Abstract
In the UK, institutional strategies regarding Personal Development Planning (PDP) are based on two main approaches: 1) legitimising local practices, with an emphasis on PDP process, and 2) central approaches, often IT based, focused on meeting threshold requirements (Ward et al., 2006).This paper reports on the nature and purposes of situated PDP practices that have evolved in four academic programmes of study within a UK university that took the first approach. The study examines the sorts of local PDP practices that have developed within such an institutional framework; how they have come about and what they say about the role and nature of PDP.Using an ethnographic approach, supplemented by staff interviews and document analysis, the four case studies illustrate how an enabling institutional framework has afforded academic course teams the spaces to develop implicit and explicit PDP practices. In two cases a formal and explicit programme-deep model of PDP through e-Portfolio has been developed. In the others, there are implicit, but strong PDP practices evident although they are not necessarily claimed as PDP. The four case studies are not readily categorised but they do exhibit hybrid characteristics of the ââ¬Ëprofessionalââ¬â¢, ââ¬Ëemploymentââ¬â¢ and ââ¬Ëacademicââ¬â¢ domains (Clegg and Bradley, 2006).In conclusion, it will be argued that the diverse and situated nature of PDP practices that have emerged in different contexts need not be seen as institutionally troublesome. These four cases present authentic pictures of what PDP has become, even if it isnââ¬â¢t called PDP.
Highlights
Introduction2) Central approaches, often IT based, focused on meeting threshold requirements
In the UK, institutional strategies regarding Personal Development Planning (PDP) are based on two main approaches (Ward, Jackson and Strivens, 2006): 1) Legitimising local practices, with an emphasis on PDP process. 2) Central approaches, often IT based, focused on meeting threshold requirements.Within these two broad categories lies a diversity of PDP practices
To this end this paper will capture four rich pictures of situated PDP practice that have developed within the context of one UK Higher Education Institution (HEI)
Summary
2) Central approaches, often IT based, focused on meeting threshold requirements. Within these two broad categories lies a diversity of PDP practices. The key purpose of this paper is to see what PDP has become in different academic settings, rather than to evaluate PDP practices against some ideal type of what policy makers think it ought to be. To this end this paper will capture four rich pictures of situated PDP practice that have developed within the context of one UK Higher Education Institution (HEI). We build on the work of Haigh (2008) in looking at the social practices that influence the creation and implementation of PDP.
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