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Teaching-research nexusIn a nutshell logo

 

 

Introduction

Rowland describes the 'enquiring' university as one founded on a culture of open and critical enquiry, underpinning both teaching and research. It is therefore in the spirit of such intellectual enquiry that information and resources are shared on these pages, to start conversations and stimulate ideas. There is no unitary, uncontested view of what the teaching-research nexus looks like (see for example Hughes in Barnett, 2005). Links between teaching and research are likely to be multiple, diverse, dynamic and discipline-specific. Evidence of strong links can be found in a variety of contexts; at Institutional, Divisional/disciplinary and individual teacher-researcher levels.

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Teaching-research nexus and the teaching and learning framework

Critical enquiry is an explicit feature of the teaching-research nexus, through an emphasis on enquiry based learning experiences that develop research skills and critical dispositions. More broadly though, critical enquiry is a concept linking the different aspects of the University's teaching and learning framework. It can be found in each of the the core elements of the framework.

  1. It is expressed in the Graduate Qualities, through the development of critical and creative thinking, problem solving skills, reflective dispositions, the ability to question knowledge, values and assumptions and to understand and apply disciplinary and professional research methods.
  2. It is at the core of active student engagement, through which students reflexively and actively contribute to their own learning.
  3. It underpins the design of flexible learning environments that enable and stimulate experiential learning.
  4. Discipline and profession-specific methods and principles of critical enquiry are developed in distinctive disciplinary contexts.
  5. Research in professional practice is encouraged through practice based learning.
  6. Service learning can be understood to contain an implicit assumption that applying knowledge for the 'public good' requires a level of critical judgement informed by enquiry.

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Indicators of the teaching-research nexus

Students learn through authentic enquiry

Students learn about research

Students learn to do research

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How the Learning and Teaching Unit can collaborate with Schools to support the Teaching-research nexus

The Learning and Teaching Unit is one of several service units which work to improve the teaching and learning environment for students and staff.  The team includes academic and professional staff based on campus in Learning Connection and at the LTU building at Underdale.

Examples of support for the implementation include:

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Examples of the Teaching-research nexus at UniSA

Undergraduate courses:

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Resources and references

 

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Further assistance

Further assistance with Teaching-research nexus is available from your:

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