(Re)harmonising the Academy: Integrating life-long learning and science communication in Swedish higher education
Licentiate thesis, 2022
expectations, including research, teaching, and disseminating research to the surrounding
society. It is however not always clear what these functions should entail, and how they should
be played out. Similarly, institutions, departments, and individual researchers’ role, or roles,
are multifaceted and ever-evolving and researchers are frequently expected to take on new tasks
and acquire new skills as a consequence of ambitions in policy.
This licentiate thesis explores how the ambitions of Swedish higher education, as expressed in
policy and regulations such as goal statements and promotion and recruitment processes, are
realised in practice in two specific areas: students’ life-long learning and their acquisition of
learning skills—with a focus on self-regulated learning, and researchers’ engagement in
science communication. The aim is to investigate potential areas of disharmony between policy
ambitions and practice, as well as among individual researchers’ multiple roles.
The three papers included in this thesis illustrate different facets of how policy ambitions are
realised in a Swedish STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics) context.
Paper 1 focuses on the extent to which students acquire learning skills, i.e., to what extent the
ambition that students should acquire these skills is realised. This study used a questionnaire
to investigate engineering students’ learning skills in terms of learning strategies, self-regulated
learning, and awareness of what constitutes effective learning. Paper 2 explores to what extent
researchers engage in science communication i.e., to what extent the ambition that researchers
should engage in dissemination of science is realised in practice. By analysing data from a
publication repository along with corresponding full texts, this study mapped the science
communication practices at a Swedish STEM university. Finally, Paper 3 focuses on what
characterises expert scientists’ writing process when addressing non-academic readers,
providing input for training and eventual incentives that may promote science communication.
Seven researchers in STEM with extensive experience of science communication were
interviewed to pinpoint what strategies they use when writing science communication texts and
how they regulate this writing process.
My thesis paints a vivid picture of how higher education in Sweden today involves a
complexity of functions and practices, and faces the challenge of integrating new tasks and
skills, such as learning skills and science communication writing, into teaching and into
academic scholarship. Taken together, the findings from the three papers align with previous
research in Sweden and internationally, and suggest that policy ambitions in these areas are
realised to some extent—as shown by students’ awareness of the effectiveness of various
learning skills, and the fact that some researchers do engage in science communication.
However, there is clearly room for improvement: students’ need more scaffolding of learning
skills, which in turn may require incentives and training for higher education teachers, and
researchers need incentives and training in science communication. In summary, this thesis
suggests that there is a shortage of both incentives and training despite policy ambitions
expressed for instance in the Swedish Higher Education Act and in regulations for promotion,
tenure, and recruitment processes in Swedish and internationally. Overall, disharmonies seem
to be built into the system and into individual researchers’ academic scholarship. Finally, my
thesis provides some concrete suggestions about how to take small steps towards less
disharmony, i.e., harmonising, or perhaps reharmonising, the academy.
self-regulated learning
science communication
metacognition
life-long learning
policy
higher education
generic skills
academic scholarship
Author
Maria Cervin-Ellqvist
Chalmers, Communication and Learning in Science, Language and Communication
Metacognitive illusion or self-regulated learning? Assessing engineering students’ learning strategies against the backdrop of recent advances in cognitive science
Higher Education,;Vol. 82(2021)p. 477-498
Journal article
Cervin-Ellqvist, M., Johansson, S., Persson, M., Sjöberg Hawke, C., & Negretti, R. The silent tribe? Mapping the variety of researchers’ science communication practices across STEM disciplines.
Negretti, R., Sjöberg-Hawke, C., Persson, M., & Cervin-Ellqvist, M. Thinking outside the box: Senior scientists’ metacognitive strategy knowledge (MSK) and self-regulation of writing for science communication.
Subject Categories
Didactics
Learning
Pedagogy
Learning and teaching
Pedagogical work
Licentiate theses - Department of Communication and Learning in Science, Chalmers University of Technology: 2022:2
Publisher
Chalmers
Seminarierum 1, Hörsalsvägen 2
Opponent: Prof. John Airey, Department of Teaching and Learning, Stockholm University, Sweden