An Autoethnography Of Becoming An Innovative Engineering Academic: Punk, Pirate And Guerilla Pedagogy

Michael Murray

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In this Autoethnography (AE) I consider, “becoming” the Most Innovative Teacher (2018) at my university. My identity as a university teacher, my epistemic beliefs, and my choice of vocational pedagogical techniques, have been influenced by my working-class background. No school qualifications, becoming the wrong sort of engineer (plumbing), and a twenty-three-year journey to a doctoral qualification. In 2013 my employer declared that I did not have a ‘significant responsibility for research’ (SRR). I was transferred to a teaching only contract as a punitive measure for not fulfilling my employers research expectations. My lateral migration to a teaching post was the catalyst for my re-engagement with pedagogy. I became aware that my teaching & learning practice had theoretical (constructivist) foundations. Engaging in scholarship, I read publications on teaching like a pirate, guerrilla teaching, and being a punk educator. It became clear that I had taken similar risks, to do engineering education differently. In this paper I will examine what motives I had for going “off-piste” and, whether my practice truly constitutes “innovative” engineering pedagogy. I conclude with a caveat on the research methodology (autoethnography) employed.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2545-2556
Number of pages12
JournalEuropean Society for Engineering Education (SEFI)
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Autoethnography
  • Innovative Teacher
  • vocational pedagogical techniques
  • constructivist foundations
  • teaching like a pirate
  • guerrilla teaching
  • punk educator
  • engineering education
  • innovative pedagogy
  • disruptive pedagogy
  • epistemic
  • identity
  • scholarship
  • risk

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