Global Utilities

Eighth Biennial National Conference of the Association for Academic Language and Learning (AALL) 29 - 30 November 2007

Abstract

“Language staff lose academic ranking”: What’s new managerialism got to do with it?

Rosemary Clerehan
Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Monash University, Melbourne Victoria 3800, Australia
rosemary.clerehan@med.monash.edu.au

The Language and Learning Services Unit at Monash University, a site for the research-based practice of our profession since 1996 and before that, for a previous ten years at the Caulfield and Peninsula campuses, closed at the end of May, 2007.  This paper explores why that happened. It examines the apparent lack of managerial understanding and insight into the nature of academic work – our own and, by extension, that of the students and staff with whom we deal – associated with these events. Crucially, the paper draws on a conception of disciplinary learning as representing for students a complex ecology – an ecology in which we, as Academic Language and Learning practitioners, find our place, and to which we bear witness. The paper argues that management ignored the workings of this ecology to its detriment and, in devoting itself to the institutional priority of auditing learning, devalued the understanding that is necessary in order to help students learn. The implications of this for communication in our practice will be discussed.

Key Words: language and learning, new managerialism, writing, ecology

Content Approved by: Kate Chanock, HASU
Page maintained by: LAS (ESL) Unit
Last Updated: 23 March, 2007

AALL
Netspot
27 November, 2007