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Faculty Autonomy, Freedom, and Satisfaction

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A significant degree of autonomy exists even within the most highly centralized ... process of faculty collaboration supports a high degree of academic freedom. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Faculty Autonomy, Freedom, and Satisfaction


1
Faculty Autonomy, Freedom, and Satisfaction
CENTRALIZED CURRICULA
  • Craig Bach, Ph.D.Andrew N. Carpenter, Ph.D.

10th Sloan-C International Conference on
Asynchronous Learning Networks Orlando, Florida
Sunday, November 14, 2004 830am - 945am
2
Discussion Outline
  • Conceptualization of Centralized Curricula
  • Advantages of Centralized Curricula
  • Consequences for faculty autonomy, academic
    freedom and satisfaction
  • Discussion

3
Curricular Structures
  • What is a centralized curriculum?
  • Identifying Levels of Coordination
  • The Case of Online Learning Contexts

4
Benefits of Coordination
  • Easier Implementation of Program-Level Assessment
  • Increased Quality Assurance
  • Tightening of the Data Collection/
    Evaluation/Learning Improvement Cycle
  • Greater Consistency of Learning Experience

5
Consequences of Coordination
  • Faculty Autonomy

Autonomy decreased in favor of consensus Who
makes up the group that provides consensus?
  • Faculty Freedom

Individual Academic Freedom is restricted and
transferred to Faculty Teams Academic Freedom
Challenged by Institutional Goals
  • Faculty Satisfaction

Classroom experience changed Do faculty report
decreased satisfaction?
6
Substantive Claims about Autonomy
  • The interactions teachers have with individual
    students constitutes the central locus of faculty
    autonomy.
  • Curricular structure has little to do with the
    ways that these interactions allow teachers to
    teach with a distinctive pedagogical voice and
    to develop their own teaching styles and
    preferences.

7
Conclusions about Autonomy
  • A significant degree of autonomy exists even
    within the most highly centralized curricula in
    virtue of the interactions teachers have with
    individual students.
  • Examples of these autonomous acts include the
    tone of interactions with students, the exact
    standards uses to grade work, specific ways to
    explain difficult points.

8
Substantive Claim about Academic Freedom
  • Academic freedom can be vested in the
    collaboration of colleagues, not just in the
    decisions of individuals.

9
Conclusion about Academic Freedom
  • A centralized curriculum that is constructed and
    refined as the result of an inclusive,
    democratic, and ongoing process of faculty
    collaboration supports a high degree of academic
    freedom.

10
Substantive Claims about Faculty Satisfaction
  • The quality of curricular design and
    implementation matters more than curricular
    structure.
  • Substantive opportunities for faculty input into
    curricular design and implementation promote
    faculty satisfaction within a centralized
    curriculum.

11
Conclusion about Faculty Satisfaction
  • A high-quality coordinated curricular context
    arising from faculty-led and faculty-organized
    collaboration can support the professional needs
    of nearly all faculty.
  • Some faculty are more satisfied within a
    centralized curriculum because they are not
    comfortable with or do not wish to engage in
    on-line course design.

12
  • Craig Bach cbach_at_kaplan.edu
  • Andrew N. Carpenteracarpenter_at_kaplan.edu
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