1995
DOI: 10.1007/bf01383835
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What parts of teaching do academics see as feasible to delegate?

Abstract: This paper investigates Australian academics' views about teaching by asking them about the aspects of their job they could contract to others. In particular, it contrasts the views of 26 academics inthe Humanities with those of 26 in the Social Sciences. The results showed no differences as a function of level of appointment or gender but a significant difference by teaching area: academics from the Social Sciences were more likely to approve in general the practice of 'buying out' time. When asked about cont… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
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“…Davies and Salisbury (2009) mention, in passing, the practical buy-out difficulties faced by academics using funds from a project designed to establish a research network. Warton (2005) is a rare example of a study specifically about buying-out. She asked academics about their buying-out preferences, but even then the focus of her study was not on buying-out per se; she used the activities preferred for buying-out as a proxy for the extent to which different aspects of academic work were valued (Warton 2005, p. 129).…”
Section: Background and Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Davies and Salisbury (2009) mention, in passing, the practical buy-out difficulties faced by academics using funds from a project designed to establish a research network. Warton (2005) is a rare example of a study specifically about buying-out. She asked academics about their buying-out preferences, but even then the focus of her study was not on buying-out per se; she used the activities preferred for buying-out as a proxy for the extent to which different aspects of academic work were valued (Warton 2005, p. 129).…”
Section: Background and Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 98%