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Evans, Linda – Professional Development in Education, 2019
The landscape of professional development and learning knowledge has expanded steadily over the last few decades. Accompanying this expansion, the field's lexicon has widened, to include terms such as 'situated' learning and learning 'in situ', which incorporate recognition that professional learning and development occur as part-and-parcel of…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Informal Education, Incidental Learning, Educational Research
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Evans, Linda – Educational Management Administration & Leadership, 2017
In the UK the title "professor" is generally applied only to the most senior academics--equivalent to North American full professors--and whom anecdotal evidence indicates to be often unprepared for the increasingly expansive academic leadership roles that they are expected to fulfil. The study reported in this paper was directed at…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Instructional Leadership, Leadership Role, Foreign Countries
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Evans, Linda – Cambridge Journal of Education, 2014
The educational research community has made great strides in clarifying and enhancing our understanding of professional development and how it occurs. Yet in relation to one question--How do people develop professionally?--this knowledge base falls short, for while much research has been directed at addressing the question, findings have tended to…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Faculty Development, Educational Research, Cognitive Processes
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Evans, Linda; Tress, Maria Bertani – International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, 2009
What motivates research-focused academics, employed at a leading research university, to want to teach well--particularly considering that many of them admit to prioritising research above teaching? Why do they not simply settle for expending as little time as possible on their teaching planning and preparation, delivering run-of-the-mill,…
Descriptors: Research Universities, Academic Achievement, College Faculty, Teacher Effectiveness