Figures in the higher education landscape Explanatory note



Figures in the higher education landscapeUniversities in the Knowledge Economy (UNIKE) Summer SchoolPorto29 June – 3 July 2015A five day doctoral training course with a coherent programme of lectures, discussions and meetings with students on their individual projects. This is the sixth event in the doctoral training package of the EU Marie Curie programme UNIKE (Universities in the Knowledge Economy)Faculty of Psychology and Educational SciencesUniversity of PortoRua Alfredo Allen 4200-135 Porto - PORTUGAL Table of Contents TOC \o "1-2" \h \z \u Introduction PAGEREF _Toc418081181 \h 31Programme - Agenda of the event PAGEREF _Toc418081182 \h 42Abstracts of the sessions and the preparatory readings for students PAGEREF _Toc418081183 \h 72.1Transformation of educational categories in higher education PAGEREF _Toc418081184 \h 72.2Figuration Work: Anthropological explorations into university reform and shifting student figures PAGEREF _Toc418081185 \h 82.3The academic profession in Europe: new tasks and new challenges PAGEREF _Toc418081186 \h 82.4Transforming universities in Europe and the Asia-Pacific Rim – comparative view PAGEREF _Toc418081187 \h 92.5Are university managers/administrators people? PAGEREF _Toc418081188 \h 102.6Being an academic today PAGEREF _Toc418081189 \h 102.7The Learning Question: Governing the Professional Student PAGEREF _Toc418081190 \h 122.8Aspects of doctoral education: Governing narratives and doctoral education PAGEREF _Toc418081191 \h 133Preparations for the UNIKE summer school in Porto PAGEREF _Toc418081192 \h 143.1Fellows’ session: presentation and discussion of pieces of writing: ‘thesis of the thesis’, a chapter or an article submitted for feedback PAGEREF _Toc418081193 \h 143.2Division of work PAGEREF _Toc418081194 \h 153.3Complementary training package: ‘Hands on skills’ training on abstract writing, on the basis of abstracts students submitted in advance PAGEREF _Toc418081195 \h 153.4Summary of the deadlines PAGEREF _Toc418081196 \h 164Practical information PAGEREF _Toc418081197 \h 174.1Information about Porto and Portugal PAGEREF _Toc418081198 \h 174.2Weather PAGEREF _Toc418081199 \h 174.3Transport PAGEREF _Toc418081200 \h 174.4Accomodation PAGEREF _Toc418081201 \h 204.5Other facilities PAGEREF _Toc418081202 \h 214.6Summer School Venue PAGEREF _Toc418081203 \h 214.7Catering during the day PAGEREF _Toc418081204 \h 234.8Dinners PAGEREF _Toc418081205 \h 244.9Douro valley tour (Saturday, 4th July) PAGEREF _Toc418081206 \h 295Questions PAGEREF _Toc418081207 \h 306Annexes PAGEREF _Toc418081208 \h 316.1Rebecca Boden’s text on ‘the thesis of the thesis’ in her e-mail from 1st of March 2015 PAGEREF _Toc418081209 \h 31IntroductionThe Faculty of Psychology and Education Sciences of the University of Porto warmly welcomes all participants to the 6th “Universities in the Knowledge Economy” (UNIKE) Summer School from Monday 29 June 2015 to Friday 3 July 2015. UNIKE is a four year collaborative research project funded by the European Commission and involves six different universities: Aarhus University, ENS Lyon, Ljubljana University, Roehampton University, the University of Bristol and the University of Porto University. The UNIKE project is training a networked group of critical researchers aiming to produce original research on the changing roles and scope of universities in the global knowledge economies, with a focus on Europe and the Asia-Pacific Rim regions.The theme of the summer school is “Figures in the higher education landscape” and aims at analysing the transformations of the figure of the manager, academic, student and the university itself. The rationale is to question to what extent actors are actively involved in negotiating their roles and the meaning(s) higher education is assuming.This document summarises the preparation for the UNIKE summer school in Porto, Portugal. It contains the programme (part 1); the abstract of the sessions and the preparatory readings (part 2); the preparatory tasks, the division of work and the specific instructions to commentators/discussants of the papers produced by the fellows and associated fellows, as well as the deadlines for the appointed tasks (part 3) and the practical information (part 4).Besides management meetings, social outings, and PhD fellows’ sessions, the summer school will also comprise sessions on: Scientific training package: See sessions by different lecturers (see part 2)Complementary training package: ‘Hands-on skills’ training on abstract writing, on the basis of abstracts they had submitted in advance (see part 3)Aspects of doctoral education: Governing narratives and doctoral education (see part 2)Fellows’ sessions, in which fellows will have the opportunity to present and receive feedback on a piece of writing (a ‘thesis of the thesis’, a chapter or an article) they submitted in advance (see part 3)Programme - Agenda of the eventFigures in the higher education landscapeProgramme – 29/06/2015 – 03/07/2015MondayTuesdayWednesdayThursdayFridaySaturday29/0630/0601/0702/0703/0704/0708.45 – 09.00Welcome.8.30-10.15Hands on skills training on abstract writingTiago Neves (University of Porto)Optional programme: Douro Day – visit vineyards outside Porto (on own expense)Session 109.00-10.45Fellows’ session (3 x 35 min)09.00-10.45Fellows’ session (3 x 35 min)09.00-10.45Fellows’ session (3 x 35 min)09.00-10.45Aspects of doctoral education: Governing narratives and doctoral educationAntonio M. Magalhaes (University of Porto) and Corina Balaban (University of Aarhus)10.15-10.30Tea/Coffee BreakTea/CoffeeBreak10.45-11.00Tea/Coffee Break10.45-11.00Tea/Coffee Break10.45-11.00Tea/Coffee Break10.45-11.00Tea/Coffee Break10.30-12.00Hands on skills training on abstract writingTiago Neves (University of Porto)11.00-11.45Evaluation and feedback from the internal evaluator for the partnersSession 211.00 -12.15Transformation of educational categories in higher educationAmelia Vega (CIPES) and Antonio M. Magalhaes (University of Porto) 11.00 -12.45Fellows’ session (3 x 35 min)11.00 -12.30 Are university managers/administrators people?Rebecca Boden (University of Roehampton) and Davydd Greenwood (Cornell University)11.00-12.45Board meeting / Fellows’ meeting Lunch break12.15-13.30Lunch break with mentoring sessions12.45-14.00Lunch break with mentoring sessions12.30-13.30Lunch break with mentoring sessions12.45-14.00Lunch break with mentoring sessions12.00-13.00Lunch break with mentoring sessionsSession 313.30 – 15.15 Fellows’ session (3 x 35 min)14.00-15.45Fellows’ session (3 x 35 min)13.30-15.15Fellows’ session ( 3 x 35 min)Afternoon14.00Walk Porto17.00Visit cellars Port wine13.00 -15.15Final Plenary Session: Next meetings and final conference in Copenhagen + Review of the whole training+ Evaluation and feedback from the internal evaluator15.15 End of the summer schoolTea/CoffeeBreak15.15 -15.3015.45-16.30Longer break15.15 -15.30Session 415.30 – 16.30Figuration Work: Anthropological explorations into university reform and shifting student figuresGritt Nielsen(University of Aarhus)16.30 – 18.00Open public session: Transforming universities in Europe and the Asia-Pacific Rim – comparative viewUlrich Teichler (University of Kassel)15.30 – 16.30Being an academic todayJo?lle Fanghanel (University of West London) 19.30 Dinner in Matosinhos for those staying until Saturday(at all participants own expense)Break16.30-17.0018.00-19.3016.30-17.00Session 517.00-18.30Open public session: The academic profession in Europe: new tasks and new challengesTeresa Carvalho (University of Aveiro)17.00-18.30Open public session: The Learning Question: Governing the Professional StudentMaarten Simons (KU Leuven)Break18.30-19.3018.30-19.30Dinner19.30Dinner19.30Dinner19.30Dinner19.30DinnerAbstracts of the sessions and the preparatory readings for studentsThis section provides abstracts and readings (in order or appearance) related to the scientific training sessions prepared by invited speakers and UNIKE partners. All fellows, associated fellows and visiting PhD students are expected to read the preparatory readings. The preparatory readings will be uploaded on the UNIKE internal website by 4th May 2015: Link: : unikewebPassword: partner123Transformation of educational categories in higher educationAntónio M. Magalh?es (University of Porto) and Amélia Veiga (CIPES)AbstractThe meaning higher education is assuming and tends to assume is being hindered by the focus on political and functional management of the sector. The research agenda on higher education has been focusing on governance and management of higher education systems and institutions rather than on education itself. The educational role of higher education ‘deficit of concern’ should be kept at the top of higher education research agenda.The modern ideal of education assumed that the exposure of students to knowledge potentially provided emancipatory and transformational features for the individuals, providing to society better citizens and specialized workers. Educational concepts are being re-interpreted in the framework of the establishment of the EHEA and acquiring visibility as the focus on competences is underlying training and trainability.The focus on competences and (learning) outcomes has been reconfiguring education in European higher education. Education policy instruments such as the adoption of the credit system based on the student workload, the European Qualifications Framework and the description of learning outcomes induce the reconfiguration of the role attributed to education with major implications on higher education’s educational categories (e.g. teaching, learning, students, professors, classes, etc.). ReadingsMagalh?es, A., & Veiga, A. (2013). What about education in higher education? In L. Smith (Ed.), Higher Education: Recent Trends, Emerging Issues and Future Outlook (pp. 57-72). New York: Nova Science Publishers.Nybom, Torn. (2012). The Disintegration of Higher Education in Europe, 1970-2010: A Post-Humboldtian Essay. In S. Rothblatt (Ed.), Clark Kerr's World of Higher Education Reaches the 21st century (pp. 163-181). Dordrecht: Springer.Figuration Work: Anthropological explorations into university reform and shifting student figuresGritt Nielsen (Aarhus University)AbstractWhat role should students take in shaping their education, their university, and the wider society? These questions have assumed new importance in recent years as universities are reformed to become competitive in the “global knowledge economy.” With Denmark as the prism, this session will discuss how negotiations over student participation — influenced by demands for efficiency, flexibility, and student-centered education — reflect wider concerns about democracy and citizen participation in increasingly neoliberalised states. We explore my approach (which I’ve called Figuration work) and discuss the strengths and weaknesses of using anthropological methods for studying processes of reform.Readings Three chapters of my book in press (will be out early July):Nielsen, G. B. (2015, in press). ‘Introduction’. In Figuration Work. Student Participation, Democracy and University Reform in a Global Knowledge Economy. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books. The EASA series. P. 1-46.Nielsen, G. B. (2015, in press). ‘Bodies and Voices’. In Figuration Work. Student Participation, Democracy and University Reform in a Global Knowledge Economy. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books. The EASA series. P. 243-286.Nielsen, G. B. (2015, in press). ‘Entangled Figurations’. In Figuration Work. Student Participation, Democracy and University Reform in a Global Knowledge Economy. New York and Oxford: Berghahn Books. The EASA series. P.288-295.The academic profession in Europe: new tasks and new challengesTeresa Carvalho (University of Aveiro)AbstractIn this communication an interpretation of the recent changes in the academic profession in Europe, within the context of changes taking place in the higher education system and institutions is presented. In this interpretation different levels of analysis are developed. The literature of the sociology of professions is used as a possible framework to interpret the changes, historical and sociological, that affected teachers in European higher education over the past few years. Three major processes of change are identified: segmentation, feminisation and commodification. The prospects this group of academic actors now face are scrutinised as are the potential consequences for the standing of this particular group inside academia and in society.ReadingsCarvalho, T. (2012) Shaping the ‘new’ academic profession. Tensions and contradictions in the professionalisation of academics. In Guy Neave & Alberto Amaral (ed.) Higher Education in Portugal 1974-2009. A Nation, A Generation. pp. 329-352. Dordrecht: Springer Publishers. Musselin, C. (2013). How peer review empowers the academic profession and university managers: Changes in relationships between the state, universities and the professoriate. Research Policy, 42(5), 1165-1173.H?hle, E. and Teichler, U. (2013). The European academic profession or academic profession in Europe? In Ulrich Teichler and Ester Ava H?hle (Eds.) The work situation of the academic profession in Europe: Findings of a survey in twelve countries. Dordrech. SpringerTransforming universities in Europe and the Asia-Pacific Rim – comparative viewUlrich Teichler (University of Kassel)AbstractChanges of higher education in East Asia tend to be viewed in Europe with a mix of admiration, fear and critique: “Economic animal”, strong political “guidance”, merciless meritocracy, endless vertical hierarchy seem to be characteristics in East Asia and to gain momentum to some extent in Europe as well. This suggests that a comparison of the relationships between higher education and society, of the links between higher education and the social order, of the institutional fabric and of the modes of governance between East Asian countries and European countries serves “food for thought” as regards the changing character of higher education. However, if more attention is paid to individual countries as well as to the views and activities of the academic profession, a more varied and complex situation is surfacing. Such an in-depth approach does not call into question that some East Asian countries are more prone to the paradigm of the “knowledge economy” than some European countries, but calls for paying attention to a more varied and conflicting reality.ReadingsCummings, W. K. (2014). Asian Research: The Role of Universities. In Yonezawa, A. et al. (Eds.). Emerging International Dimensions in East Asian Higher Education Higher Education. Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 35-54.Marginson, S. (2011). Higher Education in East Asia and Singapore: Rise of the Confucian Model. Higher Education, 61, 587-611.Shin, J. C. (2015). Mass Higher Education and Its Challenges for Rapidly Growing East Asian Higher Education; Conclusion: Lessons from Higher Education Development in East Asia. In Shin, J. C. et al. (Eds.) Mass Higher Education Development in East Asia: Strategy, Quality, and Challenges. Cham: Springer, pp. 1-23 and 363-371.Teichler, U. (2012). Diversity of Higher Education in Europe and the Findings of a Comparative Study of the Academic Profession. In Curaj, A. et al. (Eds.). European Higher Education at the Crossroads: Between the Bologna Process and National Reforms. Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 935-959.Further ReadingSee other articles in the above named books.Are university managers/administrators people?Rebecca Boden (University of Roehampton) and Davydd Greenwood (Cornell University)AbstractThe session will be conducted in three parts: in the first, there will be a 'structured' conversation between prof. Greenwood and prof. Boden about issues of university managers/administrators. In this, they will highlight a variety of issues that will lead into the second part, which is a piece of group work, with participants in small groups. The participants will be given a short account of a real-life event (actually to do with UNIKE project) and will be invited to respond to a series of prompting questions to analyse, explore and interrogate the story. The third part will be a plenary in which there will be a joint discussion on what small groups thought/talked about. ReadingsNews-cutting files with examples from the US and the UK will be given as reading at a later stage.Being an academic todayJo?lle Fanghanel (University of West London)AbstractIn this presentation, I discuss the impact on academics of the forms of governance that have come to prevail in UK higher education over the past two decades or so, as reliance on state funding has gradually decreased whilst, at the same time, state control ‘from a distance’ (Neave, 1998 ) has significantly increased. As the higher education sector has become increasingly marketised – the UK being particularly ahead of many countries in Europe in this experiment - I will discuss the implications on practice, and specifically:professionalization of the academic roleranks and visibility of outputstensions between research and teaching, and exclusion for teaching-only academicsthe relation with students and the rhetoric of ‘engagement’In a recently published book (Fanghanel, 2012), I showed that academics do have a degree of agency in the way they respond to what has been broadly referred to as managerialism (Deem et al, 2007). There positioning is complex, and not of one piece. I will discuss ways of promoting ways of working in the academy that lead to alternative forms of engagement with students and practice. Whilst this perspective frames my argument in a deliberately optimistic light, the view of academics discussed here is not *na?vely* optimistic but rather related to what the French philosopher Alain has called ‘deliberate optimism’ (un optimisme voulu) (Alain, 1916, p 305) – which implies an engagement in promoting some purposeful alternative to that which appears to be overwhelming.ReadingsFanghanel, J. (2012). The Managed Academic. In: Being an Academic. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 15-30.Locke, W. (2014) Shifting academic careers: implications for enhancing professionalism in teaching and supporting learning. The Higher Education Academy, consulted on: https:// HYPERLINK "" \t "_blank" Further readingsRecommended reading on identity, globalisation and academic workBall, S. J. (2000) Performativities and fabrication in the education economy: Towards the performative society? The Australian Educational Researcher.27(2): 1-24.Ball, S. J. (2003) The teacher's soul and the terrors of performativity. Journal of Education Policy.18215-228.Barnett, R. (2005) Reshaping the university : new relationships between research, scholarship and teaching Maidenhead: Society for Research into Higher Education and Open University Press.Barnett, R. (2010) Being a University. New York and London: Routledge.Barnett, R. & Di Napoli, R. (2008) Changing identities in higher education : voicing perspectives London: Routledge.Bennion, A. & Locke, W. (2010) The Early Career Paths and Employment Conditions of the Academic Profession in 17 Countries. European Review.18(1): 7-33.Fanghanel, J. (2009) The role of ideology in academics’ conceptions of their discipline. Teaching in Higher Education. Special Issue: Purposes, Knowledge and Identities.14(5 ): 565-577.Fanghanel, J. (2012) Being an Academic. London and New York: Routledge.Fanghanel, J. & Cousin, G. (2012) A 'worldly' pedagogy: a case study on learning across conflict at university. Teaching in Higher Education.17 (1): 39-50.King, R. (2004) The University in a Global Age. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.King, R., Marginson, S. & Naidoo, R. (eds.) (2013) The Globalization of Higher Education. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar.Kreber, C. (ed.) (2009) The University and its Disciplines: Teaching and Learning Within and Beyond Disciplinary Boundaries. New York and London: Routledge.Locke, W. (2014) Shifting academic careers: implications for enhancing professionalism in teaching and supporting learning. Locke, W. & Bennion, A. (2010) The Changing Academic Profession in the UK and beyond, UUK Research Report. Centre for Higher Education Research and Information (CHERI): , L. (2006) The Research Game in Academic Life. Maidenhead: The Society for Research into Higher Education and Open University Press.Musselin, C. (2007) Transformation of Academic Work: Facts and Analysis. In: Kogan, M. & Teichler, U. (eds.) Key Challenges to the Academic Profession. Paris and Kassel: UNESCO Forum for Higher Education, Research and Knowledge:175-190.Musselin, C. (2009) Les réformes des universités en Europe: Des orientations comparables, mais des déclinaisons nationales. Revue du Mouvement anti-utilitariste dans les sciences sociales: L’Université en crise. Mort ou résurrection? 3369-91.Naidoo, R. (2005) Universities in the Marketplace: The Distortion of Teaching and Research. In: Barnett, R. (ed.) Reshaping the University: New Relationships between Research, Scholarship and Teaching. Maidenhead: Open University Press and McGraw-Hill Education:27-47.Palfreyman, D. & Tapper, T. (2014) Reshaping the University: The Rise of the Regulated Market in Higher Education. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Skelton, A. (2007) International Perspectives on Teaching Excellence in Higher Education: Improving knowledge and practice. Abingdon: Routledge.Trowler, P., Saunders, M. & Bamber, V. (eds.) (2012) Tribes and Territories in the 21st-Century: Rethinking the significance of disciplines in higher education. London and New York: Routledge.Whitchurcch, C. (2013) Reconstructing Identities in Higher Education: The Rise of Third Space Professionals. Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.Young, M. F. D. (2008) Bringing Knowledge Back In: From social constructivism to social realism in the sociology of education. Abingdon: Routledge.The Learning Question: Governing the Professional StudentMaarten Simons, KU LeuvenAbstractIn the nineteenth century, the so-called social question became a common and influential way of framing issues that necessitated particular governmental interventions and the deployment of adequate technologies to promote social security and socialized freedom. The lecture departs from the thesis that what emerged during the last two decades is a kind of ‘learning question’. The new framing is no longer about social normality (and mobility) but ?about learned competences (and employability). Several articulations of this shift will be discussed, including the focus on monitoring and feedback devices, the establishment of reference and exchange frameworks, and different forms of personalization, learning analytics and algorithmic reasoning. The close description of the emergence of the ‘learning apparatus’ will help to understand why learning in higher education institutions (as well as beyond) is increasingly accompanied with the concern for acceleration and how the new figure of the (higher education) student as ‘professional learner’ begins to play a major role. The ultimate objective of the lecture is to slow down by allowing issues to provoke thinking. But probably slowing down is discomforting for the fast learning of the professional student.ReadingsSimons, M., Masschelein, J. (2008). The governmentalization of learning and the assemblage of a learning apparatus. Educational theory, 58(4), 391-415.Simons, M. (2014). The learning question: Monitoring, Feedback and Performance Spectacles. In M. Pereyra & B. Franklin (eds.), Systems of Reason and the Politics of Schooling (pp.? 145 -164). New York: Routledge.Rose, N. (1999). Powers of Freedom: Reframing Political Thought. Chapter 3: The social (pp. 98-136). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Aspects of doctoral education: Governing narratives and doctoral education António M. Magalh?es (University of Porto) and Corina Balaban (University of Aarhus)AbstractThe session is divided in 3 parts: the first part looks at the transformations that have been taking place in doctoral education in Europe since it first came onto the EU agenda; the configuration that doctoral education has assumed has been diverse and often a result of tensions between EU policies and national and institutional contexts; this has provided the backdrop for the emergence of the ITN (Initial Training Network), as the EU idea for doctoral education, and its intersection(s) with existent national ideas for doctoral education. The second part looks at these developments through the lens of the enactment of a political 'grammar’ for European higher education governance. Lastly, the third part interprets these developments through the lens of 'governance' and 'figure,' more specifically by looking at how the OMC (open method of coordination) has contributed to the creation, in policy at least, of the neo-liberal worker, seen as a compilation of attributes, skills and experiences which individuals have to market.ReadingsKehm, B.M. (2007). Quo Vadis Doctoral Education? New European Approaches in the Context of Global Changes. European Journal of Education, 42(3).Melin, G. and Janson, K. (2006). What skills and knowledge should a PhD have? Changing preconditions for PhD education and post doc work. Preparations for the UNIKE summer school in PortoFellows’ session: presentation and discussion of pieces of writing: ‘thesis of the thesis’, a chapter or an article submitted for feedbackThe aim of this session is to allow fellows, associated fellows and guest PhD students to receive feedback on a piece of writing they will submit in advance. The piece of writing can be a chapter of a PhD dissertation, an article, a book chapter or a piece on ‘the thesis of the thesis’ (see Rebecca Boden’s text on ‘the thesis of the thesis’ in her e-mail from 1st of March 2015: in annex). As the texts will be in different forms therefore requiring different types of feedback we will consider grouping all of the thesis of thesis texts/articles/thesis chapters together in panels.Fellows should indicate at the beginning of the text the nature of the paper they are submitting. The length of this piece of work is limited to 6000 words (including notes, but not including references). The text should be submitted by 30 May 2015 by email to Kathrin Gramsch (kagra@edu.au.dk). Kathrin will upload all the submissions to the UNIKE internal website for all to download.During the summer school, every text will be discussed by two discussants (one partner from the ‘pool’ of UNIKE partners and the invited lecturers, and one fellow, associated fellow or guest PhD student).Each fellow gets 35 minutes in which his or her work is discussed. Fellows can decide individually whether to make a presentation or not. Those who choose to make a presentation are advised not to spend more than 5 minutes to the presentation. In case the fellow works with a presentation, the idea is still to critique the text, not the presentation.Following a fellow’s presentation, each commentator will have about 5 minutes to comment, focusing on two main points for discussion, bearing in mind the particular points/issues that the fellow wishes to be commented on. Commentators should adopt a tone of critical encouragement. The rest of the time (approx. 10 minutes) can be used to discuss the text in plenum. As a discussant you will be required to give oral feedback no longer than 5 minutes, following the fellow's presentation. Discussants are asked to send their written comments to the fellow by 25 June 2015 in any format they find appropriate (track changes, comments option in text, separate document, etc.). The final allocation of discussants will be distributed once the registration is closed.Division of workPhD FellowReviewer 1 (partner)Reviewer 2 (fellow)ChairNote takerBenediktePavelSinaVanjaJanjaCatherineSueFreyaTatyanaSintayehuCorinaSusanKatjaSinaQue AnhFreyaRebeccaSintayehuQue AnhMiguelJanjaMaartenMiguelKatjaSinaKatjaGrittCorinaJanjaBenedikteMiguelPavelVanjaSintayehuFreyaQue AnhRebeccaTatyanaFreyaCorinaSinaRogerBenedikteCorinaKatjaSintayehuAntonioCatherineMiguelJanaTatyanaSusanQue AnhCatherineVanjaVanjaRoger JanjaBenedikteTatyanaNB: Following the closing of the registration visiting PhD students work will be added to the plementary training package: ‘Hands-on skills’ training on abstract writing, on the basis of abstracts students submitted in advanceTiago Neves (University of Porto)AbstractThe session will focus on writing abstracts for scientific papers. It will begin by outlining the principles of abstract writing, including the differences and similarities between writing abstracts for an article, a conference paper proposal and an academic thesis. This will be the lecture part of the session. In the second part, the abstracts previously handed in by the students will be analysed and discussed collectively, in accordance with the aforementioned principles. It is expected that this collective critical analysis and debate promotes greater knowledge and self-awareness regarding the writing of abstracts for scientific papers.Fellows’ preparationFellows need to send their papers and abstracts before 1 June 2015 to tiago@fpce.up.pt. Please note that, when submitting an abstract, you should also submit the piece of work which it represents. The abstracts should be about ongoing, unpublished research, as this makes the session potentially more profitable for students.Summary of the deadlines17 May 2015:Deadline for online registration for the summer school in Porto ()30 May 2015:Deadline for sending in chapter/article/text/thesis of the thesis: to Kathrin Gramsch (kagra@edu.au.dk)1 June 2015:Deadline for sending in the abstract:to Tiago Neves (tiago@fpce.up.pt)25 June 2015:Deadline for sending feedback on chapter/article/text/thesis of the thesis to the fellow you were asked to send feedback to (See division of work)Practical informationInformation about Porto and PortugalInformation on Portugal and on Porto and other cities can easily be found on different websites. Some examples are: About Portugal: Portugal Tourism Official Portal: About Porto: Porto Tourism Official Portal: Lonely Planet Portugal: Planet Porto: Porto European Best Destination 2014: weather in Porto in June and July varies between a lower average temperature of 14°C and a higher average temperature of 25°C.Weather forecasts for Porto can be found on this url: from and to the AirportThe Francisco Sá Carneiro Airport is located about 11 km from Porto. Metro do Porto, the metro system in Porto will bring you easily from the airport to the Ibis Hotel and the summer school venue: FPCEUP. So, we recommend using the Metro. It is a door to door trip of about 40 minutes.When arriving look for the Metro do Porto sign: There is only one line departing from the airport, going in only one direction. It is hard to miss this. The journey consists of two parts: From the Airport to Trindade: you will need Line E (purple/violet line) in the direction of “Estádio do Drag?o” Get off at Trindade and change to the yellow D-line in the direction of “Hospital S?o Jo?o” (2 levels down)From Trindade to IPO (Ibis Hotel) or Pólo Universitário (FPCEUP: summer school venue): you will need Line D (yellow line) in the direction of “Hospital S?o Jo?o”:Get off at either IPO or Pólo UniversitárioFor more information: You can buy your ANDANTE ticket from the ticket machines. For the trip from the Airport to IPO or Pólo Universitário, you need a ticket of 4 zones. Once you have your ticket, it's important that you validate that ticket before you get on the metro and each time you change to a different metro. For validating correctly, put your ANDANTE ticket near the validation machine. If a green light appears, your validation is correct. If a red light appears, your validation is not correct. Keep your ticket to recharge it for your trip back to the airport. Another option to travel from the airport to the hotel is a taxi. This will cost you between 20 and 30 euros and will take you about 20 minutes.Travelling within Porto by metroThe easiest way to get around in Porto is by metro. We recommend using the metro, not only for your trip from the airport to the hotel, but also from the Ibis-hotel (IPO)/summer school venue (FPCEUP/Pólo Universitário) to the city centre. The metro runs from 6 AM to 1 AM. The city is connected by 6 lines. Important linesLine E (Estádio do Drag?o – Aeroporto) travels to and from Francisco Sá Carneiro Airport and Trindade (city centre)Line D (Hospital de S. Jo?o – Santo Ovídeo) travels to and from the Trindade (city centre) and the summer school venue FPCEUP/ Ibis-hotel (IPO)29761133258759003528204205968801354347-20250038301281740511Travel tickets: ANDANTEAs explained in the previous section, the ANDANTE card is the card used for public transport in the Porto Metropolitan Area. ANDANTE tickets can be purchase from vending machines in each metro station. The price varies with the number of zones needed. The price for just the paper card without trips is €0,60.You must be aware of the zone where your journey begins (where you validate your ticket) and the zone where it ends, in order to choose the right travel ticket. An interactive card can be found here: Click you the zone you start your trip and you can read what kind of ticket you will need.Every time you enter the Metro you have to validate your ANDANTEYou will not be able to use your Z4-ticket from the trip from the airport for travelling to the city. Travelling within Porto is indeed cheaper: you will not need this Z4-ticket during your stay. If you need another ANDANTE ticket, you will have to buy a new rechargeable Z2-ticket for within the city.For more information: within Porto by busSTCP’s buses provide a public transport service in the metropolitan area of Porto. The day-time service runs between 05:00 and 00:30 (some lines until 21:00) and night service (lines 1M to 13M) between 01:00 to 05:00. The same ANDANTE ticket is valid for travelling by STCP bus.For more information or planning a trip: Travelling within Porto by taxiTaxis are available through the city or by phone. This service runs 24 hours a day, all week and its cars usually take 4 passengers.Price: check the meter for the cost of the trip and pay at the end. The driver has to give you a receipt by law.Phone number: + 351 225 076 400More information: ways of exploring the cityGuindais FunicularMore information: information: – Yellow Bus Official Sightseeing ToursMore information: AccomodationAccommodation for UNIKE members, visiting lectures and guest speakersUNIKE members, visiting lectures and guest speakers will be accommodate in Ibis HOTEL Porto S?o Jo?o. The organizers kindly ask that participants indicate the dates of arrival to Porto and departure from Porto on the online registration form (deadline: 17 May 2015) so the organizers can make appropriate hotel bookings Registration form: HOTEL Porto S?o Jo?oRua Dr Plácido Costa4200-450 PORTO, PortugalPORTUGALTel. +351 22 551 3100Fax. +351 22 551 3101 Non-UNIKE membersAssociated partners, associate PhD-fellows and visiting PhD students who wish to stay at the Hotel Ibis or at the university accommodations should fill in the registration form (link: see above).The options are: The Ibis hotel: : Campanh?: are available at the university residences (SASUP and SPRU) at a cost between €17.50 and €26 per person per night. Associated partners, associate PhD-fellows and visiting PhD students who wish to stay at the university accommodations should indicate this on the registration form and contact Luísa Santos (lsantos@fpce.up.pt).SASUP: 17.50€ SPRU Campanh? Price: 26€Other facilitiesShops and supermarketA supermarket (FROIZ) and other shops can be found in the shopping centre below the Ibis Hotel.ATMATM-machines can be found in the shopping centre.Summer School VenueThe summer school will be hosted at the University of Porto, in the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences (Faculdade de Psicologia e de Ciências da Educa??o da Universidade do Porto - FPCEUP).The address is: Rua Alfredo Allen - 4200-135 Porto – Phone: +351 226 079?700The walk from Hotel Ibis to the FPCEUP is easy and short. It takes about 10 minutes. From the Ibis hotel, follow the metro tracks and turn left in Rua Alfredo Allen. Walk untill the end of the street. When you see the sign of the metro stop “Pólo Universitário”, the Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences is at the other side of the street (right hand side).Wifi-connectionThe Faculty of Psychology and Educational Sciences (FPCEUP) provides a free WIFI-connection for the Porto Summer School. Passwords will be communicated before 29 June 2015.Rooms within the faculty The Porto Summer School will take place at the following locations:room 250 (2nd floor): main venue, used for panels and fellows’ sessionsrooms 252 and 253 (2nd floor): used as extra breakout roomsAuditorium 1 (1st floor): for the open public sessionsRoom 143 (1st floor): lunch, meetings, …First floor (FPCEUP)Second floor (FPCEUP)14073812839030↑↑↑←←← Polo Universitario00↑↑↑←←← Polo Universitario10519532358188↑↑Entrance020000↑↑Entrance2465875154692600102041918771114662598132161004496673492125004112731434533Catering during the dayThe contribution for non-UNIKE fellows (associated and visiting PhD-students) is €120. The registration fee includes Summer School materials, coffee breaks and lunches. Payment (only for associated and visiting PhD-students)Payments are to be made by bank transfer to: Faculdade de Psicologia e de Ciências da Educa??o da Universidade Porto BANK: IGCP IBAN: 0781 0112 0112001216135 SWIFT CODE: IGCPPTPL Please state the name(s) of the participants(s) clearly on all payments.IMPORTANT NOTE Payments must be made before arrival. To complete your registration, please do the bank transference and send us the payment confirmation (to Luísa Santos lsantos@fpce.up.pt). Bank and transfer charges are the responsibility of the participant. Cancellation and refund policy Cancellations must be done in writing (e-mail). 75% of the registration fee will be refunded for cancellations received before 6 June 2015. After 6 June 2015 no refund will be made. All refunds will be processed after the conference.DinnersThe dinners from Monday 29 June until Thursday 2 July 2015 are covered by the project for UNIKE-members, visiting lecturers and guest speakers.Associated fellows and visiting PhDs need to register for dinner(s) on the online registration form and have to pay for themselves on the spot. Dinners will cost around €15 each.The dinner on Friday 3 July 2015 is NOT covered by the project. and all participants (UNIKE members, visiting lecturers, guest speakers, associated fellows and guest PhD students) must register for dinner in the online registration form and pay for themselves on the spot.All chosen restaurants are easily to be reached by metro or within walking distance. You will be given an ANDANTE card for the necessary trips by metro. In case you would rather not want to look for restaurants by yourself, the local organizers will arrange that one person of the local organising team will wait for you in front of the hotel and accompany you to the restaurant. The provisional times of departure from Ibis hotel are: Monday 29 June: 19:00 Tuesday 30 June: 18:45 Wednesday 1 July: 19.00 Thursday 2 July: we leave at 14:00 for the Porto walkFriday 3 July: no transport is arranged for nowPlease note any changes related to restaurants and/or times will be announced before the start of the first session in the morning. For more details concerning the chosen restaurants and the transport please see below:Dinner on Monday 29 June 2015Address: Monte Aventino Rua do Monte Aventino4350 - 233 Porto / leaving from Ibis hoteljourney time: 23 minat 19:00 in the lobby of the Ibis hotelDinner time: At 19:30Map of transportDinner on Tuesday 30 June 2015Address: Ar de Rio Avenida Diogo Leite, 5 4400 Vila Nova de Gaia / leaving from Ibis hotelJourney time: 35minat 18:45 in the lobby of the Ibis hotelDinner time: At 19:30Map of transportYou will be given an ANDANTE card for these trips by metro.Dinner on Wednesday 1 July 2015Address: Flor de Paranhos Rua Igreja de Paranhos, 162Portotransport / leaving from Ibis hotelwalking time: 18 minat 19:00 in the lobby of the Ibis hotelDinner time: At 19:30Map of transportThis is easily reachable by foot.Dinner on Thursday 2 July 2015Address: Douro MarinaAfuradaRua da PraiaVila Nova de GaiaMap of transportThis will be arranged in accordance with the transport of the social activity on Thursday afternoon.Friday dinner in MatosinhosFor those staying for the Douro tour or having flights on Saturday, on Friday evening a dinner will be organised in Matosinhos (costs to be covered by all, UNIKE and non-UNIKE, participants).Dinner will start at 20.00 in O Valentim ( ). Average price of a dinner is 20-25 EUR (as stated on the restaurant’s webpage). Address: O ValentimRua Heróis de Fran?a263 4450-158 MatosinhosTransport / leaving from Ibis hotelWe would recommend taking a taxi in smaller groups, as the price would be around 15 EUR. If you are taking a taxi the address of the restaurant is:O Valentim. M. Rua Heróis de Fran?a, 263 4450-158 Matosinhos.If you are taking the metro, you need to take a metro at your IBIS hotel to Trinidade. From Trinidade take the blue A line in the direction of Senhor de Matosinhos. You need to get off at the metro stop Matosinhos Sul. From there it is 800 meters walk to the Restaurant. (see map below)Douro valley tour (Saturday, 4th July)Douro valley is one of the oldest wine regions in the world with a unique landscape built in a particular way to grow wine on steep slopes of the valley and particular flavours to its wines. The Douro valley has been recognised by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. You can read the justification here: . For more information on Douro Valley see: .The visit to the Douro Valley will be organised by a tourist agency in cooperation with the Summer School organisation team. The visit will take place on Saturday (4th July 2015). The visit will take a full day ending with a late evening return to Porto on Saturday. This means that if you want to join the tour you should book your flights back for Sunday rather than Saturday. Furthermore, when you register for the Porto Summer School you should indicate that you want the booking at the hotel to be made until Saturday if you want us to arrange that for you.The costs of the visit to Douro and the additional night at the hotel are to be covered by the participants (both UNIKE and non-UNIKE). The costs of the trip will be around 95 EUR and will include a trip to and back from Douro, lunch and a visit to a vineyard and vinery in Douro.Full details on the tour as well as instructions on how to register for the tour will be sent out shortly.QuestionsIn case you have any questions concerning the practical organisation (part 4), please address Helena Barbieri: barbieri@fpce.up.pt In case you have any questions concerning the content of the summer school (parts 1-3), please address Jana Bacevic: jaba@edu.au.dkWe hope to welcome you all soon in Porto !AnnexesRebecca Boden’s text on ‘the thesis of the thesis’ in her e-mail from 1st of March 2015The thesis of the thesis.....Definition of?thesis?in English:noun?(plural?theses??θi?si?z)1 A?statement?or?theory?that is?put forward?as a?premise?to be?maintained?or?proved: his central thesis is that?psychological?life is not part of the?material?world1.1 (In Hegelian?philosophy) a?proposition?forming the first stage in the process of?dialectical reasoning.?Compare with?antithesis,?synthesis.2 A long?essay?or?dissertation?involving?personal?research,?written?by a?candidate?for a?university degree: a?doctoral?thesis(Oxford Dictionaries Online)Putting these definitions together, we might see the thesis of the thesis strictly as the ‘premise’ or ‘proposition’ that is going to be reasoned out in the ‘long? essay or dissertation involving?personal research, written by a candidate for a university degree’. Put more simply, let’s think of it as the line of argumentation that you’ll pursue in this mighty beast you’re struggling with called your thesis. Why do I need a line of argument?In a general sense (and usually in the regulations in UK universities) a PhD has to be an original contribution to knowledge. Original = the candidate did it and it’s not been done before, or at least not in that way. Contribution = it’s not the be-all and end-all of the subject, but it’s a brick in the knowledge wall of sufficient loveliness and worth to represent around three years full time work by someone quite clever. Moreover, it’s implicit here that what you present is worth knowing about – your work passes the ‘so what?’ test.Knowledge = well, epistemologically speaking, for academic researchers knowledge is a lot more than data or stories. Knowledge takes those data and stories and uses concepts and theories to develop deeper understandings.So, what you write has to be worth knowing and contribute in a significant way to understandings. That’s not to say that your thesis must be the answer to Life, the Universe and Everything (apologies to Douglas Adams) – because it can’t. But it needs to be original, rigorous and of significance (which, incidentally, are the UK REF criteria for judging publications).You can’t really do that by dumping a load of data, random thoughts, musings on other people’s work etc down on paper and handing it in. In the social sciences, thesis work generally consists of biting off a large chunk of some important/significant issue, chewing very hard with the aid of some concepts and theories and, when it’s digested, presenting an original contribution to knowledge. That is, every thesis needs a thesis –a line of argumentation.What’s a line of argument look like?You might like to think of it as in several stages, such as What’s bugging you? What is happening out there in the world that perhaps needs a bit of a closer look because we might benefit from understanding more about that? What questions can you ask of that thing that’s bugging you that will help you tease and test new knowledge out of your work? If you were a positivist this might be a formal hypothesis, but most social scientists think in terms of research questions. I think that this is akin to Antonio’s ‘problematique’. What’s the public story so far about this problematique? How much work has already been done that answers some part of the questions? Where do existing literature/other understandings take us? Some people call this a literature review – a term I hate because it implies that the student’s job is to simply survey all the literature and write about it. In fact, the student needs to make the literature work for them in the thesis, demonstrating the extent to which it helps or doesn’t in addressing the problematique. This use of the literature serves two purposes: it moves the argument on (we understand this...we don’t understand that etc etc) and also demonstrates that the student’s research is an original contribution to knowledge – marking a distinction between what others have done and the thesis.Contributing to understandings involves having some kind of conceptualisations or useful theories to act as a lens through which you can focus on the problematique. Most students derive this from a dialogue with/interrogation of the existing literature – the second role that previous research plays.That leaves the issue of what empirical data etc needs to be acquired and how it is going to be analysed in order to complete the tackling of the problematique. That is, the methodology. Important here is to explain how theories/conceptualisations will be used as a lens. Then there is the real meat (sorry Sue) of the thesis: the findings and analysis.And finally, a return to the original questions and an explication as to what understandings you have shed upon them.How does this fit into my thesis structure? Metaphor time. Here is a photo of a completed PhD thesis. The clasp of a string of pearls has two parts which fit together tightly and safely. One half of the clasp is the introduction, in which you set out what’s bugging you, what your questions are and, in describing what is to follow (the purpose of an introduction), you set out the thesis of your thesis.The pearls are the chapters. Probably not as many chapters as in the photo though. Each chapter should be beautiful, polished and sit in a very complementary manner with its neighbours. My visual metaphor falls down here because, in a thesis, the pearls half way along the string are probably bigger than the ones at the beginning and the end. These chapters take you through the public story so far, the theory, the methodology and the substantive material of your work.The second part of the clasp is the final chapter – where you return to your problematique, your questions, and demonstrate how you have travelled full circle and developed new understandings. The two halves of the clasp fit together perfectly. That leaves the actual string of course – the thread that runs through all the pearls and ties the clasp in. That’s your line of argument, and everything else hangs off of it and it connects everything, driving the thesis along.So, in writing about the thesis of the thesis, you might set out how you see that journey from the formulation of the problematique to new understandings progressing. And of course, at this stage, some of it will be tentative and uncertain. But I find with my students that this can be a useful exercise because: it helps to develop an overview of the thesis as a single body of work, making it less scary; ensures that there is an argument (although this is in constant development, of course), and; enables one to foresee possible problems and pitfalls. It’s also, helpfully, something that can fit usefully into a first chapter – setting out what the thesis is about and where it goes and why. In one sense, it might be thought of as an extended abstract of the thesis itself. And of course, as with all pieces of writing like this, its main use is in helping you to formulate and express your ideas and work so that you can reflect on it and share it with others for feedback. I think it’s good to keep the thesis of thesis quite short or you start to get into making the argument/writing the thesis itself – so I reckon around 3000 words is a good upper limit. Rebecca Boden1 March 2015 ................
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