Karen Sheppard
University of Queensland
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Higher Education Research & Development | 2015
Wendy Green; Deanne Gannaway; Karen Sheppard; Maryam Jamarani
Governments and educational institutions promote study abroad in the belief that it offers valuable learning experiences for all students. Yet studies suggest that equitable access to study abroad is more myth than reality. This study took a narrative approach supported by survey data to explore this issue at one Australian university. The survey indicated that the majority of students are effectively excluded from the universitys Student Exchange Programme, and that those included generally have high cultural, social and economic capital. Interviews revealed how multiple dimensions of privilege typically work to make study abroad imaginable, affordable and do-able for some. These findings are complicated by one students atypical narrative, which serves to raise further questions for research.
Archive | 2017
Deanne Gannaway; Karen Sheppard
Abstract In a service-led, knowledge-based economy, employers increasingly expect universities to deliver a workforce suited to this environment. This emphasis is evident in contemporary Australian higher education, which is shifting to an acquisition of vocational outcomes. However, vocational outcomes are not traditionally viewed as outcomes of liberal arts programs. Balancing new expectations with traditional perspectives generates a tension between assuring graduates employment outcomes and maintaining the integrity of the Bachelor of Arts (BA) as a liberal arts program. Getting it wrong can result in fragmented and unstable curricula. One of the many ways that Australian BA programs are grappling with this problem is through the provision of work-integrated learning (WIL) opportunities for liberal arts students. In professions-based programs such as engineering or dentistry, the shape and nature of these courses may be obvious. It is less so in the generalist BA. Australian BA programs offer students the opportunity to engage with WIL in a variety of ways. Evidence from national studies investigating the Australian BA between 2008 and 2016 highlight common features of practice – such as the objectives, activities, and structure, and indicate that two approaches to providing WIL opportunities in the BA are evident. In order to meet the goals and aspirations of both economic and social purposes of higher education, liberal arts programs tend to adopt either a transactional or a transformational model. Each model has particular characteristics and approaches to practice that can inform the development of new programs and policies more globally.
Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal | 2014
Michael J. Drinkwater; Deanne Gannaway; Karen Sheppard; Matthew J. Davis; Margaret Wegener; Warwick P. Bowen; Joel F. Corney
Archive | 2017
Deanne Gannaway; Karen Sheppard
Higher Education Research and Development Society of Australasia Annual Conference 2015 | 2016
Mathew Hillier; Karen Sheppard
Proceedings of The Australian Conference on Science and Mathematics Education (formerly UniServe Science Conference) | 2014
Michael J. Drinkwater; Deanne Gannaway; Karen Sheppard; Matthew J. Davis; Margaret Wegener; Warwick P. Bowen; Joel F. Corney
International Conference on Physics Education | 2013
Margaret Wegener; Michael J. Drinkwater; Timothy J. McIntyre; Deanne Gannaway; Karen Sheppard; Dominic McGrath; A Cody
HERDSA Annual International Conference | 2013
Michael J. Drinkwater; Deanne Gannaway; Karen Sheppard; Margaret Wegener
Archive | 2012
Deanne Gannaway; Karen Sheppard
Archive | 2012
Martin Mills; Merrilyn Goos; Sue Monk; Sandy Muspratt; Peter Renshaw; Rob Gilbert; Shelley Dole; Eileen Honan; Kim Nichols; Tony Wright; Deanne Gannaway; Karen Sheppard