Author(s) |
Legge, Ian Hector
Harman, Grant
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Publication Date |
1998
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Abstract |
This thesis reports on a study of decisions and decision making among academics in a student development unit,the Educational development department, located on the Footscray Campus of the Victoria University of Technology (formerly the Footscray Institute of Technology). The study reviews literature on academic culture and decision making. Broad ideas from that field are applied to empirical data gathered at the field work site from 1986 to 1991. Individual academics gave key decisions sampled from their workplace settings and each was interviewed for their perceptions about further key decisions being made or contemplated. During the data gathering phase, the researcher tried to stay close to actors' own perceptions of the field. The study focuses mainly upon the many and varied ways in which academics perceived the domain of decision making within their own close circles of work. Among its findings, the thesis calls for a more careful approach to discourse upon decisions and decision making, finding that confusions arising in ordinary Language distort social realities. Decisions are more usefully seen as pinnacle points of meaning that do not remain static within social settings. Widely and deeply across fields of legitimation, actors in this higher education setting were found to use them to both support and undermine, and by that dual process, to displace persons, ideas and programs that are normally seen to be held static in authority locations
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Link | |
Title |
Academics Making Strategic Decisions: a case study of decisions and decision making in a student development unit in an Australian University
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Type of document |
Thesis Masters Research
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Entity Type |
Publication
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