Master's Thesis from the year 2010 in the subject Pedagogy - Higher
Education, grade: 70, language: English, abstract: This thesis proposes
a typology of responsiveness in order to reduce interpretive ambiguity
and to provide a framework which makes possible an assessment of the
extent to which responsiveness is likely to be institutionalised in
higher education. The typology is tested at two universities. The
findings indicate that the typology developed can be deployed to reveal
insight into how responsiveness is manifesting at universities. The
findings around institutionalisation of responsiveness are less
conclusive but indicate that while there is evidence of the
institutionalisation of a particular type of university responsiveness,
the process is at best partial as the academic heartland of higher
education systems remain slow to accept the demands made by the state,
university leadership and other stakeholders for more responsive
universities.