecturer not
only maintains two languages but splits the
professional self in two. Such duplicity is time
consuming and exhausting. - -- Susan Wright, Enhancing the quality of
teaching in universities, LTSN Generic Centre
web site
17Doing quality assurance external and internal
players
- The QAA
- Other agencies (?)
- Institutional leaders
- Academics
- Quality professionals
- Students
18External playersthe QAA I
- In general, the team was satisfied that the
University had responded appropriately to the
Code of practice and had initiated the process of
taking action to confirm its continuing
adherence, although further work was required on
the mechanisms to ensure both local ownership and
central oversight of local practice. - -- Institutional audit report, University of
Cambridge - (April 2003 Para. 48)
19External playersthe QAA II
- The University expects its processes to take
account of the QAAs Code of Practice, but,
unlike the report, it does expect individual
staff always to refer explicitly to the Code, and
it believes that this reflects the spirit of the
QAAs own guidance. - Cambridge audit report,
- Response by the University
20Internal playersinstitutional leaders
- In terms of the leadership of this university,
it, of course, gives greater power to my arm.
There is no question whatsoever about that I can
get people to listen more carefully to the need,
for example, to have some kind of accountability
framework the QAA has helped to allow me to be
heard in an academic institution. - A female pro-vice-chancellor in an old university
- cited in Louise Morley, Quality and Power in
Higher Education - (SRHE, 2003), p.51
21Internal playersinternal relationships
- audit has widened the gulf between teaching
staff and university management and
administration, with detrimental impacts on the
quality and efficiency of teaching - top-down audit systems have generated a gulf
between managers and chalk face staff, with a
lack of communication, mutual understanding and
trust - -- Susan Wright, work cited previously
22Internal playersthe quality professionals I
- A thought police now emerges from the academic
woodwork to enforce academic management and
quality audit. Here the Salieri principle
applies nothing gives greater pleasure to the
guardians of competence than knowingly to
suffocate real creativity. Salieri could not
forgive Mozart his gift. He understood the
nature of it, for he was himself a musician, but
by the same token he understood how to destroy
it. - -- Richard Roberts, Our Graduate Factories The
Tablet, 11/10/97
23Internal playersthe quality professionals II
- We found some evidence that HEIs internal
quality assurance teams were themselves applying
the QAA Code over-prescriptively, adding to the
perception of some academics that the regime was
burdensome The apparent lack of trust between
Government and HEIs seems to permeate some HEIs
internal systems ... - Cabinet Office Better Regulation Task Force
report on HE, - July 2003
24Internal playersthe students
- The student handbooks seen by the audit team
were quite basic and did not make use of intended
learning outcomes a term unfamiliar to the
students who met the team. The students were,
nonetheless, satisfied with the information made
available to them - Cambridge audit report
- (para. 121, report on a DAT)
25What have we done to ourselves ?
- The managerialist model
- the model of technocratic space and academic
complexity
26What have we done to ourselves ?the
managerialist model I
- audit has widened the gulf between teaching
staff and university management ad
administration, with detrimental impacts on the
quality and efficiency of teaching - .. top-down audit systems have generated a
gulf between managers and chalk face staff,
with a lack of communication, mutual
understanding and trust - -- Wright, work previously cited, pp. 2 and 6
27What have we done to ourselves ?the
managerialist model II
- The audit technologies of quality assessment
have resulted in a wide gulf between the
perspectives of managers and lecturers, a lack of
trust between scrutineers and performers, and a
feeling among the latter that audit paper trails
bear little resemblance to reality and are a
wasteful deflection of energy and resources away
from their professional interest in improving
teaching and learning. - -- Wright, p.10
28What have we done to ourselves ?the
managerialist model III
- most teaching staff do not understand the
structure of university decisions making most
teaching staff do not understand how the
universitys core functions are organised Often
we do not know the names and functions of lower
tiers of administrative staff These university
managers have arrogated power to themselves
Academics, meanwhile, find themselves with an
increased workload but decreasing influence - -- Wright, pp.4-5
29QA QE seen through complexity theory
QE WORLD
chaos
zone of complexity on the edge of chaos
QA WORLD
Close to Far from agreement
agreement
rational, technical, political and judgemental
decision making
Close to certainty Far
from certainty
Paul Tosey Teaching on the Edge of Chaos
30What have we done to ourselves ?academic
complexity I
- the pressure from the wider system (for
example, the QAA framework the RAE, funding
systems) are often towards creating certainty and
risk reduction, but through overloading local
systems with demands. This seems to drive local
systems both towards stasis (e.g. we can
concentrate on producing ever neater and tighter
controls, QA systems, etc.) and towards chaos
(e.g. overload of inputs -- demands for QA
returns, monitoring of research projects and
funding, on top of local processes of
restructuring -- may lead the system towards
breakdown. - -- Tosey, p.21
31What have we done to ourselves ?academic
complexity II
- The paradoxes are that systems cannot be
creative and innovative in an orderly fashion
nor can they be excellent if their every move is
monitored. one would expect the local system
that wishes to survive to filter out these
demands, reducing, ignoring, or perhaps
transcending the input overload and refusing to
become locked into stasis. - -- Tosey, p.22
32Where do we go from here ?items for our own
agendas
- Continuing external functions
- Continuing internal functions
- Working with students
- Working on numbers
- Is Quality Enhancement the new Quality Assurance
?
33Where do we go from here ?items on the QAA
agenda I
- Wide range of good practice
- Management and monitoring of collaborative
provision - Use of management information
- Engagement of employers in curriculum planning
and monitoring
34Where do we go from here ?items on the QAA
agenda II
- Assessment procedures especially robustness in
sampling and moderation - Committee structures in teaching and learning
area - Student representation (effectiveness and
attendance) - Professional training for postgraduate tutors
- The PhD completion rates and processes
- Other postgraduate provision sustainability of
Masters level activity
35Where do we go from here -- what are the ways
ahead ?
- Dialogue
- Brokerage
- Radically different models
36Where do we go from here ?dialogue I
- The parties continually change places between
being the subject and the object of the
conversation - Each partys construction of knowledge and
interpretation of reality is equally valid - The powerful have to take on the view from below
- The intended outcome is change
- -- Wright, as earlier slide
37Where do we go from here ?dialogue II
- There is a danger of excessive optimism about
the possibility of fruitful dialogue.
Conversations frequently collapse Dialogue
tends to become an abstraction which elides the
constraints of power, the voluntary and imposed
suppressions which conversation can be said to
enact. Most human exchanges exist in a middle
ground of mediation, appropriation, slippage,
which has the effect of massaging, or indeed,
occluding otherness. We take away from most
conversations what we want to take away - -- Charles Martindale, Redeeming the Text
- Latin poetry and the hermeneutics of reception,
pp.33 and 106
38Where do we go from here ?brokerage
- an intentional act in which the broker seeks
to work in collaborative and creative ways with
people, ideas , knowledge and resources to
develop or change something - Needs infrastructures/processes to support it
- People and organisations in negotiation and
debate - -- Norman Jackson, Engaging and changing
- higher education through brokerage, forthcoming
39Where do we go from here ?radically different
models
- Wright, p.8, after Nelson and Wright
- Participatory development
- Wright, p.8/9, after Engestrom
- Activity Theory
- Wright, p.9, after Senge/Martin
- Learning Organisations
- It is not enough to change strategies,
structures and systems, unless the thinking that
produced those strategies, structures and systems
also changes.
40Where do we go from here ? measuring management
success
- Assuring standards and quality ?
- Enhancing standards and quality ?
- Avoidance vs engagement
- Cost vs benefit
- Engaging students for real
- Maintaining professional credibility
- Maintaining professional self-respect
41Describing quality assurance III
- The dancer, by this time, has turned her back.
- He is the more intelligent by far.
- Facing each other rather desperately --
- his eye is like a star --
- we stare and say, Well, we have come this far