Using agential morphogenesis to track professional identity development in higher education

Professional identity development (PID) is a growing focus for higher education researchers interested in graduate employability and workplace readiness. This raises the challenge of how to trace students’ identity shifts. This paper shows how Margaret Archer’s agential morphogenesis can be used to...

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Main Author: Gabrielle Nudelman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Western Cape 2021-06-01
Series:Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
Online Access:https://cristal.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/360
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spelling doaj-d1297915d025420bba94d0db472272592021-06-30T07:06:30ZengUniversity of the Western CapeCritical Studies in Teaching and Learning2310-71032021-06-019110.14426/cristal.v9i1.360Using agential morphogenesis to track professional identity development in higher educationGabrielle Nudelman0UCT Professional identity development (PID) is a growing focus for higher education researchers interested in graduate employability and workplace readiness. This raises the challenge of how to trace students’ identity shifts. This paper shows how Margaret Archer’s agential morphogenesis can be used to generate understandings of how students’ identities change during professional degree programmes. Archer’s theories of double and triple morphogenesis are applied to data collected through interviews and documentary research. The findings are presented as narratives about two final-year electrical engineering students who participated in employability-development focussed courses at a South African university. These narratives offer in-depth descriptions of the students’ identity shifts as they neared completion of their studies. The richness of the findings, which incorporate the constraints and enablements of the students’ professional identity development, leads to the paper’s argument that agential morphogenesis is a productive analytical tool for researchers wanting to better understand PID in higher education. https://cristal.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/360
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabrielle Nudelman
spellingShingle Gabrielle Nudelman
Using agential morphogenesis to track professional identity development in higher education
Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
author_facet Gabrielle Nudelman
author_sort Gabrielle Nudelman
title Using agential morphogenesis to track professional identity development in higher education
title_short Using agential morphogenesis to track professional identity development in higher education
title_full Using agential morphogenesis to track professional identity development in higher education
title_fullStr Using agential morphogenesis to track professional identity development in higher education
title_full_unstemmed Using agential morphogenesis to track professional identity development in higher education
title_sort using agential morphogenesis to track professional identity development in higher education
publisher University of the Western Cape
series Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
issn 2310-7103
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Professional identity development (PID) is a growing focus for higher education researchers interested in graduate employability and workplace readiness. This raises the challenge of how to trace students’ identity shifts. This paper shows how Margaret Archer’s agential morphogenesis can be used to generate understandings of how students’ identities change during professional degree programmes. Archer’s theories of double and triple morphogenesis are applied to data collected through interviews and documentary research. The findings are presented as narratives about two final-year electrical engineering students who participated in employability-development focussed courses at a South African university. These narratives offer in-depth descriptions of the students’ identity shifts as they neared completion of their studies. The richness of the findings, which incorporate the constraints and enablements of the students’ professional identity development, leads to the paper’s argument that agential morphogenesis is a productive analytical tool for researchers wanting to better understand PID in higher education.
url https://cristal.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/360
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