Abstract
The article explores the landscape in higher education in which old
binary divisions are officially denied yet have been reinvigorated through
a mix of conservative and neo-liberal policies. Efforts to resist such
pressures can happen at different levels, including, in this case, module
design and classroom practice. The rationale for such resistance is
considered in relationship to the authors’ political and moral
standpoints. Debates within higher education policy circles are
invariably reduced to a series of oppositions: theory and practice;
training and education; research and teaching. The article seeks to break
down such polarities through an exploration of classroom practice. In
fact, we argue that such distinctions help to legitimize the existing
inequalities in higher education and group-based harms, which
characterize the sector. Instead, a case is made for a pedagogy that
enables students, particularly those from diverse and disadvantaged
backgrounds, to use their experiences, values, etc. to exchange and
develop ideas in a group context, thereby providing an important means
of collective empowerment (intellectual and practical, both at work and
in their private lives). In this process students are encouraged to use
ethical theories as tools to explain and underpin their understanding of
work-based scenarios. The role of the academic is to facilitate such
exchanges and foster new ethical approaches and a public awareness and
engagement that goes beyond the classroom. The pedagogic approach,
drawing on notions of relational autonomy and narrative methods as well
as providing spaces for the co-production of new knowledge, confirms the
indivisibility of research and teaching.