TY - JOUR
T1 - Shaping the time to be a good teacher
T2 - a case study on teacher excellence and time ownership in a British transnational university
AU - Comerio, Giovanna
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2024/5/14
Y1 - 2024/5/14
N2 - This study is about a lecturer protecting herself and her teaching from the university’s increasing demands on her personal and timeless time. The British university is shaped by a fundamental arrhythmia: the co-existence of digital time, that academics are encouraged to embrace working from anywhere at any time; and analogical time, the linear time of classes, deadlines, and required administrative tasks. Pressured by these competing demands on their time and responsibilities, research and surveys show that academics feel alienated as university time arrhythmia ‘devours’ both their thinking and personal time and can compromise their wellbeing. This case study aims at uncovering the connection between the lecturer’s practices of teaching excellence, her administrative work and university time. Qualitative content analysis of semi-structured interviews illustrates how university time and teaching excellence are related, and university arrhythmia can actually be used to protect good teaching. This lecturer skilfully managed university time-devouring arrhythmia: when the university used an analogical logic of time, she used digital time, and vice versa. By doing this, she protected her personal and timeless time as well as her own teaching from mounting demands of teacher excellence, measured by the university’s simultaneous and conflicting digital and analogical logics of time.
AB - This study is about a lecturer protecting herself and her teaching from the university’s increasing demands on her personal and timeless time. The British university is shaped by a fundamental arrhythmia: the co-existence of digital time, that academics are encouraged to embrace working from anywhere at any time; and analogical time, the linear time of classes, deadlines, and required administrative tasks. Pressured by these competing demands on their time and responsibilities, research and surveys show that academics feel alienated as university time arrhythmia ‘devours’ both their thinking and personal time and can compromise their wellbeing. This case study aims at uncovering the connection between the lecturer’s practices of teaching excellence, her administrative work and university time. Qualitative content analysis of semi-structured interviews illustrates how university time and teaching excellence are related, and university arrhythmia can actually be used to protect good teaching. This lecturer skilfully managed university time-devouring arrhythmia: when the university used an analogical logic of time, she used digital time, and vice versa. By doing this, she protected her personal and timeless time as well as her own teaching from mounting demands of teacher excellence, measured by the university’s simultaneous and conflicting digital and analogical logics of time.
KW - analogical time
KW - digital time
KW - teaching excellence
KW - university arrhythmia
KW - University time
U2 - 10.1080/07294360.2024.2349288
DO - 10.1080/07294360.2024.2349288
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85192979941
SN - 0729-4360
VL - 43
SP - 1511
EP - 1524
JO - Higher Education Research and Development
JF - Higher Education Research and Development
IS - 7
M1 - 2349288
ER -