Learning through research : a regional university and its community
journal contribution
posted on 2006-01-01, 00:00authored bySue Kilpatrick, T Jones, M Barrett
Regional universities bring a research capacity to their home locations that is rarely available through other mechanisms in the region. University initiated research projects conducted locally can provide an opportunity for regional communities to examine their practices through a different lens. Through these projects, researchers in regional universities whose research includes sites internal and external to the region are able to connect their region to national and global contexts. Research presents many opportunities for regional universities and their communities to learn together.
There is some evidence that policy-makers are aware of the importance of behavioural relationships in the engagement of regional universities with communities. Policy documents tend to focus on the macro, institutional level benefits, structural incentives and impediments to university and community engagement. This paper examines research from one faculty based on a regional university campus: the Faculty of Education at the University of Tasmania in Launceston in Australia. It takes a micro view, considering benefits and factors influencing success for small research teams and individual researchers and their community research associates. A learning community approach, where synergies from collaboration can generate new knowledge for the benefit of all university and community players, emerges as an effective model for regional engagement through research.
History
Journal
International journal of pedagogies and learning
Volume
2
Issue
2
Season
'Town and gown' in the bush : contemporary regional universities and transforming communities
Pagination
36 - 49
Publisher
University of Southern Queensland, Faculty of Education
Location
Toowoomba, Qld.
ISSN
1833-4105
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal; C Journal article
Copyright notice
2006, University of Southern Queensland, Faculty of Education