Exploration of how curriculum co-creation advances student and staff aims for Scottish higher education
dc.contributor.advisor
Bovill, Catherine
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dc.contributor.advisor
Loads, Daphne
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dc.contributor.author
Lubicz-Nawrocka, Tanya Michelle
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dc.date.accessioned
2020-07-27T14:35:16Z
dc.date.available
2020-07-27T14:35:16Z
dc.date.issued
2020-06-30
dc.description.abstract
The Scottish higher education landscape has been evolving to place a greater
emphasis on student engagement, in common with the higher education sector
internationally. In the last ten years, discussion of curriculum co-creation and
student/staff partnerships in learning and teaching have become increasingly
prevalent in facilitating high levels of both student and staff engagement. My study
seeks to provide a deeper understanding of what curriculum co-creation means in
practice at Scottish universities, and how this approach affects students, staff, and
their higher education institutions.
My thesis focuses on how undergraduate students and staff at Scottish universities
conceptualise co-creation of the curriculum, and how these conceptualisations relate
to their aims for students within higher education. I draw on a wide range of
interdisciplinary literature to examine aims for higher education and key themes in 21st
Century higher education. I position co-creation of the curriculum within the wider
literature on student development, student engagement, and student/staff
partnerships while also looking at how different conceptualisations of the higher
education curriculum affect how it can be co-created.
I integrate different methodologies into my multi-phase, qualitative study. Through
criterion and snowball sampling, I identified 24 staff and student co-creation
practitioners at five Scottish universities who engaged in 15 curriculum co-creation
initiatives. I conducted 20 in-depth, semi-structured interviews and one focus group
discussion with these individuals during Phase 1. In Phases 2 and 3, I incorporated
photo-elicitation methods embedded in an arts-based approach within four further
focus group discussions and worked with two undergraduate student co-researchers
using co-inquiry methods to learn from 25 students and staff who were not co-creating
curricula. Drawing on aspects of a constructivist grounded theory approach, I
analysed cross-cutting themes which emerged. My findings focus on participants’
aims for higher education, conceptualisations of student engagement and curriculum
co-creation, and the benefits and challenges of co-creating curricula.
I offer a new definition of curriculum co-creation that extends beyond broad notions of
student/staff collaborations in curriculum development. I define the term as the
values-based implementation of an ongoing, creative, and mutually-beneficial process of staff and students working together to share and negotiate decisionmaking about aspects of higher education curricula. Examining further the notions of
creativity in curriculum development, innovation to develop enjoyment of learning and
resilience, and democratic engagement to promote positive civic impact are particular
contributions that my research makes to deepen current understandings of cocreation of the curriculum. I advance connections between risk in curriculum cocreation and the development of self-authorship to help individuals face complex
challenges and develop stronger democratic societies. Curriculum co-creation enacts
participants’ aims to foster not only individuals’ personal and professional
development but also their ability to advance social justice and have a positive impact
on their communities.
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dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/37195
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/496
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en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
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Dyer, S., & Lubicz-Nawrocka, T. (2019). Using play to facilitate faculty-student partnership: How can you co-design a module? In A. James & C. Nerantzi (Eds.), The power of play in higher education: Creativity in tertiary learning (pp. 299-302). Cham, Switzerland: Palgrave Macmillan
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Felten, P., Abbot, S., Kirkwood, J., Long, A., Lubicz-Nawrocka, T., MercerMapstone, L., & Verwood, R. (2019). Reimagining the place of students in academic development. International Journal for Academic Development, 24(2), pp. 192-203. doi:https://doi.org/10.1080/1360144X.2019.1594235
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Hancock, J., & Lubicz-Nawrocka, T. (2018). Creating spaces: Embracing risk and partnership in higher education. Teaching and Learning Together in Higher Education, 1(24).
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Lubicz-Nawrocka, T. (2011). Cosmopolitanism: exploring internationalism, multiculturalism, diversity, and global citizenship at English universities. (Master of Philosophy), University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
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Lubicz-Nawrocka, T. (2016). Co-creation of the curriculum and social justice: Changing the nature of student-teacher relationships in higher education. Paper presented at the Higher Education Close Up Conference: Locating Social Justice in Close-Up Research in Higher Education, Lancaster, UK. http://www.lancaster.ac.uk/fass/events/hecu8/abstracts/lubicz-nawrocka.htm
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Lubicz-Nawrocka, T. (2017). Co-creation of the curriculum: Challenging the status quo to embed partnership. Journal of Educational Innovation, Partnership and Change, 3(2). doi:https://doi.org/10.21100/jeipc.v3i2.529
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Lubicz-Nawrocka, T. (2018). Students as partners in learning and teaching: The benefits of co-creation of the curriculum. International Journal for Students as Partners, 2(1), pp. 47-63. doi:https://doi.org/10.15173/ijsap.v2i1.3207
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Lubicz-Nawrocka, T. (2019). Creativity and collaboration: An exploration of empathy, inclusion, and resilience in co-creation of the curriculum. Student Engagement in Higher Education Journal, 2(3), 199-213.
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Lubicz-Nawrocka, T. (2019). “More than just a student”: How co-creation of the curriculum fosters Third Spaces in ways of working, identity, and impact. International Journal for Students as Partners, 3(1), pp. 34-49. doi:https://doi.org/10.15173/ijsap.v3i1.3727
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Lubicz-Nawrocka, T., & Bunting, K. (2019). Student perceptions of teaching excellence: An analysis of student-led teaching award nomination data. Teaching in Higher Education, 24(1), pp. 63-80. doi:https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2018.1461620
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Lubicz-Nawrocka, T., & Simoni, H. (2018). Co-researching co-creation of the curriculum: Reflections on arts-based methods in education and connections to healthcare co-production. International Journal for Students as Partners, 2(2), pp. 157-165. doi:https://doi.org/10.15173/ijsap.v2i2.3427
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dc.subject
curriculum co-creation
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dc.subject
student engagement
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dc.subject
higher education
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students as partners
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co-creation of the curriculum
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co-creation in the curriculum
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creativity
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third space
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dc.title
Exploration of how curriculum co-creation advances student and staff aims for Scottish higher education
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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