Researching Identities: Impact of the Performance-Base Research Fund on the Subject(s) of Education

Abstract

My argument begins by introducing key conceptual tools, applying them to the formative years of Education as a university subject. Second, I sketch a brief history of the subject in New Zealand in the 1980s and 1990s, emphasising its contradictory mandates as both academic and professional/clinical discipline. Third, I explore interviewees’ experiences and perspectives during and immediately after the quality evaluation process (Middleton, 2005a). The conclusion suggests ways the evaluation model might change to support (not penalise) Education’s dual mandate to enhance research capacity and outputs and to produce good practitioners for the teaching professions.

Citation

Middleton, S. (2006). Researching identities: Impact of the Performance-based Research Fund on the Subject(s) of Education. L. Bakker, J. Boston, L. Campbell & R. Smyth (Eds.). Evaluating the Performance-Based Research Fund: Framing the Debate. Wellington: Institute for Policy Studies, Victoria University of Wellington, pp. 477 - 500.

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Institute of Policy Studies

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